At the State Library and Archives of Florida, the Spanish Land Grant applications for both Jose Maria and Joaquin Caldez, each list Angola as on the north side of the Oyster River, respectively eight and nine miles from Tampa Bay. [1] The location of Angola on the Oyster River as described by local history author Janet Snyder Matthews, was in "southern Sarasota Bay, eight miles from Tampa Bay."[6]71 In the footnotes to Edge of Wilderness, Matthews speculated that the "Oyster River of Caldes which may have been present-day Whitaker Bayou or Hudson Bayou."[6]395
In his book on The Territory of Florida, John Lee Williams, described "a stream that enters the bay joining the entrance of Oyster River, on the S.W."[7] and his accompanying map published in 1837 shows an area between a stream he called the "Oyster River" not to be confused with the Manatee River labeled elsewhere on the map; and another stream entering lower Sarasota Bay as "Old Spanish Fields."[7]
Background
Spanish Florida was a haven for escaped slaves and for Native Americans deprived of their traditional lands during colonial times and in the first decades of U.S. independence. The Underground Railroad ran south during this period.[8][9][10]
Three autonomous black communities developed in Spanish Florida, though not simultaneously. Fort Mose was the first and smallest autonomous black community but it was abandoned in 1763 after the Spanish cessation of Florida in the aftermath of the Seven Years' War. Fort Mose was heavily influenced by neighboring St. Augustine. The second community was at Prospect Bluff on the Apalachicola River, but it was destroyed by forces under the command of General Andrew Jackson in 1816. Angola, farthest from the border of Georgia, was the last of the black settlements to survive.[citation needed] According to historian Canter Brown, Jr., "Most maroon settlements were tiny because people needed to escape detection. Angola's 600 to 750 people was an incredible size back then, and shows that these were capable people."[2]: 73 He described it as "one of the most significant historical sites in Florida and perhaps the U.S."[2]: 71
None of these were settled as a group, as white colonies were; refugees gradually accumulated over many years until a community of several hundred existed. Some refugees from the Negro Fort calamity came to Angola.[11]: 5 In 1815, British officials transported around 80 black veterans of the War of 1812 to Angola.[12]
Destruction
When Andrew Jackson became Florida's de facto territorial governor in 1821, he decided that Angola would need to be destroyed and its runaway slave populace returned to bondage.[citation needed] Without the official backing of the U.S. government, Jackson decided to employ Indian allies to raid in Florida instead.[13] "Acting in direct defiance of Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, Jackson's first order of business was to send his Creek allies on a search and destroy mission against Angola",[1]: 250 which was "burned to the ground".[2]: 73 The result of the raid was "terror" all over Florida and all the blacks who could left for The Bahamas.[1]: 250–252 Those trying to reach the Bahamas would go to Cape Florida. They would be denied refuge in The Bahamas or assistance in general by British officials there. However they still established a settlement on Andros Island, named Red Bays in 1821.[14]
A small number joined the Red Sticks Indians and formed a community called Minatti at the headwaters of the Peace River near Lake Hancock.[Citation needed]
Commemoration
In July 2018, the first Back to Angola Festival was held at the Manatee Mineral Springs Park.[2]: 71 Descendants of those who had escaped to the Bahamas attended.[15]
^ abcMillett, Nathaniel (2013). The Maroons of Prospect Bluff and Their Quest for Freedom in the Atlantic World. University Press of Florida. ISBN9780813044545.
^ abcdefgEger, Isaac (July 2018). "Angola's Ashes: A newly excavated settlement highlights Florida's history as a haven for escaped slaves". Sarasota Magazine. Vol. 40, no. 11. pp. 70–73.
^ abMatthews, Janet Snyder (1984). Edge of Wilderness, A Settlement History of Manatee River and Sarasota Bay 1528-1885 (2nd ed.). Sarasota, Florida: Coastal Press. ISBN0-914381-00-8.
^ abWilliams, John Lee (1837). The Territory of Florida, Or, Sketches of Topography, Civil and Natural History, of the Country, the Climate and the Indian Tribes, from the First Discovery to the Present Time, With a Map, Views, &C. A.T. Goodrich. p. 300.
^Brown Jr., Canter (2005). "Tales of Angola: Free Blacks, Red Stick Creeks, and International Intrigue in Spanish Southwest Florida, 1812–1821". In Brown Jr., Canter; Jackson Jr., David H. (eds.). Go Sound the Trumpet! Selections in Florida's African American History. University of Tampa Press. pp. 5–21. ISBN187985242X.
^Rivers, Larry E. (2000). Slavery in Florida : territorial days to emancipation. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. p. 8. ISBN9780813018133.
Cox, Dale (2020). The Fort at Prospect Bluff, the British Post on the Apalachicola and the Battle of Negro Fort. Old Kitchen Media. ISBN 978-0578634623.
Baram, Uzi (2015). "Including maroon history on the Florida Gulf Coast : archaeology and the struggle for freedom on the early 19th-century Manatee River". In Delle, James A. (ed.). The limits of tyranny : archaeological perspectives on the struggle against new world slavery. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press. pp. 213–240. ISBN9781621900870.