The Threshold of Manifest Destiny: Gender and National Expansion in Florida
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In The Threshold of Manifest Destiny, Laurel Clark Shire illuminates the vital role women played in national expansion and shows how gender ideology was a key mechanism in U.S. settler colonialism.
Among the many contentious frontier zones in nineteenth-century North America, Florida was an early and important borderland where the United States worked out how it would colonize new territories. From 1821, when it acquired Florida from Spain, through the Second Seminole War, and into the 1850s, the federal government relied on women's physical labor to create homes, farms, families, and communities. It also capitalized on the symbolism of white women's presence on the frontier; images of imperiled women presented settlement as the spread of domesticity and civilization and rationalized the violence of territorial expansion as the protection of women and families.
Through careful parsing of previously unexplored military, court, and land records, as well as popular culture sources and native oral tradition, Shire tracks the diverse effects of settler colonialism on free and enslaved blacks and Seminole families. She demonstrates that land-grant policies and innovations in women's property law implemented in Florida had long-lasting effects on American expansion. Ideologically, the frontier in Florida laid the groundwork for Manifest Destiny, while, practically, the Armed Occupation Act of 1842 presaged the Homestead Act.
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The Threshold of Manifest Destiny - Laurel Clark Shire
The Threshold of Manifest Destiny
EARLY AMERICAN STUDIES
Series Editors
Daniel K. Richter, Kathleen M. Brown, Max Cavitch, and David Waldstreicher
Exploring neglected aspects of our colonial, revolutionary, and early national history and culture, Early American Studies reinterprets familiar themes and events in fresh ways. Interdisciplinary in character, and with a special emphasis on the period from about 1600 to 1850, the series is published in partnership with the McNeil Center for Early American Studies.
A complete list of books in the series is available from the publisher.
THE THRESHOLD OF MANIFEST DESTINY
Gender and National Expansion in Florida
Laurel Clark Shire
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
PHILADELPHIA
Copyright © 2016 University of Pennsylvania Press
All rights reserved.
Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.
Published by
University of Pennsylvania Press
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112
www.upenn.edu/pennpress
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress
ISBN 978-0-8122-4836-4
For Linda Barnes Clark and Judith Coren Williams
CONTENTS
Note on Terminology
Introduction. Expansionist Domesticity and Settler Colonialism in Florida
Part I. Slavery, Indian Removal, and Expansionist Domesticity
Chapter 1. Property, Settlement, and Slavery
Chapter 2. Innocent Victims of a Savage
War
Chapter 3. Seminole Resistance
Part II. Gender and Pro-Settler Policy
Chapter 4. Turning Sufferers into Settlers
Chapter 5. Gender and Settler Colonialism
Conclusion. The Garden and the Spear
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
NOTE ON TERMINOLOGY
I have elected to refer to people of African descent in this book as black
rather than African American
because they were not all born in the Americas. I refer to those who were enslaved as enslaved
persons rather than slaves
because slavery was a social and legal condition put upon them by whites, not an essential aspect of their being or identity. I refer to people indigenous to North America as Native Americans
or indigenous
people or (when accurate) by tribal affiliation (such as Seminole) but rarely as Indians.
I use Indian
only when referring to U.S. policies and practices that used that label in the nineteenth century, such as Indian removal
policy or U.S. Indian agent.
INTRODUCTION
Expansionist Domesticity and Settler Colonialism in Florida
In 1841 a young widow named Elizabeth Berry joined a group of white settlers that the U.S. Army deployed to recolonize north Florida. On August 17, Berry and her children, along with three other families and five single men, moved into blockhouses at Fort White. The U.S. military had constructed the fort in 1836 to protect a nearby settlement from Seminole attacks. By August 1841 the army had abandoned it, but military leaders hoped that installing white families there—the same kind of people the fort had been constructed to protect—would similarly discourage Seminole resistance. It was one of a dozen sites targeted by the army for reoccupation in the winter of 1841. By early 1842, however, the settlers had also deserted Fort White (one army officer blamed the whiskey trade), so Elizabeth Berry and her children moved again. For the second time, she found an opportunity for her family that also served national interests, and they settled near a former Seminole town at Chucochatti, where white settlers had made a successful colony with U.S. military support in February 1842.¹ Elizabeth Berry’s story illustrates that making homes in Florida was a political act carried out by white families supported by federal policies, and that white women were key actors in settler colonialism.
Prior to U.S. colonization, Florida was not an uninhabited frontier; it was a prosperous agricultural region where five thousand Native Americans and hundreds of Africans and their descendants lived. In 1823, an American trader visited Chucochatti and several other towns in the region northeast of Tampa Bay, where autonomous Seminoles and Black Seminoles (a group whose status varied from freedom to a form of slavery) had flourished since the mid-eighteenth century. They raised livestock, planted crops in the region’s fertile savannahs, and sold their excess produce on the Spanish colonial market. Two turbulent decades later, white families had taken over Chucochatti and much of the rest of Florida. Early in the Second U.S.-Seminole War, American forces burned it along with many other Seminole towns. Several years later soldiers escorted white settlers there, including a handful of widowed or single women like Elizabeth Berry. Many of these early settlers (male and female) filed for free land just after the war under a new homestead law called the Armed Occupation Act (AOA). By 1850 there were 604 whites and 324 enslaved blacks living at Chucochatti, and the region had been renamed Benton County in honor of pro-expansion Missouri senator Thomas Hart Benton, who had championed the new land law. Several waves of U.S. military, Indian, and welfare policies had wrested this productive corner of the continent from Native peoples and installed white families and enslaved blacks on it.²
At each stage of Florida’s transition from Seminole villages to American farmland, Americans mobilized white women like Berry to support their efforts. Such women provided material labor and cultural support for the growing American settlements in Florida. They represented national growth as the spread of domesticity and civilization and rationalized the violence of territorial expansion as the protection of white American women and their homes. American journalists, settlers, and politicians also told and retold stories that placed white women into threatened homesteads in Florida. Indian depredation
narratives enabled white Americans to paint the territory as their home, where autonomous Native American and black people threatened their property. Within that rhetorical context, those who predated U.S. settlers in Florida became invaders, while white Americans, who took possession of already settled land, became the victims. Americans naturalized this startling reversal by using racialized notions of civilization and savagery in proximity to white women and children, who were always presumed to be vulnerable innocents. Thus stories about Seminole men’s attacks on white women relied on a highly gendered ideology of female vulnerability and domesticity to frame white frontier settlers as innocent homemakers, repurposing domesticity for Manifest Destiny. In this way, white women’s domestic work in Florida provided needed physical, material, and reproductive labor and served the fundamentally ideological process of claiming Florida as home to white Americans (many of them slave owners) and not home to Seminole and free black families and communities.
This book examines the central role that gender (masculinity and femininity as understood through domesticity) and race (particularly through white women) together played in the effort to turn Florida into an American place. In the period from 1821, when the United States acquired Florida from Spain, through the Second U.S.-Seminole War (1835–1842) and the decades beyond, American leaders and settlers used white men’s and women’s physical labor to create homes, farms, families, and communities. The colonization of Florida illustrates how gender ideology—domesticity as well as masculinity—abetted settler colonialism in the early nineteenth-century United States.
Settler Colonialism
As the first territory added after the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and a frontier that attracted many white migrants in the 1820s, Florida was on the threshold of Manifest Destiny. One of several early experiments in expansion, the aggressive white colonization of Florida provided Americans with a place to test various cultural and political methods of supporting national growth. White settler colonization turned out to be the most effective method, supported by federal policies that granted land to white families.
Settler colonialism in North America began with European colonial ventures. It continued after 1783 in the early U.S. republic in the southern and midwestern borderlands that would become states such as Kentucky, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri. While white settlement proceeded differently in each context, American settler colonialism shares much with European colonization elsewhere. In settler colonies such as the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Brazil, Europeans expanded their empires through the settlement of families—men and women—who created permanent, mixed societies in which whites dominated native peoples.³
In settler colonies, outsiders (white Europeans in many cases) invaded a place and used political, cultural, and economic structures to transform it into their space, turning themselves into its natives.
Intending to stay permanently, settlers used legal and military methods to take and control the land. They also participated in a legal fiction that turned land into property that could be exclusively claimed by (white) individuals under colonial legal structures. Rather than claiming colonial space in the name of a monarch, however, settler colonists often declared their own sovereignty over the land. Many eventually asserted formal or informal independence from their empires of origin (as the United States did in 1776). The permanence of invading white settler families resulted in a perpetual conquest. While whites enjoyed land and citizenship in new territories, for the Native Americans coerced out of these lands, and the Mexicans and blacks denied basic rights and freedoms within them, U.S. expansion hardly felt like liberation. The settler/invaders never left, and indigenous survivors still live under colonial rule in settler societies, as Seminole and Mikasuki peoples do in Florida today.⁴
Unlike other kinds of imperial regimes, large numbers of women from the invading culture helped to colonize settler colonies, providing vital domestic and reproductive labor to create homes and reproduce white families and society. Settler women’s work was essential to colonial efforts to dispossess indigenous peoples because they created settlements that were both permanent and dominated by white cultural norms (albeit hybrid colonial ones, distinct from both European and indigenous North American cultures). Other than the presence of a large number of white women, settler colonies were similar to other colonies, and to varying degrees most combined the appropriation of Native land with resource extraction and forced labor.⁵
White settler colonialism in North America placed Native Americans and people of African descent in different positions. Settler societies shared what theorists call a logic of elimination
regarding indigenous peoples. White settlers rendered land available to themselves by eliminating indigenous peoples; they engaged in violent campaigns to exterminate, assimilate, or segregate indigenous peoples who held prior claims to the space. By contrast, displaced populations of subordinated or enslaved people supplied the labor force needed to build a new society on that land and extract profit from it to benefit the white ruling class. The importation of an alienated and subaltern labor force was fully compatible with settler colonialism, as racial slavery was in the United States. Racial hierarchy arose from white settler colonies’ needs for land and labor, which relied on eliminating indigenous peoples and enslaving Africans.⁶
In the United States, settlers often began to unofficially colonize territory through passive, instead of active, expansionist policy. Rather than sending out settlers formally charged with civilizing conquered territory (although it eventually resorted to that in Florida), typically the U.S. government just failed to prevent settlers from squatting on lands in contact zones, and it later granted them preemption (the right to purchase land before auction) or even free public land. When, inevitably, violence erupted between white squatters and Native Americans, national leaders did not directly bear the burden of responsibility. Thus the government could rhetorically pursue peace with indigenous groups (or assimilation) even as its unofficial colonial army (white settler families) encroached on their lands. The young and cash-poor federal government slowly won more territory without having to officially declare simultaneous wars against all the indigenous peoples in its borderlands, and white settlers acquired more and more land through preemption and other generous federal land policies—policies framed as Jacksonian Free-Soilism, not imperialism. Of course, on many occasions violence between whites and Native Americans in frontier zones erupted to such a degree that the government had to intervene, usually when white encroachment had provoked Native resistance that resulted in the widely reported killing of white settler families. At such points, the U.S. military or state militias, sent to put down indigenous resistance, could be framed as protecting national borders and defending white women and children from the Native Americans, which conveniently made aggressive expansion look like defensive peacekeeping. Land recently wrested from Native Americans and (in the South) open to slavery was the tacit reward for aggressive, individualistic, entrepreneurial behavior. Settler colonist
may sound more innocent than imperialist invader,
but white settlers were far from harmless.⁷
Florida’s history produced a unique version of settler colonialism. Many groups had laid claim to Florida before 1821, so the territory that Americans acquired in 1821 was already home to European colonists, autonomous Native Americans, and free blacks. This mixed population made Americans extremely anxious about their southern border; these groups might ally with foreign empires, or each other, and invade the United States or launch an insurrection against American slavery. A brief summary of Florida’s past reveals who lived there on the eve of transfer to the United States in 1821, how these different constituencies provoked white American anxiety, and how each would either be coopted or driven out to make way for American settlers and their enslaved labor force in the decades that followed. White settler colonization, enabled by white women’s labor in multiple ways, represented a solution to the threat Americans believed Florida’s indigenous and colonial population posed.
Indigenous people had lived in Florida long before Europeans arrived there, but disease, warfare, and the slave trade devastated Florida’s first peoples between the 1500s and the 1700s. Beginning in the early eighteenth century, several groups came south to populate this recently emptied region and founded villages in the panhandle and in the interior of north central Florida. Whites began calling all the Native Americans in Florida the Florida Indians and the Seminoles in the late eighteenth century, but indigenous Floridians did not think of themselves as part of one group at that point. Some historians believe that the name Seminole originated from the Spanish word cimarron, meaning runaway.
Others believe it derives from a Muscogee Creek word for wild plants and animals. By 1821 their settlements included at least five thousand Native American people as well as several hundred people of African descent. By the outbreak of the Second U.S.-Seminole War in 1835, the Florida Indians
lived in four regional political communities—Apalachicola, Apalachee, Alachua, and Mikasuki—which were largely autonomous from each other. These groups were also distinct from the Muscogee Creeks (their nearest ancestral relatives) and Europeans. They were farmers and traders who understood kinship through matrilineal clans. Some of them claimed the tribute of enslaved black laborers, which granted them increased status, much as the labor of captives had enriched indigenous peoples in the Southeast for centuries.⁸
In addition to the indigenous people who lived there, there were also a few thousand people of European ancestry. Multiple European rulers had claimed Florida, an attractive territory due to its long coastlines and its strategic location between British and Spanish colonies, close to the Caribbean. The Spanish made the first permanent European settlement at St. Augustine in 1565. Its European population remained tiny (fewer than five thousand people), and by the mid-1700s Spain still exerted little authority outside of St. Augustine. At the end of the French and Indian War in 1763 Great Britain claimed Florida, and most members of the small Spanish colonial population (approximately three thousand people) departed. The British combined part of Louisiana with Florida to create two provinces, East and West Florida, and designated capitals at St. Augustine and Pensacola. The British hoped to encourage the development of profitable plantations in the Floridas and pursued peaceful relations with Native American groups to stabilize them. British colonist Andrew Turnbull, for example, recruited 1,403 Mediterranean laborers (mainly from Minorca) in 1767–1768 to work on his sugar plantation at New Smyrna. Turnbull’s experiment with European contract workers failed when disease, grueling labor, violent overseers, and indigenous attacks killed nearly half of them, and the survivors abandoned the plantation in 1777. In St. Augustine the colonial government gave them land. By 1786, their families made up half of the population of St. Augustine and over 70 percent of its white population, because these contract laborers became white
there, as in other colonies where there were few Europeans and many people of indigenous and African ancestry. Few other British planters were permanently successful, and although Loyalists fleeing the American Revolution added to British Florida’s colonial population, most of Florida remained beyond European authority during the British period. Twenty years later, at the end of the American Revolution, East and West Florida returned to Spanish rule, and many of the British colonists evacuated. As the nineteenth century began, Napoleon occupied Spain, weakening it and opening its empire up to nationalist revolutions, which soon spread across South and Central America. Spain therefore had few resources to invest in controlling Florida. As a result, throughout the Second Spanish period (1783–1819), populations of autonomous Native and black people controlled parts of East and West Florida.⁹
There was a significant population of free blacks in Florida because its tenuous position as a barely fortified outpost of the Spanish empire had encouraged liberal immigration policies toward nonwhites since the First Spanish Period. Spain had welcomed runaway slaves and granted them freedom if they converted to Catholicism, swore loyalty to Spain, and helped protect Florida. The Spanish Crown also encouraged slave owners to manumit their slaves and incorporate them into a three-caste society of whites, free blacks, and enslaved blacks. This system allowed individuals to become free so as to discourage a collective uprising of enslaved people. Black and mixed-race residents of Spanish Florida participated in its social and economic life, and the Spanish governor of Florida sent hundreds of them to build and to occupy a fort two miles north of St. Augustine in 1738. Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose, or Fort Mose, became the first free black town in North America sanctioned by a European power.¹⁰
In addition to the free blacks who lived among European colonists, in the early nineteenth century there were five hundred or more blacks (called estelusti by the indigenous people) living among the Native peoples of Florida. Some were runaways or their descendants who had escaped slavery sometime in the past two centuries, while others came into Seminole towns through the trade in enslaved people. They occupied and could move between several different social roles, including spouse, adopted kin, ally, and tributary slave. The Seminoles did not categorically treat enslaved blacks as chattel property. Some of the Black Seminoles, whom elite Seminoles inherited, purchased, or gave as gifts, were treated as property. However, unlike enslaved blacks among American whites, the estelusti lived with their own families in Seminole villages or in four separate, but allied, towns where they elected their own leaders, owned property, carried weapons, and chose their own spouses. If they desired to acculturate fully into Seminole society, blacks might do so through intermarriage or even adoption into a clan. The black towns, like all other Seminole and Creek towns, gave tribute and military alliance to the leaders of their mother towns, in exchange for which they received protection and trade privileges. Since Creek and Seminole towns were highly autonomous, having separate towns actually made the estelusti more like Seminoles and Creeks. In other ways the Black Seminoles maintained their own culture, practicing Christianity and speaking their own language (as well as English and indigenous languages), but they shared with Seminoles similar agricultural and building methods, clothing styles, some religious practices, and very clear political and military interests. The Second U.S.-Seminole War solidified their alliance due to their common interest in defeating the Americans so that the Seminoles might retain their lands and the Black Seminoles their freedom. Though contemporary whites were concerned about the status of the Indian negroes
in Florida, the Seminoles were not preoccupied about it. Kinship ties as part of clans or extended families, not status as black, white, or Indian, were the most important categorization for them, at least in the early nineteenth century. Native Floridians thus challenged slavery organized by race even as they practiced a form of it.¹¹
Much to the displeasure of American slaveholders, no single regime dominated outside of St. Augustine and Pensacola in the early nineteenth century, and Spain’s weak presence left autonomous Native Americans and blacks in the Floridas free to ally with the British, whom the United States was already fighting on its northern frontier in the 1810s. Florida’s mixed population also made American slaveholders very nervous. These anxieties drove repeated U.S. invasions of Florida in the 1810s. The Americans lacked a viable legal reason to intervene in Spanish territory, however, and had to withdraw after each invasion prior to 1818, leaving Florida outside of American control. That changed in early 1818 when Andrew Jackson, using reports of Indian depredations
on white settlers along the Florida-Georgia border as an excuse, led a large American military force (composed of regulars, volunteers, and Lower Creek warriors) into Florida, destroying indigenous villages throughout Middle Florida and capturing thousands of cattle and hundreds of bushels of corn. The Americans began the First U.S.-Seminole War in cultural terms that would become even more familiar in the next twenty years. Cloaking expansionist aggression as self-defense, Jackson justified his actions as vengeance for the deaths of white women and children even as he targeted Seminole homes and families. He defended the invasion as vital to American national interests, since Spain had failed to rid the southeastern borderlands of threats to U.S. sovereignty by autonomous Native Americans, black runaways from slavery, and British agents who aided these groups. Although Jackson’s campaign was militarily successful, the Seminoles were too smart to engage his larger force, and most survived to fight another day. Nevertheless, Jackson had exposed Spain’s weakness. Treaty negotiations with Spain began in 1819 and Florida officially transferred to the United States in 1821. U.S. forces had finally claimed Florida, but it would take several more decades of war on its indigenous people, and white settler colonialism, before the Americans would fully control the territory.¹²
Due to its unique colonial and indigenous past and its location in the southern borderlands, Florida’s version of white settler colonialism differs from that in other contemporary U.S. territories. Much as U.S. economic forces influenced local economies in other Native North American communities, Americans quickly sought profits in Florida. Due to Florida’s location in the Southeast, however, the economic interests of slaveholders and land speculators prevailed over those of traders, and early U.S. policy toward Florida focused on removing the threats posed by autonomous Seminoles and free blacks rather than sustaining trade relationships. Thus American rule quickly marginalized the Seminole trade economy. Furthermore, while the expansion of market capitalism touched all American territories in the nineteenth century, the expansion of white settlement usually accompanied the spread of market capitalism in the borderlands. Yet large numbers of American squatters had not settled in Florida prior to 1821, making its colonization different from the process in many other early American frontier territories. While in Illinois and Georgia, for example, white squatters demanded violent federal efforts to remove indigenous residents in the 1830s in order to secure their
property (in the Black Hawk War and the Cherokee Removal from Georgia), in Florida the impetus for the First U.S.-Seminole War, which finally forced Spain to cede Florida to the United States, came from slaveholders rather than squatters. Andrew Jackson obliged them and invaded Florida because doing so extended his anti-Indian campaign into Florida and removed the British-Seminole alliance that had threatened the United States during the War of 1812. After 1821 white settlers flooded into upper Florida, and land speculation was popular there; however, the Second U.S.-Seminole War—brought on by Jackson’s removal agenda in the 1830s—soon discouraged many potential immigrants. In response to the scarcity of immigrants, American leaders enacted several policies during and right after the Second U.S.-Seminole War to attract white settler families to the unsettled parts of Florida in order to pressure the Seminoles to leave. They made policies that enlisted white women in colonization in order to replicate the settlement process unfolding in other territories, realizing that war and removal alone could not accomplish the same colonial goal: permanent settlement.¹³
In other respects, Florida is similar to other American settler colonies built in former Spanish colonial borderlands. In Missouri, as in Florida, the United States removed Native Americans in the early nineteenth century as thousands of white settlers arrived there (with the enslaved laborers they claimed as property) hoping to gain some of the cheap or free public land on offer from the U.S. government. In Texas and New Mexico, lawmakers passed similar public land bills, hoping to attract white settler families as they had done in Florida. Compared to Texas and New Mexico, Florida’s southeastern coastal location and its population distinguish it, for it had far fewer white settlers than Texas did by the time of the 1836 rebellion, and a much smaller indigenous population than the New Mexico territory included when the Americans captured it (and the rest of Northern Mexico) in the U.S.-Mexico War of 1846–1848. Pro-settler land policies shaped the white colonization of all these places, and white settler women played an important role in the settler colonialism of all these states, even though their locations and demographics varied.¹⁴
Most settler colonies, including Florida and other U.S. states, justified imperial violence in the past and disavow it in the present through origin stories that frame settlement as natural, inevitable, or benevolent (for example, Manifest Destiny and the Thanksgiving story). Settler colonial accounts often cast particular imperial actors, such as the monarch, the metropolitan colonizer, and the ethnic cleanser, as the truly guilty parties, while they present settlers as persecuted migrants, refugees seeking asylum, or hardworking pioneers. In doing so, such accounts emphasize settlers’ hardships to justify their rewards, while downplaying their role in dispossessing Native peoples. In the United States, settler colonialism had to further distinguish itself from imperialism because the American Revolution left a legacy of anticolonial feelings. However, Americans did not reject colonizing new territory; they just called it something else—such as the spread of democracy. Their stories about territorial expansion sideline settler aggression toward indigenous peoples by focusing on the religious persecution or pioneering valor of the white settlers, who are the heroes and heroines of an inspiring story about overcoming adversity to bring civilization to the wilderness. The brave settlers’ sacrifices on the colonial frontier validate their entitlement to the land, which conveniently leaves indigenous peoples with prior claims outside of the main story. Settler stories intentionally marginalize the sustained legal and military battles that whites waged to claim Native land. When settler stories mention conflict with indigenous people, as in stories about Native attacks on white settlers, white narratives blame Native Americans for bringing it on themselves
(by violently resisting white encroachment), and thus frame indigenous exile or death as the inevitable fate of savages
who could not coexist with whites (eliding that it is wholly impossible to coexist with neighbors who want to remove or kill you).¹⁵
Although scholars rarely acknowledge it, the rhetorical frameworks that obscure imperial aggression in settler colonial origin stories often rely on gender. In Florida, female war refugees and hardy male farmers took center stage in the dramatic conflict between whites and Seminoles, and both of those images of Florida settlers helped to paint the naked aggression of Indian removal as a defensive policy to protect peaceful
settler families. White women especially allowed American expansion into Florida to disappear as chivalrous defense, and at the same time settler narratives naturalized homemaking as woman’s duty rather than framing it as imperialist action.
Few scholarly overviews of settler colonial theory analyze gender or examine white women as colonizers. Some lack any gender analysis, while others examine white masculinity or the way colonial regimes targeted indigenous men and women differently. Those insights are important and valuable, but such accounts are incomplete because they do not include settler women and the ways that domestic work drove the political and geographic success of white settlements. As Margaret Jacobs notes, We must move beyond merely adding (white) women to a simple narrative of heroic triumph over adversity.
Rather, settler women must be understood as colonizers who were simultaneously complicit with and subordinated by colonial regimes.¹⁶
There is a growing literature that fully incorporates women and gender, alongside race, class, and nation, in analyses of the colonial past. Many of these studies build on the insights of postcolonial theorist Ann Laura Stoler, who argues in Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power that colonial regimes invaded intimate spaces and harnessed gender, race, and sexuality to their imperial mission. Margaret Jacobs’s White Mother to a Dark Race, Adele Perry’s On the Edge of Empire, and Lora Wildenthal’s German Women for Empire take up these intimacies of empire
in settler colonies. These studies put gender and settler women at the center of the colonial encounter. They broaden theories of settler colonialism and challenge previous scholarship in women’s history that tended to romanticize settler women as pioneers rather than critically analyze white women as a colonizing force. In order to fully appreciate the role that white women played in imperial expansion, one must frame white female settlers’ labor in its colonial context and excavate the roots of the white woman pioneer
in the narratives that settler societies tell in order to disavow their own imperial pasts. This book joins with these studies to hold white women accountable for their role in settler colonialism and the violence that inhered in it. It contributes to the literature on gender and settler colonialism by critically focusing on white women as actors in a settler colony. It further enriches and complicates settler colonial theory by illustrating how the racial logic of elimination
intersected with gender: settler colonialism placed women of different races in different positions based on its need for particular kinds of labor as well as land. It depended on the domestic and reproductive power that American culture granted white women to make permanent settlements and to camouflage colonial violence. It also relied on the elimination of indigenous women and the matrilineal societies they reproduced through their children. Finally, white settlers depended on the reproductive and physical labor of enslaved black women, which made slavery profitable and sustainable. It targeted white, indigenous, and enslaved black women and their reproductive power in different ways in order to support settler colonialism.¹⁷
Due to the narratives that frame settler colonialism as innocent, it can be hard to recognize its imperialist essence. American exceptionalism—the notion that America was different and better than European empires—tends to further obscure this in the U.S. case. Previous generations of U.S. historians argued that the United States was never imperialist so long as its territorial acquisitions were contiguous annexations within the continent; but that argument no longer holds. Scholars of U.S. settler colonialism describe it as a violent imperial mode under which Indian removal and genocide laid the groundwork for subsequent U.S. foreign policy and imperialism. Diplomatic historians now recognize that various iterations of imperial ideology operated well before and after the era of the U.S.-Mexico War, from the expansionist logic among the founding generation of American leaders, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams in particular, to the Latin American filibusters of the 1850s and to the U.S. occupation of Haiti, Cuba, and the Philippines in the 1890s.¹⁸
While histories of American settler colonialism usually include Florida, its significance in the development of U.S. expansionism has never been fully explored, in part due to the old myth that contiguous expansion was not imperialist. Historians also have overlooked it because the United States acquired it long before Manifest Destiny (the ideology that God intended for the growing population of white Americans to spread over all of North America, bringing Christianity, democracy, and capitalism to improve it) entered popular speech in the 1840s. The U.S. colonization of Florida began in the 1820s, as whites moved west into Missouri and other parts of the Louisiana Purchase, and at nearly the same moment that Moses Austin brought the first Anglo settlers into Mexican Tejas; thus Florida deserves as much recognition in the development of Manifest Destiny. If anything, the colonization of Florida and Missouri led the way, as both were already American territories by the time Cora Montgomery coined the term Manifest Destiny
in the United States Magazine and