Dawn of an Empire: St. Augustine and the Spanish Founding of America (America Uncovered)

About

Before Jamestown. Before Plymouth. There was St. Augustine.

In 1565—fifty-five years before the Pilgrims set foot at Plymouth Rock—Spanish ships slipped along the Florida coast and anchored in a shallow inlet guarded by marsh and sand. What they built there would become the oldest continuously occupied European-founded city in the continental United States. Yet its story has been pushed to the margins of the American narrative.

Dawn of an Empire restores St. Augustine to its rightful place at the center of the nation’s origins. Here is the clash of empires—Spain, France, and England—fighting not only for land, but for souls, treasure routes, and control of the Gulf and Atlantic sea lanes. Here are the Timucua and Calusa peoples, whose alliances and resistance shaped the fate of the colony as surely as any royal decree. Here are missionaries and soldiers, enslaved Africans who found freedom under the Spanish flag, pirates on the horizon, and hurricanes that nearly erased the fragile settlement from the map.

Far from a footnote, Spanish Florida was a proving ground. It forged the first multicultural frontier in what would become the United States. It established the first parish, the first fortifications, and the first legally sanctioned free Black community in North America. It endured siege, starvation, rebellion, and revolution—yet survived. This is not simply the story of a city.
It is the story of an empire’s northern edge—and the forgotten beginning of America itself.

This is early American history before the familiar narrative begins.

Drawing on archival records, archaeology, and Atlantic World scholarship, this book examines:

  • The Indigenous societies of Spanish Florida and their political power
  • The militarized founding of St. Augustine in 1565
  • The Spanish mission system and Native resistance
  • African life in colonial Florida, from enslavement to freedom
  • Imperial rivalry between Spain and England
  • Why American memory elevated Jamestown and Plymouth while sidelining Spanish America
St. Augustine did not disappear. Its fort still stands. Its parish registers still exist. Its records endure in Spanish and Florida archives. What changed was the national story.

For readers of early American history, colonial America, Atlantic World studies, Native American history, African American history, Spanish empire, and the contested origins of the United States, Dawn of an Empire restores St. Augustine to its rightful place at the beginning of the American story.