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The Florida Militia pursued Seminole who were outside the reservation boundaries. In the period prior to the Third Seminole War, the militia captured one man and a few women, and 140 hogs. One Seminole woman elder committed suicide while being held by the militia, after the rest of her family had escaped. The whole operation cost the state US ...
The circumstances of exactly how and why Jackson launched first Seminole War were made a campaign issue during the 1824 presidential campaign by Jesse Benton Jr., who shot Jackson in a bar brawl in 1813 as one incident in a much longer relationship between Jackson, Jesse Benton, and Thomas Hart Benton, later a Jacksonian Democratic U.S. Senator ...
During the First Seminole War, beginning in 1818, American forces under General Andrew Jackson advanced into northern Florida capturing Kinache's village of Miccosukee and occupying the Spanish settlement of St. Marks before destroying the Red Stick village of Peter McQueen at the Econfina River and Nero's town of maroons on the Suwannee River before reaching Bolek's (old town) abandoned village.
Fort Christmas – one in a series of four small, short lived forts built along the St. Johns River during the Seminole Wars. These forts were used to garrison troops and protect supplies during War. These forts were used to garrison troops and protect supplies during War.
The Seminoles in the Loxahatchee area in January 1838 were the same group of Seminoles who had just fought at the Battle of Lake Okeechobee a month earlier. Seminole historian Billy Bowlegs III stated that Chief Abiaka led this Seminole group after the battle to the coast of Palm Beach County in order to loot shipwrecks for valuable supplies of gunpowder, clothing, and food.
"The trial of Ambrister during the Seminole War: Florida" (illus. from 1848) The Arbuthnot and Ambrister incident occurred in April 1818 during the First Seminole War when American General Andrew Jackson invaded Spanish Florida and his troops captured two British citizens, Alexander Arbuthnot and Robert Ambrister, separately.
John Caesar (c. 1770s? – January 17, 1837) was a Black Seminole lieutenant and interpreter to Ee-mat-la, hereditary chief of the St. Johns River Seminoles in Florida. In Joshua Giddings' history of the wars against the Seminole, Caesar was described as "an old man and somewhat of a privileged character among both Indians and Exiles."
Duncan Lamont Clinch (April 6, 1787 – December 4, 1849 [1] was an American army officer and slave-plantation owner who served as a commander during the War of 1812, and First and Second Seminole Wars. In 1816, he led an attack on Negro Fort, the first battle of the Seminole Wars.