Inscription
In the closing phases of the First Seminole War (1817-1818), a U.S. supply boat was attacked by Creek Indians. The boat was ascending the Escambia River from Pensacola in Spanish West Florida, and was bound for Fort Crawford in the American Alabama Territory. The attack prompted Major White Young at Fort Crawford to launch an April 1818 assault by American forces into Spanish West Florida, the target being several Creek encampments on Bayou Texar that were only a mile away from Pensacola.
Without Creek warriors present to protect them, Young’s assault on Bayou Texar resulted in the massacre of around 30 Creek women and children. This massacre partially prompted U.S. Army General Andrew Jackson to march his troops westward from St. Marks. In May 1818, Jackson captured Pensacola and the Spanish fortifications, which brought an end to the major military events in the war and convinced Spain of the futility of holding onto their colony of Florida.
Location
Sources
More markers in Escambia
Middle Passage To Pensacola/ African Presence In Colonial Pensacola
Pensacola, FL
Side One: Beginning in the early 1500s and continuing for more than three centuries, about 12 million enslaved Africans were transported...
Christ Episcopal Church
Pensacola, FL
Christ Church, founded in 1827, was incorporated by the Legislative Council of the Territory of Florida in 1829.
First Jewish House Of Worship In Florida
Pensacola, FL
Jewish families in Pensacola began organized worship following the Civil War.
North Hill Preservation District
Pensacola, FL
The North Hill Preservation District occupies a 50-block area bound by Blount, Wright, Palafox, DeVilliers and Reus Streets, and...
Trader Jon's
Pensacola, FL
This building was erected in 1896 and rented to numerous businesses until the 1950s.
