History
of Fernandina Beach
THE EIGHT FLAGS OF AMELIA ISLAND
Native American bands associated with the Timucuan
mound-building culture settled on the island circa 1000
which they called Napoyca. They would remain on Napoyca
until the early 18th century.
FRENCH FLAG
French Huguenot explorer Jean Ribault becomes the first
(recorded) European visitor to Napoyca in 1562, which he
names Isle de Mar. In 1565, Spanish forces led by Pedro
Menendez de Aviles drive the French from northeastern
Florida, slaughtering Ribault and approximately 350 other
French colonists.
SPANISH FLAG
In 1573, Spanish Franciscans establish the Santa Maria
mission on the island, which is named Isla de Santa Maria.
The mission was abandoned in 1680 after the inhabitants
refuse a Spanish order to relocate. British raids force the
relocation of the Santa Catalina de Guale mission on St.
Catherine's Island, Georgia, to the abandoned Santa Maria
mission on the Island in 1685. In 1702, this mission was
again abandoned when South Carolina's colonial governor,
James Moore, leads a joint British-Indian invasion of
Florida.
ENGLISH FLAG
Georgia's founder and colonial governor, James Oglethorpe,
renames the island "Amelia Island" in honor of princess
Amelia (1710-1786), King George II's daughter, although the
island was still a Spanish possession. After establishing a
small settlement on the northwestern edge of the island,
Oglethorpe negotiates with Spanish colonial officials for a
transfer of the island to British sovereignty. Colonial
officials agree to the transfer, but the King of Spain
nullifies the agreement. The Treaty of Paris in 1763
ratifies Britain's victory in the Seven Years' War, ceding
Florida to Britain in exchange for Havana and nullifying all
Spanish land grants in Florida. The Proclamation of 1763
established the St. Mary's River as East Florida's
northeastern boundary.
SPANISH FLAG
In 1783, the Second Treaty of Paris ends the Revolutionary
War and returns Florida to Spain. British inhabitants of
Florida had to leave the province within 18 months unless
they swore allegiance to Spain. In 1811, surveyor George J.
F. Clarke plats the town of Fernandina, named in honor of
King Ferdinand VII of Spain.
PATRIOT FLAG
With the approval of President James Madison and Georgia
Governor George Mathews in 1812-1813, insurgents known as
the "Patriots of Amelia Island" seize the island. After
raising a Patriot flag, they replace it with the United
States Flag. American gunboats under the command of
Commodore Hugh Campbell maintain control of the island until
Spanish pressure forces their evacuation in 1813.
GREEN CROSS OF FLORIDA FLAG
Spanish forces erect Fort San Carlos on the island in 1816.
Led by Gregor MacGregor in 1817, a Scottish-born soldier of
fortune, 55 musketeers seize Fort San Carlos, claiming the
island on behalf of the "Green Cross."
MEXICAN REBEL FLAG
Spanish soldiers force MacGregor's withdrawal, but their
attempt to regain complete control is foiled by American
irregulars organized by Ruggles Hubbard and former
Pennsylvania congressman Jared Irwin. Hubbard and Irwin
later join forces with the French-born pirate Luis Aury, who
lays claim to the island on behalf of the Republic of
Mexico. U. S. Navy forces drive Aury from the island, and
President James Monroe vows to hold Amelia Island "in trust
for Spain."
CONFEDERATE FLAG
On January 8, 1861, two days before Florida's secession,
Confederate sympathizers (the Third Regiment of Florida
Volunteers) take control of Fort Clinch, already abandoned
by Federal workers who had been constructing the fort.
General Robert E. Lee visits Fort Clinch in November 1861
and again in January 1862, during a survey of coastal
fortifications.
UNITED STATES FLAG
Union forces, consisting of 28 gunboats commanded by
Commodore Samuel Dupont restore Federal control of the
island on March 3, 1862 and raise the American Flag. |
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