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Brief History of St. Augustine (beginning in 1565)
Founded in 1565, St. Augustine is the oldest continuously
occupied settlement of European origin in the United States.
Forty-two years before the English colonized Jamestown and
fifty-five years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth
Rock, the Spanish established at St. Augustine this nation's
first enduring settlement.
The architectural legacy of the city's past is much younger,
testimony to the impermanent quality of the earliest structures
and to St. Augustine's troubled history. Only the venerable
Castillo de San Marcos, completed in the late seventeenth
century, survived destruction of the city by invading British
forces in 1702.
Vestiges of the First Spanish Colonial Period (1565-1764)
remain today in St. Augustine in the form of the town plan
originally laid out by Governor Gonzalo Méndez de
Canzo in the late sixteenth century and in the narrow streets
and balconied houses that are identified with the architecture
introduced by settlers from Spain. Throughout the modern
city and within its Historic Colonial District, there remain
thirty-six buildings of colonial origin and another forty
that are reconstructed models of colonial buildings.
St. Augustine can boast that it contains the only urban
nucleus in the United States whose street pattern and architectural
ambiance reflect Spanish origins.
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