In 1793-1794 a motley group of South Carolina and Georgia backcountrymen entered into a conspiracy with French revolutionaries to invade Spanish territories in Louisiana and Florida. Although the plot eventually collapsed under pressure from the French and American governments, support for the expedition and resistance to the planned invasion provide a revealing chapter in the history of the southern backcountry and the Atlantic world. The confluence of multi-national, multi-racial constituencies in the heat of revolutionary fervor is ripe for re-evaluation. The most recent examination of the plot was conducted by Michael Morris, who placed the planned invasion of East Florida within the context of Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u27s analysis of south...
In the course of its historical development, Florida has endured shifting and contested lines of dem...
“The Border-seas of a New British Empire” explores the relationship between the rebellious thirteen ...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...
Florida emerged from the Revolutionary War “entangled.” A pawn of the United States, British, and Sp...
Historians of late eighteenth-century Florida usually distinguish between the British period (1763-1...
This essay analyzes the entangled histories of France and Spain in Florida and the circum-Atlantic ...
Integrating social, cultural, economic, and political history, this is a study of the factors that g...
Florida’s Spanish borderland was the result of over two hundred and fifty years of cooperation and c...
During the Second Spanish Period (1784-1821) and its early years as a United States territory, East ...
On his 10,000-acre plantation along the St. Johns River, Francis Philip Fatio had much to claim. Wit...
Americans\u27 dreams of empire appeared to become reality when the United States gained control over...
This article is a preliminary case study of legal and normative entanglement in Spanish West Florida...
After returning the two Floridas to Spain by the Treaty of Paris of 1783, England watched with satis...
Florida passed to British control in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. A Royal Proclamat...
That the southern portion of the Florida peninsular possessed no significant commercial value in col...
In the course of its historical development, Florida has endured shifting and contested lines of dem...
“The Border-seas of a New British Empire” explores the relationship between the rebellious thirteen ...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...
Florida emerged from the Revolutionary War “entangled.” A pawn of the United States, British, and Sp...
Historians of late eighteenth-century Florida usually distinguish between the British period (1763-1...
This essay analyzes the entangled histories of France and Spain in Florida and the circum-Atlantic ...
Integrating social, cultural, economic, and political history, this is a study of the factors that g...
Florida’s Spanish borderland was the result of over two hundred and fifty years of cooperation and c...
During the Second Spanish Period (1784-1821) and its early years as a United States territory, East ...
On his 10,000-acre plantation along the St. Johns River, Francis Philip Fatio had much to claim. Wit...
Americans\u27 dreams of empire appeared to become reality when the United States gained control over...
This article is a preliminary case study of legal and normative entanglement in Spanish West Florida...
After returning the two Floridas to Spain by the Treaty of Paris of 1783, England watched with satis...
Florida passed to British control in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. A Royal Proclamat...
That the southern portion of the Florida peninsular possessed no significant commercial value in col...
In the course of its historical development, Florida has endured shifting and contested lines of dem...
“The Border-seas of a New British Empire” explores the relationship between the rebellious thirteen ...
Upheaval characterized eighteenth-century Florida. European powers continued to fight for dominance ...