Florida’s colonial history is mainly that of an intermittent struggle for possession by the three great European nations-Spain, France, and Great Britain. Though efforts were made at colonization, none were really successful except the fair beginning of the English in East Florida; the beginning in the West was in those parts only nominally and temporarily Florida. The purpose of Spain’s two hundred years of sovereignty was to keep the others out, and that was the reason for St. Augustine and Pensacola-two oases in a wilderness
For many years after its discovery la Florida was a vague geographical concept. Discovered by Ponce ...
St. Augustine’s 1763-64 evacuation was a ten-month event that ended Spain’s two hundred year rule in...
A story often told but still begging for a fuller explanation is the tale of the French settlers in ...
England acquired legal and sovereign control of Spanish Florida on February 10, 1763. After more tha...
Florida was ceded to the United States by Spain in 1821 as two quite separate provinces, East and We...
Florida passed to British control in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. A Royal Proclamat...
The Seven Years\u27 War in Europe offically ended in Paris on February 10, 1763, with England active...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...
The relevance of a particular study is always associated with the place that it occupies in the circ...
After returning the two Floridas to Spain by the Treaty of Paris of 1783, England watched with satis...
Though Florida had been discovered by Ponce de Leon in 1513, not until 1565 did it become a Spanish ...
Florida’s history of exploration and colonization is lengthy, complex, And filled with failure. Begi...
The waning years of the eighteenth century were a time of conflict and turmoil. Europe was convulsed...
St. Augustine’s 1763-64 evacuation was a ten-month event that ended Spain’s two hundred year rule in...
Under the terms of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 the territorial holdings of Great Britain were increa...
For many years after its discovery la Florida was a vague geographical concept. Discovered by Ponce ...
St. Augustine’s 1763-64 evacuation was a ten-month event that ended Spain’s two hundred year rule in...
A story often told but still begging for a fuller explanation is the tale of the French settlers in ...
England acquired legal and sovereign control of Spanish Florida on February 10, 1763. After more tha...
Florida was ceded to the United States by Spain in 1821 as two quite separate provinces, East and We...
Florida passed to British control in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. A Royal Proclamat...
The Seven Years\u27 War in Europe offically ended in Paris on February 10, 1763, with England active...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...
The relevance of a particular study is always associated with the place that it occupies in the circ...
After returning the two Floridas to Spain by the Treaty of Paris of 1783, England watched with satis...
Though Florida had been discovered by Ponce de Leon in 1513, not until 1565 did it become a Spanish ...
Florida’s history of exploration and colonization is lengthy, complex, And filled with failure. Begi...
The waning years of the eighteenth century were a time of conflict and turmoil. Europe was convulsed...
St. Augustine’s 1763-64 evacuation was a ten-month event that ended Spain’s two hundred year rule in...
Under the terms of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 the territorial holdings of Great Britain were increa...
For many years after its discovery la Florida was a vague geographical concept. Discovered by Ponce ...
St. Augustine’s 1763-64 evacuation was a ten-month event that ended Spain’s two hundred year rule in...
A story often told but still begging for a fuller explanation is the tale of the French settlers in ...