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Historians
credit Juan Ponce de Leon, the first governor of the Island
of Puerto Rico, with the discovery of Florida in 1513. While
on an exploratory trip in search of the fabled Bimini he
sighted the eastern coast of Florida on Easter Sunday, which
fell on March 27 that year. Ponce de Leon claimed Florida
for the Spanish Crown and named it Florida after the Easter
season, known in Spanish as PASCUA FLORIDA. This newly claimed
territory extended north and west to encompass most of the
known lands of the North American continent that had not
been claimed by the Spanish in New Spain (Mexico and the
Southwest).
In the following half century, the government of Spain launched
no less than six expeditions attempting to settle Florida;
all failed. In 1564 French Huguenots (Protestants) succeeded
in establishing a fort and colony near the mouth of the
St. Johns River at what is today Jacksonville. This settlement
posed a threat to the Spanish fleets that sailed the Gulf
Stream beside the east coast of Florida, carrying treasure
from Central and South America to Spain. As Don Pedro Menéndez
de Avilés was assembling a fleet for an expedition
to Florida, the French intrusion upon lands claimed by Spain
was discovered. King Philip II instructed Menéndez,
Spain's most capable admiral, to remove the French menace
to Spain's interests.
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