Mauricio de Zúñiga explained

Mauricio de Zúñiga
Order:11th Spanish Governor of West Florida
Term Start:July 1812
Term End:April 1813
Predecessor:Francisco San Maxent
Successor:Mateo González Manrique
Order2:14th Spanish Governor of West Florida
Term Start2:March 1816
Term End2:15 September 1816
Predecessor2:José de Soto
Successor2:Francisco San Maxent
Birth Date:18th century
Birth Place:El Prat de Llobregat, in Baix Llobregat (Barcelona Province, Catalonia, Spain)
Death Date:1816
Profession:Military and Administrator (governor of West Florida)

Mauricio de Zúñiga (died 1816) was a Spanish military officer who served as governor of West Florida from 1812 to 1813, and again in 1816.

Early years

Mauricio de Zúñiga was born in the 18th century, probably in El Prat de Llobregat, in Baix Llobregat (Barcelona Province, Catalonia, Spain). As a youth, he joined the Spanish army, where he rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel.[1] [2]

Political career

In July 1812, Zúñiga was appointed governor of West Florida,[3] and moved to its capital, Pensacola. He served in that office till April 1813.

In 1814, during the War of 1812, the British Royal Marines established what became known as the Negro Fort on Prospect Bluff along the Spanish side of the Apalachicola River.[4] The garrison initially included around 1,000 Britons and several hundred persons of African descent. Shortly after the end of the war in 1815, the British withdrew from the post and left the black population in occupation. Over the next few years the fort became a colony for escaped slaves from Pensacola, St. Augustine, and Georgia.[5]

After Zúñiga resumed the governorship of West Florida in March 1816, Andrew Jackson, commander of the Southern Military Division of the United States,[6] wrote him and demanded that the Spanish authorities immediately intervene to destroy or remove the denizens of the fort and the surrounding community of escaped slaves and Indians.[7] Although Zúñiga did not have enough troops to deploy and drive them out, he did send Captain Sebastián Pintado to investigate the matter and recover any runaway slaves who belonged to the Spanish.[8] [9]

Zúñiga, who wanted to maintain good relations with the Native Americans of Florida (who would be outraged if the Negro Fort was attacked) and, at the same time, wanted to avoid a military invasion by Jackson, replied that he also was concerned about the fort, but awaited instructions from his superiors what to do about the matter. Soon afterward, however, someone from the fort fired shots at an American supply ship. This gave Jackson the excuse he needed to order the attack and destruction of the fort by General Edmund P. Gaines on July 27. 1816, in which almost all of its residents were killed.[10] Nevertheless, the number of runaway slaves from Georgia who subsequently fled to Florida was still significant.[11]

Zúñiga's term as governor ended on 15 September 1816, and he died near the end of that year.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Vázquez Cienfuegos, Sigfrido (2007). Comportamiento de las tropas veteranas e Cuba a principios del siglo XIX (In Spanish: Behavior of veteran troops and Cuba in the early nineteenth century). Universidad de Sevilla. Number 19, p. 98.
  2. Richard K. Murdoch. A British Report on West Florida and Louisiana, November, 1812. The Florida Historical Quarterly. July 1964. 43. 1. 45.
  3. Ben Cohoon. U.S. States F-K.
  4. Web site: A Guide to the General Duncan Lamont Clinch Family Papers . J. Sean McCormick . University of Florida . University of Florida . uflib.ufl.edu . April 2007.
  5. Book: Jane G. Landers. Richmond F. Brown. Coastal Encounters: The Transformation of the Gulf South in the Eighteenth Century. 1 December 2007. U of Nebraska Press. 978-0-8032-1393-7. 109–110.
  6. Book: Carol H. Behrman. Andrew Jackson. 1 September 2002. Twenty-First Century Books. 978-0-8225-0093-3. 71.
  7. Book: Deborah A. Rosen. Border Law. 6 March 2015. Harvard University Press. 978-0-674-96761-8. 20.
  8. Jane Landers. Translated into Spanish by Germán Rodrigo Mejía Pavony. Resistencia y Manumisión: Cimarrones africanos e indios en la frontera española con los Estados Unidos. Memoria y Sociedad. November 2003. 7. 15. 30. 24 February 2018. Resistance and Manumission. Spanish. pdf.
  9. Book: Jane Landers. Atlantic Creoles in the Age of Revolutions. 1 February 2010. Harvard University Press. 978-0-674-03591-1. 123.
  10. Book: Albert Marrin. Old Hickory:Andrew Jackson and the American People: Andrew Jackson and the American People. 16 December 2004. Penguin Young Readers Group. 978-1-101-12685-1. 109.
  11. Book: Liz Sonneborn. The Acquisition of Florida: America's Twenty-seventh State. 1 January 2009. Infobase Publishing. 978-1-4381-1979-3. 48–49.