History of the Historic Seville District


The Seville Historic District is a place where settlers built homes along the bayfront and Seville Square. The settlers were Spanish, French and British. Pensacola was a seaport town - fishing, shipping, and naval stores were the backbone of community. The homes in the district date from the early and late 19th Century. These homes are some of the oldest in Florida.

Established in 1752 by a group of Spanish hurricane survivors from Santa Rosa Island. The British took West Florida after the French and Indian War of 1763. British surveyors mapped the existing streets. In 1781 the Spanish captured Pensacola and changed the street names to Spanish. These names remain the same today.

Seville Square is full of live oak trees. These trees give shade to visitors for picnics in the park. The trees are identified by their broad spreading crown, evergreen leaves and long acorns. At any time of day it is not unusual to find school children or adults relaxing and playing in the square. 

Pensacola History and Culture

Pensacola and the surrounding area boast a rich historical legacy, one that begins with the earliest years of European colonization.
Of course there were Native Americans living in the area prior to the coming of the Spanish, but much of their civilization has been lost to the ravages of time.

Until the purchase of this land, by the U.S. in 1819, it was a "no man's land" for runaway slaves and Indians.

It is known that humans lived in the Pensacola area as long as 10,000 years ago. For most of that time, their communities were small and nomadic. Through generations they developed a culture that was tied to the seashore and the trade generated by access to Gulf.

By A.D. 1300 or so, the Native American Indians of present-day Pensacola were part of a larger grouping of mound builders, who flourished until the coming of the Spanish and the diseases that would finally destroy most of the natives.

There's much disagreement and speculation over who was the first European to set foot in Pensacola... Francisco Maldonado, a member of the Hernando de Soto expedition, is known to have explored the Gulf Coast and is thought to have landed in Pensacola Bay.

But without a doubt the most celebrated and remembered of early Spanish explorers of the area is Don Tristán de Luna y Arellano. De Luna led an ambitious expedition that intended to settle the Florida coast and establish a base of exploration and trade.

Leading 2,000 plus soldiers, farmers, metalworkers, priests, and, surprisingly, lawyers, de Luna dropped anchor in Pensacola Bay in August of 1559.

What begin in a flurry of high hopes and officious pronouncements quickly degenerated into a nightmarish ordeal. Barely had the colony landed when Pensacola was hit by a massive hurricane that destroyed all but three of de Luna's ships.

After abortive rebellions, disastrous raiding excursions and continuing starvation, the colonists were finally retrieved nearly four years after leaving Mexico.

Most of the community's provisions were also lost or destroyed by the storm, and the settlement began to disintegrate. As difficult as it is for us to picture, given today's Pensacola of interstate, intercostals waterways, and highways, in the 1550s Pensacola was as good a definition of the "middle of nowhere" as existed.

The years following saw Spain and France contesting control of the entire Gulf Coast region. In 1698, 140 years after de Luna's comic opera attempt at a permanent settlement, Don Andres dArriola founded Pensacola.

In the early 1700s Spanish and French colonists formed an uneasy alliance against the British and their Indian allies during Queen Anne's War. The British burned Pensacola to the ground in 1707, the French in 1722.

After that the Spanish rebuilt the town on several different locations. Control of Pensacola then shifted to England, until the American Revolution, when it was given again to Spain.

The United States finally gained possession of the city in 1821... and lost control again in 1860 when Florida seceded from the Union and joined the Confederate States of America.
 
After the Civil War, Apache Chief Geronimo was held at Ft. Pickens along with some of his family and followers, before being moved to Mobile, Alabama.

As Pensacola entered the twentieth century it started a steady period of growth. Fueled in part by the building of railroads into the county and bridges connecting Pensacola with Gulf Breeze, and Gulf Breeze with Santa Rosa Island.

Throughout the 1900s the city and its adjacent areas continued to grow and develop. The city of Pensacola has become a regional business, healthcare, shopping center. Naval Air Station Pensacola has provided the city with many jobs and a community of civic-minded families who have been a tremendous resource.

Pensacola, the city of Five Flags, is a history buff's dream. In Pensacola Bay the sunken wrecks of the de Luna expedition rest, on Ft. Pickens walk the ghosts of Civil War soldiers and Apache braves, and over it all hangs the legacy of the many nations and cultures which shaped the city, and its people.


 

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