Early history
Northeast Florida showing Cow Ford (center) from
Bernard Romans' 1776 map of Florida.
The area of the modern city of Jacksonville has been inhabited for thousands of years. On Black Hammock Island in the national
Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve, a
University of North Florida team discovered some of the oldest remnants of pottery in the United States, dating to 2500 BC.
[13] In the 16th century, the beginning of the historical era, the region was inhabited by the
Mocama, a coastal subgroup of the
Timucua
people. At the time of contact with Europeans, all Mocama villages in
present-day Jacksonville were part of the powerful chiefdom known as the
Saturiwa, centered around the mouth of the
St. Johns River.
[14] One early map shows a village called
Ossachite at the site of what is now downtown Jacksonville; this may be the earliest recorded name for that area.
[15]
French
Huguenot explorer
Jean Ribault charted the
St. Johns River
in 1562 calling it the River of May because he discovered it in May.
Ribault erected a stone column near present-day Jacksonville claiming
the newly discovered land for
France.
[16] In 1564,
René Goulaine de Laudonnière established the first European settlement,
Fort Caroline, on the St. Johns near the main village of the Saturiwa.
Philip II of Spain ordered
Pedro Menéndez de Avilés to protect the interest of
Spain
by attacking the French presence at Fort Caroline. On September 20,
1565, a Spanish force from the nearby Spanish settlement of
St. Augustine attacked
Fort Caroline, and killed nearly all the French soldiers defending it.
[17] The
Spanish renamed the fort
San Mateo,
and following the ejection of the French, St. Augustine's position as
the most important settlement in Florida was solidified. The location of
Fort Caroline is subject to debate but a reconstruction of the fort was
established on the St. Johns River in 1964.
[18]
Spain ceded Florida to the British in 1763 after the
French and Indian War, and the British soon constructed the King's Road connecting St. Augustine to
Georgia. The road crossed the St. Johns River at a narrow point, which the
Seminole called
Wacca Pilatka and the British called the
Cow Ford; these names ostensibly reflect the fact that
cattle were brought across the river there.
[19][20][21]
The British introduced the cultivation of sugar cane, indigo and fruits
as well the export of lumber. As a result, the northeastern Florida
area prospered economically more than it had under the Spanish.
[22] Britain ceded control of the territory back to Spain in 1783, after its defeat in the
American Revolutionary War, and the settlement at the Cow Ford continued to grow. After Spain ceded the
Florida Territory to the
United States
in 1821, American settlers on the north side of the Cow Ford decided to
plan a town, laying out the streets and plats. They soon named the town
Jacksonville, after
Andrew Jackson. Led by
Isaiah D. Hart, residents wrote a charter for a town government, which was approved by the Florida Legislative Council on February 9, 1832.
Civil War and the Gilded Age
Union Army guard house on Bay Street in December 1864.
During the
American Civil War, Jacksonville was a key supply point for hogs and cattle being shipped from Florida to aid the
Confederate cause. The city was blockaded by
Union forces, who gained control of the nearby
Fort Clinch.
Though no battles were fought in Jacksonville proper, the city changed
hands several times between Union and Confederate forces. The
Skirmish of the Brick Church in 1862 just outside Jacksonville proper resulted in the first Confederate victory in
Florida.
[23] However, Union forces captured a Confederate position at the
Battle of St. Johns Bluff leading to the Union occupation of Jacksonville in 1862. In February 1864 Union forces left Jacksonville and confronted a
Confederate Army at the
Battle of Olustee resulting in a
Confederate
victory. Union forces then retreated to Jacksonville and held the city
for the remainder of the war. In March 1864 a Confederate cavalry
confronted a Union expedition resulting in the
Battle of Cedar Creek. Warfare and the long occupation left the city disrupted after the war.
[24]
During
Reconstruction and the
Gilded Age, Jacksonville and nearby St. Augustine became popular winter
resorts for the rich and famous. Visitors arrived by
steamboat and later by
railroad. President
Grover Cleveland attended the Sub-Tropical Exposition in the city on February 22, 1888 during his trip to Florida.
[25]
This highlighted the visibility of the state as a worthy place for
tourism. The city's tourism, however, was dealt major blows in the late
19th century by
yellow fever outbreaks. In addition, extension of the
Florida East Coast Railway further south drew visitors to other areas. From 1893 to 1938, Jacksonville was the site of the Florida Old Confederate
Soldiers and Sailors Home with a nearby cemetery.
[26]
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