|

The
territory known as La Florida, on the northern rim
of the Gulf of Mexico, began to be charted by early
16th-century Spanish navigators soon after their discovery
of America. Although expeditions into the unknown
peninsula, led by Ponce de León (1513, 1521), Pánfilo de
Narváez (1528), and Hernando de Soto (1539), failed to
realize mythical riches of the region, the Spanish were
determined to conquer and to pacify the northern frontier
of New Spain. Colonial strategy required the establishment
of military settlements, both on the Gulf and in the
Atlantic, to prevent intrusions by other European powers
and to make the peninsula secure for Spanish navigation.
The deep and sheltered harbor known today as Pensacola Bay
was visited by members of the Narváez and Soto
expeditions and by later Spanish pilots, who called the
bay Polonza, or Ochuse. This 16th-century
map, from Cornelius Wytfliet’s Descriptiones
Ptolemaicae Augmentum, shows the territory of La
Florida and includes Pensacola Bay. Another look at
the Pensacola Bay's history Click
here
Pensacola was chosen by New Spain Viceroy Luis de Velasco
as the place to begin the conquest and colonization of
Florida in 1559. Command of the enterprise was given to
Don Tristán de Luna y Arellano, who had first come to
Mexico in company with its famous conqueror, Hernán
Cortes, and had served as maestre de campo for
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado on the march for Cibola. He
was given detailed instructions to construct regular
Spanish towns, and to appoint councilmen, judges, and
bailiffs. The first settlement at Ochuse
(Pensacola) was to have a fortress large enough to contain
100 colonists, and was to include storehouses, jails,
inns, and slaughterhouses. The Luna expedition assembled
at the Mexican port of Veracruz, where eleven ships were
loaded with supplies of corn, hardtack biscuit, bacon,
dried beef, cheese, oil, vinegar, wine, and live cattle,
as well as arms, armor, and tools for construction and for
agriculture. When the armada departed for Florida,
it carried 540 soldiers, 240 horses, and more than 1,000
colonists, including women and children, black servants,
and Aztecs and Tlaxcalans.
On August 15, 1559, the fleet came to anchor in the
sheltered waters of Pensacola Bay, and the colonists went
ashore to pick a suitable place to build a town. Luna
ordered scouting parties to look for food, since the
fleet’s supplies were calculated to last only eighty
days. One went up the Escambia River, finding only a small
native village before returning to the anchorage after
twenty days. There they learned of a calamitous event that
had occurred during their absence. On September 19, a
hurricane had struck the armada at anchor
destroying all but three of the vessels, some of which had
not yet been unloaded. Many people lost their lives, and
supplies on shore had been damaged by heavy rains.
Although four relief voyages were attempted from Mexico
and Cuba, the fledgling Florida colony was doomed by the
disaster; Luna fell ill, and discontent among the hungry
immigrants began to turn to mutiny. Although the viceroy
replaced Luna with another governor, Angel de Villafañe,
the enterprise was beyond salvation, and its survivors
trickled back to Mexico.
After the failure of the Luna colony, the Gulf coast of
Florida was forgotten by the Spanish for over a century.
In 1693, a scientific expedition, led by Captain Andres de
Pez, conducted a reconnaissance of Pensacola Bay. Pez was
accompanied by the Creole scientist Carlos Sigüenza y
Gongora, whose map of the bay shows details of water
depth, landmarks, and sites of native villages encountered
by the survey party. A fleet arrived in 1698 to establish
a presidio garrisoned by soldiers, and Pensacola
became a formal Spanish colony. This earliest known map of
Pensacola Bay, drawn by Sigüenza, depicts modern-day
Emanuel Point as Pta. de Vibero (Viper Point).
Many historians who write about the European discovery and
settlement of what is now the United States are unfamiliar
with the expedition of Tristán de Luna, which was the
first attempt to colonize Florida in 1559. The story is
not well known, probably because the settlement at
Pensacola failed to flourish after a hurricane destroyed
most of the colony’s ships and provisions. Until
recently, what little we know of this forgotten chapter of
Florida history comes from a collection of documents
transcribed and translated by Herbert Ingram Priestly, who
was Librarian of the Bancroft Library at the University of
California. Entitled The Luna Papers, and published
by the Florida Historical Society in 1928, this two-volume
series of letters and testimonials that record the
disastrous events that befell the Luna colony now is
out-of-print and difficult to find.
With the discovery of the Emanuel Point Ship and its
telltale 16th-century features and artifacts, interest in
the Tristán de Luna expedition was rekindled. In 1995,
the City of Pensacola decided to sponsor a research
campaign to search for additional archival documents
pertaining to the Luna colony. Directed by archival
researcher Denise Lakey, the year-long project has turned
up numerous pieces of correspondence, legal briefs,
accounts, and audits, many of which are previously
unstudied. This document, for instance, is a deposition of
personal effects which belonged to Diego López, captain
of the flagship of Luna’s fleet. López, the document
explains, was drowned when the ship El Jesus
wrecked on a sandbar in Pensacola Bay. Most of the
documents were found in the Archive of the Indies in
Seville, Spain. Copies of these new materials are now
available to students and scholars at the libraries of the
University of West Florida and the University of Florida,
and at the Florida State Archives.

|