Confederate Florida, far removed from the clash of massed armies to its north, remained in many respects on the periphery of Civil War fighting. The state by no means, however, escaped the war’s impact as violence and the potential for violence served to its residents almost daily reminders of the national struggle. One dimension of Florida’s Civil War experience, a factor which threatened the escalation of violence throughout the conflict, previously has been neglected by students of the state’s history. That factor was the potential for Indian war
Between 1750 and 1810, the Muskogee Indians held the upper hand in intercolonial affairs and made Fl...
25-3Extracts from the Message of Governor Call, Florida. [339] On the Seminole Indian hostilities in...
A Prelude to the Creek War of 1813-1814 John Innerarity to James Innerarity Elizabeth Howard West Qu...
Secession and the approach of hostilities in 1861 found Florida unprepared for civil war. The state’...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
The Second Seminole War comprised the single most significant event of Florida’s territorial period....
There was no one basic cause of the Second Seminole War which began in Florida in December 1835. Maj...
The North American Southeast remained a wild borderland where Indian tribes, the United States, Spai...
In the early months of 1861, some Florida citizens seemed to feel that the approaching conflict woul...
The Seminole War. - The treaty negotiated with the Florida tribes of Indians at Moultrie Creek, Sept...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Sacrifice at the Margins of the Confederacy: Florida and the Civil War Of the tens of thousands of b...
Although critical to American military operations in the Third Seminole War, Fort Myers would have p...
As Florida\u27s political leaders voted on January 10, 1861, to follow the secessionist lead of Sout...
R. K. Call vs. the Federal Government on the Seminole War Herbert J. Doherty, Jr. The Railroad Backg...
Between 1750 and 1810, the Muskogee Indians held the upper hand in intercolonial affairs and made Fl...
25-3Extracts from the Message of Governor Call, Florida. [339] On the Seminole Indian hostilities in...
A Prelude to the Creek War of 1813-1814 John Innerarity to James Innerarity Elizabeth Howard West Qu...
Secession and the approach of hostilities in 1861 found Florida unprepared for civil war. The state’...
The news that the Seminoles had begun hostilities in Florida spread slowly early in January, 1836. T...
The Second Seminole War comprised the single most significant event of Florida’s territorial period....
There was no one basic cause of the Second Seminole War which began in Florida in December 1835. Maj...
The North American Southeast remained a wild borderland where Indian tribes, the United States, Spai...
In the early months of 1861, some Florida citizens seemed to feel that the approaching conflict woul...
The Seminole War. - The treaty negotiated with the Florida tribes of Indians at Moultrie Creek, Sept...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Sacrifice at the Margins of the Confederacy: Florida and the Civil War Of the tens of thousands of b...
Although critical to American military operations in the Third Seminole War, Fort Myers would have p...
As Florida\u27s political leaders voted on January 10, 1861, to follow the secessionist lead of Sout...
R. K. Call vs. the Federal Government on the Seminole War Herbert J. Doherty, Jr. The Railroad Backg...
Between 1750 and 1810, the Muskogee Indians held the upper hand in intercolonial affairs and made Fl...
25-3Extracts from the Message of Governor Call, Florida. [339] On the Seminole Indian hostilities in...
A Prelude to the Creek War of 1813-1814 John Innerarity to James Innerarity Elizabeth Howard West Qu...