The Trans-Atlanticist

The Trans-Atlanticist

Spanish Florida, African-Americans, and the Declaration of Independence

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This episode explores the complexity of Florida's colonial history, its relationship to African-Americans, and its importance during the War of Independence.

Our expert guest is Prof. Jane Landers (Vanderbilt University), who is also the Director of the Slave Societies Digital Archive.

Topics include:

-The importance of remembering African-American history in Spanish America

-An overview of Spanish colonial history, which is much older than Anglo-American history that began in Jamestown in 1619

-Spain's religious sanctuary policy, which granted African-American slaves freedom in Florida as far back as 1687

-The first Underground Railroad for enslaved Blacks, which led south to Spanish Florida not north

-The different models of slavery in Spanish colonies and the different ways enslaved people could free themselves

-The complex political, religious, economic, and military structures in Spanish colonies

-Indigenous migration from Anglo colonies to Spanish Florida

-The War of Jenkins' Ear (1739-1748) and the Battle of Bloody Mose (1740) near St. Augustine, during which free Africans fought with Spain to protect their freedom

-Spanish Florida during the French and Indian War (the Seven Years' War)

-The cession of Florida to Britain at the end of the War in 1763 and the subsequent migration of Carolina farmers with roughly 9,000 enslaved African-Americans to Florida and then the later transfer of additional enslaved Africans from Africa

-The exile of free Blacks from Florida to Cuba in 1763-64

-Spain's support of American Patriots in the War of Independence

-The deployment of exiled free Blacks, who had left Florida for Spanish-Cuba in 1763, to fight the British in Pensacola in 1777

-The return of Florida to Spain in 1784

-The drive by the US both to eliminate free black culture in Florida and also to institute a slave economy there

-The transfer of Florida to the new United States in 1821 and the second exile of free Blacks from Florida to other Spanish colonies

-An analysis of the phrase "all men are created equal" through the lens of the free inhabitants of Spanish Florida

Jane Landers' books can be found here:

Atlantic Creoles in the Age of Revolutions

Black Society in Spanish Florida

The Slave Societies Digital Archive can be found here:

Slave Societies


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About this podcast

Andrew Sola explores the past, present, and future of relations between Europe and the United States with scholars, artists, authors, politicians, journalists, and business leaders. Based at the Amerikazentrum in Hamburg, the Trans-Atlanticist provides you with insights from the thought leaders who are shaping the trans-Atlantic relationship every single day.

by Andrew Sola

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