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On
September 8, 1565, with much pomp and circumstance and 600
voyagers cheering, Menéndez set foot on the shores
of Florida. In honor of the saint whose feast day fell on
the day he first sighted shore, Menéndez named the
colonial settlement St. Augustine. Menéndez quickly
and diligently carried out his king's instructions. With
brilliant military maneuvering and good fortune, he removed
the French garrison and proceeded to consolidate Spain's
authority on the northeast coast of Florida. St. Augustine
was to serve two purposes: as a military outpost, or PRESIDIO,
for the defense of Florida, and a base for Catholic missionary
settlements throughout the southeastern part of North America.
Maintaining St. Augustine as a permanent military colony,
however, was a mighty task. Without the courage, perseverance,
and tenacity of the early settlers, it is doubtful that
the community would have survived.
English pirates and corsairs pillaged and burned the town
on several occasions in the next century. Clashes between
the Spaniards and the British became more frequent when
the English colonies were established in the Carolinas,
and later, in Georgia. The Spanish moved to strengthen their
defenses, beginning in 1672 construction of a permanent
stone fortress. The Castillo de San Marcos was brought to
completion late in the century, just in time to meet an
attack by British forces from the Carolinas in 1702. Unable
to take the fort after a two-month siege, the British troops
burned the town and retreated. In 1740, an even stronger
attack was mounted by the Governor of the British colony
of Georgia, General James Oglethorpe. He also failed to
take the fort.
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