Castillo de San Marcos
Castillo de San Marcos
Castillo de San Marcos
San Marcos
Castillo
FEDERAL
PUBLICATION
Official National
Park Handbook
Handbook 149
Using
this
Handbook
is located
continuously inhabited community
founded by Europeans in the United States. This
handbook tells the intercultural story of the long
Castillo
in the longest
de
San Marcos
Castillo
Produced by the
Division of Publications
Washington, D.C.
>.
******
...
**
'a*l*'
-**.
Florida
maps of a
city that
is
now
in
Pages
2-3:
From
de San Marcos is
readily apparent: no wall or
approach is unguarded.
Castillo
On May
It
was a
vessel
To the
came the usual answers: Friends
from Mexico come aboard! Two shots from the
routine questions
Tomorrow
Unknown
come ashore.
when the launch
to the townspeople,
of pirates
surrender.
Some
fUBLIC DOCUMENTS
DEPOSITORY ITEM
JUL 20
1994
CLEMSON
UBJityRY
weak from
On
wounded
ransomed
prisoners.
released prisoners identified the invaders as
English and told how the enemy had carefully sounded
the inlet, taken its latitude, and noted the landmarks.
Thev intended to come back and seize the fort and
The
make
it
shipping.
Florida, a
Drake s attack on
Augustine was part of the
growing hostilities between
Spain and England that culminated in the attack of the
Spanish Armada on England
two years later. Drake was
Sir Francis
St.
Spain
>ain,
in
Pacific
\r\
\Lago
\Nicaragua
Oc e a n
Portobelp
Territorial claims,
748
Spanish
English
French
Spanish trade
route
The
silver fleet
where
it
was transshipped
Panama
to
NEW
ENGLAND
,
Port
CAROLINA
Royal
Jamestown-
~~V-j J/
Roanoke
rrnsy
Island
Savannah
Atlantic
Ocean
Virgin
Islands
ID'
V
Margarita
one
the seas.
Its
nobles strove for possessions beyond the seas. Jamestown, despite its inauspicious beginning, was soon
followed by the settlements in New England and
elsewhere. Between the James River and Spanish
Florida stretched a vast, rich territory too tempting
to ignore, and in 1665 Charles II of England granted
a patent for its occupation. The boundaries of the
new colony of Carolina brazenly included some
hundred miles or more of Spanish-occupied land
even St. Augustine itself!
The
signs
were
clear:
The
was
inevitable.
10
hind, as Floridians
knew from
bitter experience.
if
made
which we would
resist,
with
11
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of rock were
quarried.
damp when
To show her commitment to the proposed construction, the Queen Regent appointed Sgt. Maj. Don
Manuel de Cendoya, a veteran of 22 years service, as
successor to Governor Guerra.
In Mexico City Cendoya followed Queen Mariana's
orders and delivered his message to the viceroy, the
Marquis de Mancera. Florida's defenses were to be
strengthened at once with a main castillo at St.
Augustine, a second fort to protect the harbor entrance, and a third to prevent troop landings. Initial
estimates were that the project would cost 30,000
pesos. At this point came the news of the English
settlement at Charleston, and Cendoya at once suggested a fourth fort at Santa Catalina.
The viceroy's finance council finally decided to
allot 12,000 pesos to begin work on one fort. If
suitable progress were made, they would consider
sending 10,000 yearly until completion. The question
of additional forts would be referred to the crown.
Cendoya had to be satisfied with this arrangement
and a levy of 17 soldiers. He left for Florida, making
a stop at Havana where he sought skilled workers.
There he also found an engineer, Ignacio Daza.
On August 8, 1671, a month after Cendoya's
arrival in St. Augustine, the first worker began to
draw pay. By the time the mosquitoes were sluggish
in the cooler fall weather, the quarrymen had opened
coquina pits on Anastasia Island, and the lime
burners were building two big kilns just north of the
old fort. The carpenters put up a palm-thatched
shelter at the quarry, built a dozen rafts for ferrying
stone, firewood, and oyster shells for the limekilns
across the water. They built boxes, handbarrows, and
carretas the long, narrow, hauling wagons as well.
The blacksmith hammered out axes, picks, stonecutters' hatchets, crowbars, shovels, spades, hoes,
wedges, and nails for the carpenters. The grindstone
screeched as the cutting edge went on the tools.
Indians at the quarry chopped out the dense
13
shaped the
soft
coquina
for the
masons.
and changed
By
Although the
Stone masons were the most
skilled and highly paid laborers
who worked on the Castillo.
real
14
15
names Bernardo
Spanish
Fitzpatrick),
Contreras, by
whom
father-in-law
four
a dol-
"bit
Charles
says that
were com-
He was to be garroted. On the appointed day Ransom ascended the scaffold. The executioner put the
rope collar about his neck. The screw was turned 6
times and the rope broke! Ransom breathed again.
While the onlookers marveled, the
friars
took the
governor that
this
man was an
ingenious fellow, an
a carpenter, and what was most remarkable, a maker of "artificial fires" fire bombs. Ransom
was offered his life if he would put his talents to use
artillerist,
He agreed and, like Collins, was exceedingly helpful. Twelve years later, church authorities finally agreed that the sanctuary granted by the
parish pastor was valid. At last Ransom was free of
the garrote.
All told, between 100 and 150 workers on the construction crew labored in those first days of feverish
preparations. They, along with some 500 others
at the Castillo.
16
men
supplied.
soil,
few.
as did beans
to start building.
The new
fort,
though somewhat
more recent
ideas,
larger.
Daza recommended
slight
17
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,4
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Sres-Zte
'^S^O
Don Manuel
October 1672
de Cendoya, Governor and
Captain General of these
provinces for Her Majesty
began
with spade in hand
the foundation trenches for
.
About
"
Queen Mariana.
more than a month later on Wednesday,
November 9, Cendoya laid the first stone of the
foundation. The people of St. Augustine must have
ing ceremonies for
Little
wept
soldiers
who had
the
19
could be finished
20
place than
St.
Augustine
amount because
them
and
21
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Ml
j-jjfefcj
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s&^A
WKjf
UIS
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1 \*/|
li^j^Jcil
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...
Archeology,
in
one of its
24
human
the final blow to his pride was a terse order from the
crown to stick strictly to Daza's plan for the Castillo.
Yet the old warrior did not give up. Eventually the
The
on hand
to
make
sure
reins of government.
part of the
work was the San Pablo bastion, where the level had
been miscalculated. The sally port had its drawbridge and iron-bound portal, and another heavy
door closed the postern in the north curtain. Permanent rooms that would go along the curtain walls
were
25
Saint Augustine
Although Saint Augustine was
primarily a military outpost intended to protect Spain's dominion over Florida and the
community as well,
their families.
Except for
50 years. Archeo-
logical investigations
show
that almost
View
and
women
ida.
came to
Flor-
local
initially
than
more
in St.
George Street
*2**
Spanish
diet,
thing that
The town
was
out
according to ordinances dictated by the Spanish government in 1 563, resulting in a
itself
laid
Spain intended
St.
Augustine
be a permanent settlement,
not a mere outpost on the
fringes of empire. In the 1 8th
century, indeed, it had become
a vibrant community that numto
all in-
adapted to the
New World,
work
moat wall.
The 1680s were turbulent
Timucua.
Work on the
too
On March
30,
came
first.
and anchored
at
the
inlet
in
unfinished Castillo.
28
ness, such as
heathen Indians to raid mission Indians. Furthermore, it was in land recognized as Spanish even by
the English monarch.
So in September 1686, Marquez sent Captain
Alejandro Tomas de Leon, with orders to destroy the
colony, which he did. He then sacked and burned
Governor Joseph Morton's plantation on Edisto Island.
III,
showing
29
The
Castillo
Bastions
ters built
built
up
lib
Guard Rooms
Augustine was a garrison
town and no one lived inside
St.
the Castillo.
When soldiers
Storage
Rooms
rice, flour,
could be used
in
time of siege.
<\ *
was
religion, slavery
good diligence."
Soon there was more black labor for both fields
and fortifications. From the Carolina plantations, an
occasional slave would slip away and move southward along the waterways. In 1687 a small boat
loaded with nine runaways made its way to St.
Augustine. The men found work to do and the
tine with rejoicing "for his
women
servants.
It
baptism.
A few months later, William Dunlop came from
Charleston in search of them. Governor Quiroga,
reluctant to surrender converted slaves, offered to
buy them for the Spanish crown. Dunlop agreed to
the sale, even though the governor was as usual short
of cash and had given him a promissory note. To seal
the bargain, Dunlop gave one of the slaves, a baby
girl, her freedom. Later the crown liberated the
others.
32
in a
knotty problem.
First,
commerce with
illegal.
hHh
IE
mMm
si
the founding.
Until the outworks could be finished, the Castillo
was vulnerable to siege guns and scaling ladders.
Nevertheless it was impossible to push the heavy
work of quarrying, lumbering, and hauling at this
crucial time. There were too many other pressures.
Belatedly trying to counteract English gains and
strengthen their own ties with the Indians, the Spaniards built a fort in the Apalachecola country. Unfortunately the soldiers had to be pulled back to
St. Augustine when Spain declared war on France
in 1689.
came
from Havana and Campeche, the solon handouts from the townspeople.
To lessen the chances of famine in the future,
ally
diers
had
in
to live
33
The Drawbridge
up the drawbridge was
locking the door. Once it
was pulled up flush against the
walls and the portcullis the
heavy grating made of solid
Pulling
like
bored
rotated
it,
drums to
causing the
revolve.
The
and
lifting
chains,
lift its
And where was better than the broad cleararound the fort? Acres of waving corn soon
covered the land almost up to the moat. When the
crown heard of these plantings, back to Florida came
a royal order banning corn fields within a musket
shot of the Castillo. A whole army could hide in the
tall corn without being seen by the sentries!
A new governor, Don Laureano de Torres y Ayala,
arrived in 1693. At the outset he had to deal with
hostilities between St. Augustine and Charleston
nearby.
ings
hostilities that
in
mocked
Europe.
35
more
details.
44-45,
The
in
coming. Relations with France had become peaceful, but incursions by the English-led Indians kept
the backcountry inflamed. As tensions increased,
Gov. Jose de Zuniga y Cerda looked at the St.
Augustine defenses with an experienced eye. Zuniga
knew, after a military career spanning 28 years, that
strong walls were not enough. The Castillo's guns
were ancient and obsolete many of them unserviceable. The powder from Mexico so fouled the gun
barrels that after "four shots, the Ball would not go in
the Cannon." Arquebuses, muskets, powder, and
shot were in short supply.
Once again Captain Ayala sailed directly to Spain
to ask for aid.
It
for the
War
Moore
of Carolina lost
He settled down
more artillery from Jamaica,
and thus matters stood when four Spanish men-ofwar arrived and blocked the harbor entrance, bottling up Moore's fleet of eight small vessels. Moore
ill-equipped to besiege the Castillo.
to await the arrival of
burned
37
Augustine
in ashes,
its
people
survived.
in 1714.
The
threat to St.
38
Selected attacks
^Pt
English
ifk
Spanish
ij&
French
CAROLI
iarleston
(670, 1706
N A
1706
Edisto Island,
1706
Settlement
Royal, 1686
N ,-1'r
*$%#
ad^d
English to 1700
&**
^Savannah
Spanish
of Madrid, 1 670, aimed at
stopping the Spanish-English contest
along the South Atlantic coast by
confirming Spanish claims as far north
as 3230". The English agreed to this
but within a few years continued their
push southward. Savannah, settled in
1733, was well within Spanish territory.
The Treaty
J'f<
Santa Catalina
ort
1680
King George
ort Frederica,
GEORGIA
Island,
1742
LU
St.
Simons
Island,
1742
<
CD
Atlantic
Ocean
Marys
Santa Maria
Island,
1683
n Juan de Puerto,
San
Carlos,
1693
^SanPedro de
Patale,
1704
ubale 1704
ijk$y
aV)
-\
Matanzas
1683,1740,1741,1742,
Matanzas
W&.
Santa Cptalina
de Wuica,
1685
North
100 Kilometers
100 Miles
yJtt
Santa Fe,
in Florida before they decided to attack him. Oglethorpe had his work cut out for
him, because the Castillo was
superbly sited. Creeks and
marshes protected it to the
west and south. On the east
the bay stretched to a shallow
up batteries there.
Some troops were on the mainland where they had seized vacant Fort Mose, a free black
setting
his
forces could attack one segment before it could be reinforced by the other two. This
is exactly what the Spaniards
did, overwhelming the British
force at Fort Mose. Undecided
about further land attack, the
British then began shelling the
Castillo and the town from
their siege batteries in a bombardment that lasted 27 days.
But the British mortars and
siege guns were too far away
to be totally effective and the
damage they did was slight.
Some of the newer stonework
sarily tired
&
-/..
and money.
and masonry
vaults, to withstand English bombs, would replace
the rotting beams of old rooms in the Castillo.
Stronger outworks would be built, too. To supervise
the project, Engineer Pedro Ruiz de Olano came
from Venezuela. The work began in April 1738
rather inauspiciously. The master of construction,
one Cantillo, was a syphilitic too sick to earn his
16-real daily wage. Much of his work fell to his
assistant, a Yl-real master mason. All six stonecutters were Negroes. One was an invalid, and none of
them as yet had much skill with coquina. For moving
stone, there was but one oxcart. The labor gang 52
convicts was too small. Nevertheless, quarry and
kiln hummed with activity, and in the Castillo the
crash of demolition echoed as the convicts pulled
down old structures and began trenching for the new
bombproof s. They started on the east, because this
side faced the inlet where enemy action was likely.
soldiers, artisans, convicts, provisions,
The
walls
As
would be raised
five feet
Havana
stonecutting dragged.
Luckily, a
door
let in light
and
air.
43
Ordnance
Forts are often described with
like impregnable, unassailable, grim, invulnerable,
and redoubtable. These descriptions often came about
words
because
of their
armaments.
A strategically positioned
with a
full
fort
complement of weap-
for-
was extremely
Basically
all
difficult.
Guns fired
their projectiles in
The
first artillery
made of forged
pieces were
-oC
1.
2.
3.
Sponge
Powder ladle
4.
5.
Scraper
6.
7.
Worm
24-pounder cannon
16-pounder cannon
12-pounder cannon
8.
9.
1 0.
1 1
cator, Invincible,
Destroyer
are a few
what guns
were used where and when.
Guns were classified by the
torians investigating
<"
Tools for
The
Guns
residue.
amount of powder
needed into the chamber. The
scraper removed any powder
the exact
These
illustrations
Morla's
Madrid
in 1803.
The
with a
fill
War of Jenkins'
Ear.
Havana
46
The Mechanics
of a Siege
Military engineers built forts
for several reasons: to protect
from falling
disciplined science,
and his
in-
would be dug
and parallels
or be stormed. Conducting
a textbook perfect siege did
not always result in success,
for the fort !s defenders would
not have been idle. They
would fire cannon at the sappers. Often they dug counter
trenches out from the fortress
Mortar
\
1st Parallel
fire
"
Line of attack
ing forces.
weaken
fort walls.
3rd Parallel
Fort's
Defenses
OUTER WORKS
Glacis
Attackers
Covered Way
Moat
INNER FORT
j
Ravelin
Rampart
Moat
Parapet
Scarp
^H
Magazine
Well
The
old
rooms
still
On
The
attackers
numbered almost
1,400, including
and Indian allies. While the warships blockaded the harbor on the east, William Palmer came in
from the north with a company of Highlanders and
occupied the deserted outpost called Fort Mose.
Oglethorpe landed his men and guns on each side of
the inlet and began building batteries across the bay
from the Castillo.
Montiano saw at once that all the English positions were separated from each other by water and
could not speedily reinforce one another. Fort Mose,
at the village of the black runaways a couple of miles
north of the Castillo, was the weakest. At dawn on
June 26 a sortie from St. Augustine hit Fort Mose,
and in the bloodiest action of the siege scattered the
Highlanders and burned the palisaded fortification.
Colonel Palmer, veteran of Florida campaigns, was
sailors
originally
opened
sky and fell swiftly to burst with terrific concussion. The townspeople fled, 2,000 of them, some to
the woods, others to the covered way where Castillo
walls screened them from the shelling.
48
July 6
provisions.
had been
built.
to withdraw.
British
49
6*
oaoDato lancto.
Le&ioEpiftolaebeatiPauliApo- nit Maria Magdalene,
&
alters^
olol.
rite,
&
ubiChnftus eft
Dei fedens
Mor- eum
tui
enim
eftis,
veftra
tunc
erat
ficut fulgur
Ciim Chriftus
ficut nix.
& veftime'ntu
ejus
timore aute
ejus
Prae
&
fad
apparuerit ,
funtvelutmortui.
Refpondeni
vos appardbitis
&
crucifixus eft
Surrexd
Venke, vidi
:
&
Alle
to
ja.
nus. Etcit6euntes,dicitedifci
pulis ejus, quia furrexit. Etecci
praecedit vos in Gahlaea: ibi eun
H.1.
117.
tfUt
lit.
& BUfcipe,quaefumusD6mine
ternuni.
lemore.
nobis medelam,teoperan
Fra3fatiO.TequidemD6mincom
ni
tat infra in
Canone.
Infra actionem.
The End
Beyond the
military aspects,
which were so
of
an Era
Governor Alonso Fernandez de Heredia, stood under the royal coat of arms at the sally port as the
masons
out on the
truth there
was
still
feet
51
now
mathematics
Havana, to
Pedro Brozas.
St. Augustine had only 25 convicts for labor, but
when work began on July 27, 1762, many soldiers and
townspeople sensed the urgency, for Havana was
already besieged, and volunteered to help. Since
much of the project was a simple but strenuous task
of digging and moving a mountain of sand from
borrow pit to earthwork, all able-bodied people were
welcome. The volunteers did, in fact, contribute
labor worth more than 12,000 pesos. The only paid
workers were the teamsters driving the 50 horses that
hauled the fill. Each dray dumped 40 cubic feet of
earth, and the hauling kept on until the covered way
had been raised five more feet to its new height.
The masons soon finished a stone parapet, six feet
high, for the new covered way. With this wall in
at the military college in
moved
52
fill
masons
ravelin.
They never
started
its
53
land;
It is
this
One by
after 1702.
now
was re-dug. In
bomb-
was regimental
troops were quar-
headquarters and
tered in Fort
St.
many redcoated
Mark.
By October 1776
the British
forces for repeated use against the rebellious colonials to the north.
The damp
of these colonists.
54
number
held
among more
that have
digs in
Even
In the settlement after the Revolution, the Spaniards did indeed recover Florida,
and on July
12,
new pine
at the
Castillo-
56
The fort's name was also changed, for the Americans chose to honor Gen. Francis Marion, Revolutionary leader and son of the very colony against
whose possible aggression San Marcos had been
Congress restored the original name in 1942,
almost 20 years after the fort had been designated a
built.
monument.
Heavy doors and
national
and Nina
visit St.
Augustine
in 1992.
Now
people
57
m**,
^-mm-jy*-
m
v
>.-
id
Adviser
.**
'
'
St.
Augustine
is
settlers
southeastern
You may
write:
Drawer
economy
in the
on
20th
in St.
Augustine where Flagler College occupies the former Hotel Ponce de Leon
at
streets
and
in the
George Street, a pedestrian walkway between Castillo Drive and Cathedral Place, is lined with shops and
restaurants of every type and descripSt.
George
Street.
Along
this street a
num-
tion
city
are.
Inquire at the
St.
at the cor-
61
is
administered by the
St.
Augustine
which there
museum
adjacent
a charge. The
the story of St.
is
tells
Mose, the
old-
United
Beaches
Florida A1A
to
some
States.
Accommodations
Visiting the Castillo
The Castillo de San Marcos is one of
the oldest structures in North America
built by Europeans. It is one of the few
links on this continent to early modern
Europe and a way of warfare that has
become obsolete. Park interpreters give
frequent programs at the fort telling its
history and explaining its construction.
They can answer questions you have
about the history of the area and about
related National Park System sites. You
may wish to walk around the Castillo
at your own pace; a free park folder
Some
city.
Information
is
available at the
For
fur-
62
Park System
sites
guard
St.
Fort Caroline
NMEM
Gulf
Islands
NS
Castillo
de San
Marcos
NM
Ft.
Matanzas
NM
De Soto
National Memorial
16390, Bradenton, FL
34280-5390.
No one knows exactly where Spanish
explorer Hernando de Soto landed
on Florida's west coast in 1539. This
park at the entrance to Tampa Bay
memorializes that landing and de Soto's
subsequent journeys of exploration
throughout the southeastern United
P.O.
Box
called Battery
from 1797.
It
one
is
in
on the story of
Augustine.
States.
Monument
Route
FL 32225.
The establishment
It
of a French colony
Menendez marched
to the
it,
Monument
9,
GA 31410.
was
at
Edward Oglethorpe
established a set-
HM
Monument,
Augustine,
1 Castillo
Drive, Saint
FL 32084.
soldiers
ment
in
Florida.
In
settle-
tine,
FL 32561.
The ravelin
63
all
those persons
production of
which
this
Marcos or
files
of the National
Park Service.
Karen Kasmauski
Ken
18,
49
2-3
35, 36, 38, 42, 48, 50, 52, 55, 57, 58-59, 60
U.S.
As
Department of the
Department of the
of our nationally-owned public lands and natural resources. This includes fostering sound use of our
land and water resources; protecting our fish, wildand biological diversity; preserving the environmental and cultural values of our national parks and
historical places; and providing for the enjoyment of
life,
life
as-
The Department
major responsibility for American Indian
reservation communities and for people who live in
island territories under U.S. administration.
also has a
917.59'
18-
Interior
de
San Marcos
Castillo
^^^J
uastmo ae
San Marcos