
PREFACE.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
CHAPTER II. FIRST DISCOVERY, 1512 TO 1565—JUAN PONCE DE LEON.
CHAPTER III. RIBAULT, LAUDONNIÈRE, AND MENENDEZ—SETTLEMENTS OF THE HUGUENOTS, AND FOUNDATION OF ST. AUGUSTINE. 1562-1565-1568.
CHAPTER IV. THE ATTACK ON FORT CAROLINE—1565.
CHAPTER V. ESCAPE OF LAUDONNIÈRE AND OTHERS FROM FORT CAROLINE. ADVENTURES OF THE FUGITIVES.
CHAPTER VI. SITE OF FORT CAROLINE, AFTERWARDS CALLED SAN MATTEO.
CHAPTER VII. MENENDEZ'S RETURN TO ST. AUGUSTINE—SHIPWRECK OF A. D. 1565.
CHAPTER VIII. FATE OF RIBAULT AND HIS FOLLOWERS—BLOODY MASSACRE AT MATANZAS—1565.
CHAPTER IX. FORTIFYING OF ST. AUGUSTINE—DISAFFECTIONS AND MUTINIES—APPROVAL OF MENENDEZ' ACTS BY THE KING OF SPAIN. 1565-1568.
A careful, compact chronicle, this work draws directly from the earliest Spanish and French accounts of Florida’s first European footholds. The author preserves the original flavor of those 16th‑century sources, letting readers hear the voices of explorers, missionaries, and soldiers as they described the new coastline, its native peoples, and the promise of a southern empire.
The narrative follows the daring French Huguenot settlement at Fort Caroline and the swift Spanish response that led Pedro Menéndez de Avilés to found St. Augustine, America’s oldest continuously inhabited European city. Early clashes, shipwrecks and uneasy alliances shape a vivid picture of a contested frontier, where ambition, faith, and survival collided on the Gulf’s edge.
Full title
The Spaniards in Florida Comprising the Notable Settlement of the Huguenots in 1564, and the History and Antiquities of St. Augustine, Founded A.D. 1565
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (252K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chuck Greif, University of Florida Digital Collections and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2011-09-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1820–1906
A lawyer, judge, historian, and early preservation advocate, he helped shape how Florida remembered its colonial and territorial past. His writing remains closely tied to St. Augustine and the state’s early historical record.
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