America's First True "Pilgrims"
An excerpt from Kenneth C. Davis's bestselling new book explains they arrived half a century before the Mayflower reached Plymouth Rock
- By Kenneth C. Davis
- Smithsonian.com, May 23, 2008, Subscribe
The first Pilgrims to reach America seeking religious freedom were English and settled in Massachusetts. Right?
Well, not so fast. Some fifty years before the Mayflower left port, a band of French colonists came to the New World. Like the later English Pilgrims, these Protestants were victims of religious wars, raging across France and much of Europe. And like those later Pilgrims, they too wanted religious freedom and the chance for a new life. But they also wanted to attack Spanish treasure ships sailing back from the Americas.Their story is at the heart of the following excerpt from America's Hidden History: Untold Tales of the First Pilgrims, Fighting Women, and Forgotten Founders Who Shaped a Nation.
It is a story of America's birth and baptism in a religious bloodbath. A few miles south of St. Augustine sits Fort Mantanzas (the word is Spanish for "slaughters"). Now a national monument, the place reveals the "hidden history" behind America's true "first pilgrims," an episode that speaks volumes about the European arrival in the Americas and the most untidy religious struggles that shaped the nation.
St. Augustine, Florida — September 1565
It was a storm-dark night in late summer as Admiral Pedro Menéndez pressed his army of 500 infantrymen up Florida's Atlantic Coast with a Crusader's fervor. Lashed by hurricane winds and sheets of driving rain, these 16th-century Spanish shock troops slogged through the tropical downpour in their heavy armor, carrying pikes, broadswords and the "harquebus," a primitive, front-loading musket which had been used with devastating effect by the conquistador armies of Cortés and Pizarro in Mexico and Peru. Each man also carried a twelve-pound sack of bread and a bottle of wine.
Guided by friendly Timucuan tribesmen, the Spanish assault force had spent two difficult days negotiating the treacherous 38-mile trek from St. Augustine, their recently established settlement further down the coast. Slowed by knee-deep muck that sucked at their boots, they had been forced to cross rain-swollen rivers, home to the man-eating monsters and flying fish of legend. Wet, tired and miserable, they were far from home in a land that had completely swallowed two previous Spanish armies—conquistadors who themselves had been conquered by tropical diseases, starvation and hostile native warriors.
But Admiral Menéndez was undeterred. Far more at home on sea than leading infantry, Admiral Menéndez drove his men with such ferocity because he was gambling—throwing the dice that he could reach the enemy before they struck him. His objective was the French settlement of Fort Caroline, France's first foothold in the Americas, located near present-day Jacksonville, on what the French called the River of May. On this pitch-black night, the small, triangular, wood-palisaded fort was occupied by a few hundred men, women and children. They were France's first colonists in the New World—and the true first "Pilgrims" in America.
Attacking before dawn on September 20, 1565 with the frenzy of holy warriors, the Spanish easily overwhelmed Fort Caroline. With information provided by a French turncoat, the battle-tested Spanish soldiers used ladders to quickly mount the fort's wooden walls. Inside the settlement, the sleeping Frenchmen—most of them farmers or laborers rather than soldiers—were caught off-guard, convinced that no attack could possibly come in the midst of such a terrible storm. But they had fatally miscalculated. The veteran Spanish harquebusiers swept in on the nightshirted and naked Frenchmen who leapt from their beds and grabbed futilely for weapons. Their attempts to mount any real defense were hopeless. The battle lasted less than an hour.
Although some of the French defenders managed to escape the carnage, 132 soldiers and civilians were killed in the fighting in the small fort. The Spanish suffered no losses and only a single man was wounded. The forty or so French survivors fortunate enough to reach the safety of some boats anchored nearby, watched helplessly as Spanish soldiers flicked the eyeballs of the French dead with the points of their daggers. The shaken survivors then scuttled one of their boats and sailed the other two back to France.
The handful of Fort Caroline's defenders who were not lucky enough to escape were quickly rounded up by the Spanish. About fifty women and children were also taken captive, later to be shipped to Puerto Rico. The men were hung without hesitation. Above the dead men, the victorious Admiral Menéndez placed a sign reading, "I do this, not as to Frenchmen, but as to Lutherans." Renaming the captured French settlement San Mateo (St. Matthew) and its river San Juan (St. John's), Menéndez later reported to Spain's King Philip II that he had taken care of the "evil Lutheran sect."
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Comments (39)
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well it is more useful then other information but we need more data about suttlement in America
Posted by loulou on February 3,2013 | 05:05 AM
I do not understand anything!!!!
Posted by peter lustig on September 24,2012 | 04:35 AM
After reading most of the comments about aliens,inmmigrants,foreigners,soldiers they are all the same in another's people land if they go there uninvited. I came here the same way the pilgrims did in search of a better life disobeying the inmigration laws. just like the pilgrims. someone will say theren't any laws when this pilgrims came in your homeland you have the rigth to say who stays and who leaves.why didi'nt the pilgrims leave then. because they had better weapons and figthing technics. so they were able to overpower the natives who own the land they lived in. the only thing they needed was a land title but that wasn't needed then since people honor their word. since politics weren't yet known till these so called "americans" created their own goverment to care for their wellbeen.build a big army and conquer the land. hope you let others read this. god bless the usa.
Posted by Remigio Verduzco on February 19,2011 | 11:31 PM
Regarding Lakota's comments on March 11, 2009.
Never, have I heard anyone put it any better.
I for one am a first generation American. Because I am, I too am a "Native American". I am not Swedish-American.
I am not responsible for any of the actions of my fellow countrymen that took place before I reached the age of reason. I can sympathize with those who were mistreated by "Americans" who came before me, but I will not accept blame or cause myself to feel guilt for actions I had nothing to do with. I accept and honor all those who are deserving of my respect and honor, but refuse to honor or respect those who are undeserving, regardless of their position in life.
Before I say anything that will "offend", I end with "God Bless America. If that offends, so be it.
Posted by FlatbushOkie on August 18,2010 | 09:45 PM
Well we should rename Thanksgiving to "Turkey Day", that's what most of the people I know call this day now.
I'm not being sarcastic... well maybe a bit.
Posted by joanne grand on July 22,2009 | 02:07 AM
I am part Sioux and part Cherokee - and all American. When I look at America's history and read the arguments about the Native American's being here first, I think many whites support Native peoples out of guilt from the past. I too struggled with this and have considered this for a long time. I have concluded that all mankind whether by evolution or creation originated in Mesopotamia. From there, and over time mankind migrated across the whole of the earth to establish tribes, cultures and societies on nearly every part of the continents. Somewhere, someplace and sometime, someone was first in a new land and migrated there. Everyone is an immigrant somewhere in the tree of history, save perhaps ancient mesopotamia. So I have to wonder, how long do a people have to occupy a land before they too are native? Or does native status only apply to the children of the first and original immigrants of a land? I ask that only to illustrate the folly of such logic. Considering these things, I have concluded in my heart that if you are born upon the land - then you are a native of that land. Many of you refer to us as Native American's and in some regards we are. But so are you. Your guilt and your politically correct terms keep us divided and set apart. Please, stop dividing us. Let us be one people and let the sins of the past finally rest in the graves of those who committed them. Native people's did some horrible things too. Our hands are not completely innocent, we merely lost - but that was hundreds of years ago. Today we are where we are. Lamenting the past will not change it. We, you and I, did not committ those sins. Our forefathers did, but we did not, so let us not wallow in the guilt thereof. Let us move forward as one America, as American's and build upon what we have now, and stop being halted and divided by the sins of our past.
Welcome to America. If you were born here, you too are a Native American. Let us stand together now and build!
Posted by Lakota on March 11,2009 | 08:57 AM
this is so fun learning about the first actual pilgrims i am really in to history exspecially this thanks a lot
Posted by megan on January 25,2009 | 06:26 PM
I am a full blood Cherokee living on the reservation in North Carolina. My people WERE NOT from India and so we're not "Indians". My people were here before Amerigo and so we ARE NOT "Americans". We are Native People, me specifically, Cherokee. My Native ancestors were stupid and provided the first welfare line, the first WIC program and neglected their border patrol/protection and was stabbed in the back for their generosity. We were the ones called "savages" but it was the original illegal aliens who did the massacuring and started the scalping of us for collection of bounty "rewards". The press of yesteryear were bleeding heart liberals creating stories to coddle their egos, same as today. Sob stories of how badly people were treated in their home land so they had no choice but to leave...sound familiar??? Stories of how people come here to "live a better life"...sound familiar??? Stories of how people lived in poverty conditions because of their government...sound familiar???? WAKE UP PEOPLE! Don't let history repeat itself. Our borders MUST be protected to stop any further damage by illegal aliens. My opinion...Elizabeth Dare...1st official anchor baby!
Posted by Karen on December 15,2008 | 12:15 PM
I am a student currently in school. I am also the youngest in my family and had never really looked into history like this before. Like other children, I am not amazed in history, but this has got me in here like a fish on a hook. I love hearing how pilgrims used to live and that is history for you. I am also the fastest typer in my class and can type without looking.
Posted by Fantastic on December 9,2008 | 05:06 PM
this website is amazing it teaches young people about the pilgrims it is so amazing lol ..
Posted by megan on December 7,2008 | 11:48 AM
How can you discover a territory that is already occupied? Man killing man all in the name of God. Such Greed. May God forgive us ALL.
Posted by Sandra on December 5,2008 | 12:48 PM
Question What country did the ships and people that discovered America come from
Posted by freeland king on December 4,2008 | 03:42 PM
It seems that there is very little talk about the Aztec's and their human sacrifices. There are stories of blood flowing like a river down the stairs of their temples. The "Indians" were fighting each other long before the Europeans got here, and they kept fighting each other after Columbus and other arrived. There is no people group on this planet that does not have some dark, terrible secret of wanting to wipe out their enemies. Every race has it villains and heroes. America is a great place, we need to be proud of this country and try to avoid the mistakes of the past. Howard Zinn is a very one sided account of history. There are so many better historians out there. Try Larry Schweikart.
Posted by Steve Ross on December 3,2008 | 12:32 PM
Thank God for the last comment about the natives being here first. How can anyone claim to discovering some place that is already occupied. It is ludicrous. We need to face up to our history and began writing the truth about our history no matter how bad it make us look. To continue teaching our children based on lies is really crazy.
Posted by ramona fletcher on November 29,2008 | 07:17 PM
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