Difference between revisions of "Spanish West Florida"

From Pensapedia, the Pensacola encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(+ image)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Spanish West Florida''' was a Spanish colony which included Pensacola and most of the Florida Panhandle.  Spanish West Florida was ceded to the United States by the [[Wikipedia:Adams-Onís Treaty|Adams-Onís Treaty]] ([[1819]]) and [[Transfer of Spanish West Florida to the United States|transferred]] at a ceremony at [[Plaza Ferdinand VII]] in Pensacola in July [[1821]].
+
[[Image:WestFloridaMap.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Spanish West Florida]]'''Spanish West Florida''' was a Spanish colony which included Pensacola and most of the Florida Panhandle.  Spanish West Florida was ceded to the United States by the [[Wikipedia:Adams-Onís Treaty|Adams-Onís Treaty]] ([[1819]]) and [[Transfer of Spanish West Florida to the United States|transferred]] at a ceremony at [[Plaza Ferdinand VII]] in Pensacola in July [[1821]].
  
 
==Boundaries==
 
==Boundaries==

Latest revision as of 19:32, 1 December 2008

Spanish West Florida

Spanish West Florida was a Spanish colony which included Pensacola and most of the Florida Panhandle. Spanish West Florida was ceded to the United States by the Adams-Onís Treaty (1819) and transferred at a ceremony at Plaza Ferdinand VII in Pensacola in July 1821.

Boundaries[edit]

Spanish West Florida contained the portions of present-day Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida south of the 31st parallel north, bounded on the west by the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, on the east by the Apalachicola River, and by the Gulf of Mexico to the south.

After the Louisiana Purchase, the United States claimed the portions of Spanish West Florida from the Mississippi River eastward to the Perdido River, just west of Pensacola. Spain contended that its territory extended west to the Mississippi River. This caused tension between the two nations, and led to increasingly frequent incursions into the territory by the United States Army, under Andrew Jackson and others. The status of the disputed area was not fully resolved until Spain ceded it, along with the rest of the Floridas, to the United States in 1819.