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The Other War of 1812: The Patriot War
and the American Invasion of Spanish East Floridaby James G.
Cusick, John
David Smith
Hardcover: 392 pages
6" x 9" (2003)
$54.95
"A
carefully researched history of Spanish East Florida's Patriot War, a
complicated conflict that involved covert action by American forces,
greedy
border marauders from Georgia, rebels inside the province, Spanish
troops and
provincial white militia, free black militia, and Seminole warriors
(both
Indian and African American). The result of the war was devastation of
the
province's plantations and an end to a remarkable period of economic
expansion."--Daniel L. Schafer, University of North Florida
"Greatly
expands our understanding of how the Patriot War of 1812-13, a truly
forgotten
conflict, was interwoven with the War of 1812, American expansion, and
developing ideas about free armed blacks living in the Spanish-American
borderlands of Florida. Ultimately, the acquisition of Florida--a
process that
began with the Patriot War--would be the only way to satisfy American
territorial ambitions and racial fears."--Gene A. Smith, Texas
Christian
University
James
Cusick tells the story of an early-19th-century American plot that went
desperately wrong, plunging the United States into an undeclared war
for
possession of Spanish East Florida and provoking a conflict that would
embarrass the president, destroy a colony, and reshape forever the
nature of
life in the American South.
When
the administration of James Madison secretly decided to attempt to
overthrow
the Spanish colony, it set in motion an invasion that could not be
halted--the
Patriot War, one of the great but little-known conflicts of the early
American
republic. In March of 1812, on the eve of a major war with Great
Britain, the
United States became embroiled in a military invasion of the Florida
peninsula
that escalated into two years of increasing mayhem.
Instead
of an easy conquest aided by local rebels, the president discovered
that his agent,
General George Mathews, a former governor of Georgia, had spearheaded a
covert
and unjustifiable military occupation of Spanish territory. The drastic
action
stunned national and international sensibilities, and within weeks a
public
debate was raging about the rightness of American actions. People in
Georgia
rose in protest over the Spaniards' willingness to use black troops and
militia
to defend Spanish rights. At the same time, settlers in East Florida,
incensed
at having a foreign military presence on their soil, began a propaganda
campaign in the press to denounce President Madison's actions. The U.S.
Army
and Georgia militia, assisted by local volunteers known as Patriots,
put St.
Augustine under siege, seized towns and forts, and destroyed livestock
and
homesteads; by 1813 warfare had devolved into a vendetta with
practically every
plantation and farmstead between the Georgia border and Cape Canaveral
looted
or consigned to flames.
This
new account of the Patriot War, drawing on Spanish and American
sources,
focuses on eyewitness accounts recovered from correspondence, military
reports,
newspaper articles, and claims for financial compensation. Written in a
lively
style, it places events in a broad context, tying the attempted
conquest of
Spanish territory into larger issues of American history.

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