The history and antiquities of the city of St. Augustine, Florida, founded A.D. 1565. Comprising some of the most interesting portions of the early history of Florida, Part 2

Author: Fairbanks, George Rainsford, 1820-1906
Publication date: 1858
Publisher: New York, C.B. Norton
Number of Pages: 432


USA > Florida > Saint Johns County > Saint Augustine > The history and antiquities of the city of St. Augustine, Florida, founded A.D. 1565. Comprising some of the most interesting portions of the early history of Florida > Part 2


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holy religion in these regions, and to establish their own abominable and crazy sect among the Indians ; so that the more promptly we shall punish them, we shall the more speedily do a service to our God and our king, and comply with our conscience and our duty.


" To accomplish this, we must choose five hund- red arquebuse men and pikemen, and carry pro- visions in our knapsacks for eight days, divided into ten companies, each one with its standard and its captain, and go with this force by land to examine the settlements and fort of our enemies ; and as no one knows the road, I will guide you within two points by a mariner's compass ; and where we cangot get along, we will open a way with our axes; and moreover, I have with me a Frenchman who has been more than a year at their fort, and who says he knows the ground for two leagues around the fort.


" If we shall arrive without discovery, it may be that falling upon it at daylight we may take it, by planting upon it twenty scaling ladders, at the cost of fifty lives. If we are discovered, we can form in the shelter of the wood, which I am assured is not more than a quarter of a league distant, and plant- ing there ten standards, send forward a trumpeter requiring them to leave the fort and the country, and return to their own country, offering them ships


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and provisions for the voyage. They will imagine that we have a much greater army with us, and they may surrender ; and if they do not, we shall at least accomplish that they will leave us undisturbed in this our own settlement, and we shall know the way, so that we may return to destroy them the succeed- ing spring."


After some discussion, it was concluded that after hearing mass, they should undertake the expedition on the third day. Considerable opposition was manifested on the part of the officers; but, with a consummate knowledge of human nature, the ade- lantado got up the most splendid dinner in his power, and invited his recreant officers to the repast, and dexterously appealed to their fears, as well as their pride, and overcame their reluctance to undertake the unknown dangers of a first march through Florida at a wet season, an actual acquaintance with which would still more have dampened their ardor.


The troops assembled promptly upon the day appointed, at the sound of the trumpet, the fife and the drum, and they all went to hear mass, except Juan de Vicente, who said he had a disorder of the stomach, and in his leg; and when some friends wished to urge his coming, he replied,-" I vow to God, that I will wait until the news comes that our force is entirely cut off, when we who remain will


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embark in our three vessels, and go to the Indies, where there will be no necessity of our all perishing like beasts "


This Juan Vicente seems to have been an apt specimen of a class of croakers not peculiar to any age or country. Of his further history, the chronicle gives other instances of a similar spirit ; and his sole claim to immortality, like that of many an other, is founded upon his impudence.


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CHAPTER IV.


THE ATTACK ON FORT CAROLINE .- 1565.


THE troops, having heard mass, marched out in order, preceded by twenty Biscayans and Asturians having as their captain Martin de Ochoa, a leader of great fidelity and bravery, furnished with axes to open a road where they could not get along. At this moment there arrived two Indians, who said . that they had been at the French fort six days before, and who "seemed like angels " to the sol- diers, sent to guide their march. Halting for refresh- ment and rest wherever suitable places could be found, and the Adelantado always with the van- guard, in four days they reached the vicinity of the fort, and came up within less than a quarter of a league of it, concealed by a grove of pine trees. It rained heavily, and a severe storm prevailed. The place where they had halted was a very bad one, and very marshy ; but he decided to stop there, and went back to seek the rearguard, lest they might lose the way.


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About ten at night the last of the troops arrived, very wet indeed, for there had been much rain during the four days ; they had passed marshes with the water rising to their waists, and every night there was so great a flood that they were in great danger of losing their powder, their match-fire, and their biscuit ; and they became desperate, cursing those who had brought them there, and themselves for coming.


Menendez pretended not to hear their complaints, not daring to call a council as to proceeding or returning, for both officers and soldiers went forward very inquietly. Remaining firm in his own resolve, two hours before dawn he called together the Master of the Camp and the Captains, to whom he said that during the whole night he had sought of God and his most Holy Mother, that they would favor him and instruct him what he should do, most advan- tageous for their holy service ; and he was persuaded that they had all done the same. " But now, Gentle- men," he proceeded, “ we must make some determin- ation, finding ourselves exhausted, lost, without ammunition or provisions, and without the hope of relief."


Some answered very promptly, "Why should they waste their time in giving reasons ? for, unless they returned quickly to St. Angustine, they would


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be reduced to eating palmettos ;* and the longer they delayed, the greater trouble they would have."


The Adelantado said to them that what they said seemed very reasonable, but he would ask of them to hear some reasons to the contrary, without being offended. He then proceeded-after having smoothed down their somewhat ruffled dispositions, consider- ably disturbed by their first experience in encounter- ing the hardships of such a march-to show them that the danger of retreat was then greater than an ad- vance would be, as they would lose alike the respect of their friends and foes. That if, on the contrary, they attacked the fort, whether they succeeded in taking it or not, they would gain honor and reputa- tion.


Stimulated by the speech of their General, they demanded to be led to the attack, and the arrange- ments for the assault were at once made. Their French prisoner was placed in the advance ; but the darkness of the night and the severity of the storm rendered it impossible to proceed, and they halted in a marsh, with the water up to their knees, to await daylight.


At dawn, the Frenchman recognized the country,


* A low palm, bearing an oily berry.


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and the place where they were, and where stood the fort ; upon which the Adelantado ordered them to march, enjoining upon all, at the peril of their lives, to follow him; and coming to a small hill, the Frenchman said that behind that stood the fort, about three bow-shots distant, but lower down, near the river. The General put the Frenchman into the custody of Castaneda. He went up a little higher, and saw the river and one of the houses, but he was not able to discover the fort, although it was ad- joining them ; and he returned to Castaneda, with whom now stood the Master of the Camp and Ochoa, and said to them that he wished to go lower down, near to the houses which stood behind the hill, to see the fortress and the garrison, for, as the sun was now up, they could not attack the fort without a reconnoisance. This the Master of the Camp would not permit him to do, saying this duty appertained to him ; and he went alone with Ochoa near to the houses, from whence they discovered the fort ; and returning with their information, they came to two paths, and leaving the one by which they came, they took the other. The Master of the Camp discovered his error, coming to a fallen tree, and turned his face to inform Ochoa, who was following him; and as they turned to seek the right path, he stopped in advance, and the sentinel discovered them, who


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imagined them to be French; but examining them he perceived they were unknown to him. He hailed, " Who goes there ?" Ochoa answered, "French- men." The sentinel was confirmed in his supposition that they were his own people, and approached them ; Ochoa did the same ; but seeing they were not French, the sentinel retreated. Ochoa closed with him, and with his drawn sword gave him a cut over the head, but did not hurt him much, as the sentinel fended off the blow with his sword ; and the Master of the Camp coming up at this moment, gave him a thrust, from which he fell backwards, making a loud outcry. The Master of the Camp, putting his sword to his breast, threatened him with instant (leath unless he kept silence. They tied him there- upon, and took him to the General, who, hearing the noise, thought the Master of the Camp was being killed, and meeting with the Sergeant-major, Fran- cisco de Recalde, Diego de Maya, and Andres Lopez , Patino, with their standards and soldiers, without being able to restrain himself, he cried out, "San- tiago ! Upon them ! Help of God, Victory ! The . French are destroyed. The Master of the Camp is in their fort, and has taken it." Upon which, all rushed forward in the path without order, the General remaining behind, repeating what he had said many times ; himself believing it to be certain


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that the Master of Camp had taken with him a con- siderable force, and had captured the fort.


So great was the joy of the soldiers, and such their speed, that they soon came up with the Master of the Camp and Ochoa, who was hastening to receive the reward of carrying the good news to the General of the capture of the sentinel. But the Master of the Camp, seeing the spirit which animated the sol- diery, killed the sentinel, and cried out with a loud voice to those who were pressing forward, " Com- rades ! do as I do. God is with us; " and turned, running towards the fort, and meeting two French- men on the way, he killed one of them, and Andres Lopez Patino the other. Those in the environs of the fort, seeing this tragedy enacted, set up loud outcries ; and in order to know the cause of the alarm, one of the French within opened the postern of the principal gate, which he had no sooner done than it was observed by the Master of the Camp ; and throwing himself upon him, he killed him, and entered the gate, followed by the most active of his followers.


The French awakened by the clamor, some dressed, others in their night-clothes, rushed to the doors of their houses to see what had happened; but they were all killed, except sixty of the more wary, who escaped by leaping the walls.


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Immediately the standards of the Sergeant Major and of Diego Mayo were brought in, and set up by Rodrigo Troche and Pedro Valdes Herrera, with two cavaliers, at the same moment. These being hoisted, the trumpets proclaimed the victory, and the bands of soldiers who had entered opened the gates and sought the quarters, leaving no Frenchman alive.


The Adelantado hearing the cries, left Castaneda in his place to collect the people who had not come up, who were at least half the force, and went him- self to see if they were in any danger. He arrived at the fort running ; and as he perceived that the soldiers gave no quarter to any of the French, he shouted, "That at the penalty of their lives, they should neither wound nor kill any woman, cripple, or chikl under fifteen years of age." By which seventy persons were saved, the rest were all killed.


Renato de Landonnière, the Commander of the fort, escaped, with his servant and some twenty or thirty others, to a vessel lying in the river.


Such is the Spanish chronicle, contained in Barcia, of the capture of Fort Caroline. Its details in the main correspond with the account of Laudonniere, and of Nicolas Challeux, the author of the letter printed at Lyons, in France, under date of August, 1566, by Jean Saugrain. In some important particulars, how-


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ever, the historians disagree. It has been already seen that Menendez is represented as having given orders to spare all the women, maimed persons, and all children under fifteen years of age. The French relations of the event, on the contrary, allege that an indiscriminate slaughter took place, and that all were massacred without respect to age, sex, or condition ; but as this statement is principally made upon the authority of a terrified and flying soldier, it is alike due to the probabilities of the case, and more agreeable to the hopes of humanity, to lessen somewhat the horrors of a scene which has need of all the palliation which can be drawn from the slightest evidences of compassion on the part of that stern and bigoted leader.


The Spanish statement is further confirmed by other writers, who speak of a vessel being dispatched by Menendez subsequently to carry the survivors to Spain.


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CHAPTER V.


ESCAPE OF LAUDONNIERE AND OTHERS FROM FORT CAROLINE: ADVENTURES OF THE FUGITIVES.


THE narratives of this event are found singularly full, there being no less than three accounts by fugi- tives from the massacre. The most complete of these is that of Nicolas de Challeux, a native of Dieppe, which was published in the following year. I have largely transcribed from this quaint and curious nar- rative, not only an account of the fullness of the de- tails, but also for the light it throws upon the habits of thought and modes of expression of that day, when so much was exhibited of an external religious faith, and so many were found who would fight for their faith when they refused to adhere to its require- ments. There are apparent, also, a close study of the Scriptures, a great familiarity with its language, a frequent use of its illustrations, and a disposition to attribute all things, with a reverent piety, to the direct personal supervision of the Almighty. With the aid of the map accompanying the succeeding chapter, it will not be difficult to trace the perilous


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route of escape pursued by De Challeux and his com- panions, over obstacles much magnified by the terror of the moment and want of familiarity with the country :-


" The number of persons in the fort was two hundred and forty, partly of those who had not re- covered from sea-sickness, partly of artisans and of women and children left to the care and diligence of Captain Laudonnière, who had no expectation that it was possible that any force could approach by land to attack him. On which account the guards had withdrawn for the purpose of refreshing themselves a little before sunrise, on account of the bad weather which had continued during the whole night, most of our people being at the time in their beds sleeping. The wicket gate open, the Spanish force, having tra- versed forests, swamps, and rivers, arrived at break of day, Friday, the 20th September, the weather very stormy, and entered the fort without any resistance, and made a horrible satisfaction of the rage and hate they had conceived against our nation. It was then who should best kill the most men, sick and well, women and little children, in such manner that it is impossible to conceive of a massacre which could equal this for its barbarity and cruelty.


"Some of the more active of our people, jumping from their beds, slipped out and escaped to the ves-


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sel in the river. I was myself surprised, going to my duty with my clasp-knife in my hand; for upon leaving my cabin, I met the enemy, and saw no other means of escape but turning my back, and ma- king the utmost possible haste to leap over the pali- sades, for I was closely pursued, step by step, by a pikeman, and one with a partisan ; and I do not know how it was, unless by the grace of God, that my strength was redoubled, old man as I am and grey- headed, a thing which at any other time I could not have done, for the rampart was raised eight or nine feet ; I then hastened to secrete myself in the woods, / and when I was sufficiently near the edge of the wood at the distance of a good bow-shot, I turned towards the fort and rested a little time, finding my- self not pursued ; and as from this place all the fort, even the inner-court was distinctly visible to me, looking there I saw a horrible butchery of our men taking place, and three standards of our enemies planted upon the ramparts. Having then lost all hope of seeing our men rally, I resigned all my senses to the Lord. Recommending myself to his mercy, grace, and favor, I threw myself into the wood, for it seemed to me that I could find no greater cruelty among the sav- age beasts, than that of our enemy which I had seen shown towards our people. But the misery and an- guish in which I found myself then, straitened and


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oppressed, seeing no longer any means of safety upon the earth, unless by a special grace of our Lord, transcending any expectation of man, caused me to utter groans and sobs, and with a voice broken by distress to thus cry to the Lord :


"'O God of our fathers and Lord of all mercy! who hast commanded us to call upon Thee even from the depths of hell and the shades of death, promising forthwith thy aid and succor ! show me, for the hope which I have in Thee, what course I ought to take to come to the termination of this miserable old age, plunged into the gulf of grief and bitterness ; at least, cause that, feeling the effect of Thy mercy, and the confidence which I have conceived in my heart for Thy promises, they may not be snatched from me through fear of savage and furious wild beasts on one hand, and of our and Thy enemies on the other, who desire the more to injure us for the memory of Thy name which is invoked by us than for any other cause ; aid me, my God! assist me, for I am so troubled that I can do nothing more.' And while I was making this prayer, traversing the wood, which was very thick and matted with briars and thorns, beneath the large trees where there was neither any road nor path, scarcely had I trailed my way half an hour, when I heard a noise like men weeping and groan- ing near me ; and advancing in the name of God, and


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in the confidence of His succor, I discovered one of our people, named Sieur de la Blonderie, and a little behind him another, named Maitre Robert, well known to us all, because he had in charge the prayers at the fort. Immediately afterwards we found also the servant of Sieur d' Ully, the nephew of M. Le- breau, Master Jaques Trusse, and many others ; and we assembled and talked over our troubles, and de- liberated as to what course we could take to save our lives. One of our number, much esteemed as being very learned in the lessons of Holy Scripture, pro- posed after this manner: 'Brethren, we see to what extremity we are brought ; in whatever direction we turn our eyes, we see only barbarism. The heavens, the earth, the sea, the forest, and men,-in brief, no- thing favors us. How can ive know that if we yield to the mercy of the Spaniards, they will spare us ? and if they should kill us, it will be the suffering of but a moment ; they are men, and it may be that, their fury appeased, they may receive us upon some terms ; and, moreover, what can we do ? Would it not be better to fall into the hands of men, than into the jaws of wild beasts, or die of hunger in a strange land ? '


"After he had thus spoken, the greater part of our number were of his opinion, and praised his counsel. Notwithstanding, I pointed out the cruel


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animosity still unappeased of our enemies, and that it was not for any human cause of quarrel, that they had carried out with such fury their enterprise, but mainly (as would appear by the notice they had already giveîr us) because we were of those who were reformed by the preaching of the Gospel; that we should be cowards to trust in men, rather than in God, who gives life to his own in the midst of death, and gives ordinarily his assistance when the hopes of men entirely fail.


" I also brought to their minds examples from Scripture, instancing Joseph, Daniel, Elias, and the other prophets, as well also the apostles, as St. Pe- ter and St. Paul, who were all drawn out of much affliction, as would appear by. means extraordinary and strange to the reason and judgment of men. His arm, said I, is not shortened, nor in any wise en- feebled; his power is always the same. Do you not recolleet, said I, the flight of the Israelites before Pharaoh ? What hope had that people of escap- ing from the hands of that powerful tyrant ? He had them, as it were, under his heel. Before them they had the sea, on either side inaccessible moun- tains.


" What then ? He who opened the sea to make a path for his people, and made it afterwards to swallow up his enemies, can not he conduct us by 4


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the forest places of this strange country ? While thus discoursing, six of the company followed out the first proposition, and abandoned us to go and yield themselves up to our enemies, hoping to find favor before them. But they learned, immediately and by experience, what folly it is to trust more in men than in the promises of the Lord. For having gone out of the wood, as they descended to the fort they were immediately seized by the Spaniards and treated in the same fashion as the others had been. They were at once killed and massacred, and then drawn to the banks of the river, where the others killed at the fort lay in heaps. We who remained in the wood continued to make our way, and drawing towards the sea, as well as we could judge, and as it pleased God to conduct our paths and to straiten our course, we soon arrived at the brow of a mountain and from there commenced to see the sea, but it was still at a great distance; and what was worse, the road we had to take showed itself wonderfully strange and difficult. In the first place, the mountain from which it was necessary for us to descend, was of such height and ruggedness, that it was not possible for a person descending to stand upright; and we should never have dared to descend it but for the hope we had of sustaining ourselves by the branches of the bushes, which were frequent upon the side of the


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mountain, and to save life, not sparing our hands which we had all gashed up and bloody, and even the legs and nearly all the body was torn. But descending from the mountain, we did not lose our view of the sea, on account of a small wood which was upon a little hill opposite to us ; and in order to go to the wood it was requisite that we should traverse a large meadow, all mud and quagmire, covered with briars and other kinds of strange plants ; for the stalk was as hard as wood, and the leaves pricked our feet and our hands until the blood came, and being all the while in the water up to the middle, which redoubled our pain and suffering. The rain came down upon us in such manner from heaven, that we were during all that time between two floods; and the further we advanced the deeper we found the water.


" And then, thinking that the last period of our lives had come, we all embraced each other, and with a common impulse, we commenced to sigh and cry to the Lord, accusing our sins and recognizing the weight of his judgments upon us. ' Alas ! Lord,' said we, 'what are we but poor worms of the earth ? Our souls weakened by grief, surrender themselves into thy hands. Oh, Father of Mercy and God of Love, deliver us from this pain of death ! or if thou wilt that in this desert we shall draw our last breath, assist us so that death, of all things the


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most terrible, shall have no advantage over us, but that we may remain firm and stable in the sense of thy favor and good-will, which we have too often experienced in the cause of thy Christ to give way to the spirit of Satan, the spirit of despair and of dis- trust; for if we die, we will protest now before thy Majesty, that we would die unto thee, and that if we live it may be to recount thy wonders in the midst of the assembly of thy servants.' Our prayers concluded, we marched with great difficulty straight towards the wood, when we came to a great river ·


which ran in the midst of this meadow; the channel was sufficiently narrow but very deep, and ran with great force, as though all the field ran towards the sea. This was another addition to our anguish, for there was not one of our men who would dare to undertake to cross over by swimming. But in this confusion of our thoughts, as to what manner to pass over, I bethought myself of the wood which we had left behind us. After exhorting my comrades to patience and a continued trust in the Lord, I re- turned to the wood, and cut a long pole, with the good-sized clasp-knife which remained in my hand from the hour the fort was taken; and I returned to the others, who awaited me in great perplexity. 'Now, then, comrades,' said I, 'let us see if God, by means of this stick, will not give us some help to




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