User:FlaLibrarian/sandbox

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To do[edit]

Generals scott and gaines stayed at Fort Drane Aristocrat in Uniform pg 93-99

Second Seminole War[edit]

Add section on weapons. There were only two arsenals in Florida, one at Fort Brooke and the other at Fort Marion, with a third under construction in what is now Chattahoochee.[2]

Create Confederate Medical Service[edit]

[3]

Create 1st Regiment, US Artillery[edit]

Fought in the Seminole Wars. Company G was stationed at Fort Pickens at start of the civil war. [4]

Augustus Alston[edit]

Augustus A. Alston was born in . In 1830, Alston, along with his father, mother, sisters, and older brother, moved to Florida from Hancock County, Georgia. The family set up a homestead near Lake Miccosukee and eventually built a large plantation known locally as "Ingleside."[5]

During the early 1830s, Alston was the director of the Union Bank of Florida in Tallahassee.[6] His brother, Willis, was the director of the local railroad.

During the Second Seminole War Alston led a company of militia called the Leon Volunteers.[7] On January 31, 1836, Lieutenant William Ward, one of the regimental drillmasters, presented Alston with a petition created by soldiers in his unit. The petition drew attention to the fact that their six-month enlistment period was up and that the troops wished to return home. Alston, after looking at the petition, told his second-in-command William C. Parish to "shoot the damned dog." Parish obeyed the order and drew his pistol and shot Ward on the spot.[8] https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/9c00d88b-1b8f-431d-8ffa-cac0803d32b1

On December 12, 1839, Alston dueled General Leigh Read. The two met at the border between Georgia and Florida and choose rifles as their weapons. Alston was shot and killed in the duel.[9]

Abraham (Sauanaffe Tustunaggee[edit]

Abraham, or Abram, was a Black Seminole who eventually became a leader and advisor amongst the Seminole tribe during and after the Seminole Wars.

Abraham was born sometime around 1787 to 1791. In his youth, he was a slave owned by Dr. Eugenio Antonio Sierra in Pensacola, which was then part of Spanish territory. Historians have used descriptions of Abraham to infer that he was likely a domestic slave to Dr. Sierra.[10]

Florida Brigade of the Army of Northern Virginia[edit]

Commanders[edit]

The brigade commanders were:

Brig. Gen. Edward A. Perry: August 28, 1862 – April 30, 1863
Col. David Lang:


Florida Brigade of the Army of Tennessee[edit]

Update Seminole Nation of Oklahoma Principle Chiefs List[edit]

  • Micconapy, aka Sint-Chahkee. ( -1849)
  • John Jumper (1849-1877) (1882-1885)
  • Hulbutta Micco (1902-1905)[11]
  • Alice Brown Davis (1922- )
  • Chief Chili Fish (1935-1936)
  • Greg Chilcoat (2017-2021)
  • Lewis Johnson (2021-Present)

Camp Izzard Battle and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C3%A1lpata_Tastanaki_Preserve "Largest battle of Second Seminole War"?

Black seminoles and slavery https://www-tandfonline-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/epdf/10.1080/14664658.2020.1788266?needAccess=true&role=button

Create John T. Sprague[edit]

John Titcomb Sprague (July 3, 1810-September 6, 1878) was an American soldier who fought for the United States during the Second Seminole War as well as for the Union during the American Civil War. He eventually rose to the rank of adjutant general for the state of New York.

John T. Sprague was born on July 3, 1810 in Newburyport, Massachusetts.[12]

In 1850, Sprague led a large wagon train along with three companies of mounted infantry from Fort Inge on the Leona river to El Paso.[13]

Sprague died on September 6, 1878.[14]

Create Dr. Joseph A. Braden[edit]

https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/25724 Joseph Addison Braden was born in Virginia.[15]}

2nd United States Colored Infantry Regiment[edit]

Needs inline citations Needs Company Table: Work in progress

3rd Florida Infantry Regiment[edit]

Needs closing info

During the Atlanta Campaign, the 3rd was serving as part of Finley's brigade. On May 28, 1864, during the Battle of Dallas the Floridians engaged primarily with men from the 53rd Ohio Infantry Regiment. They were repulsed with heavy losses. One Union officer estimated a lost of roughly 600 men in Finley's Brigade.[a]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Jesse Finley himself was wounded at the Battle of Resaca a couple of weeks before the engagement at Dallas. Despite not being at the battle, reports continued to use his name when referring to the Florida brigade.

1st Florida Cavalry Regiment[edit]

Reformat and add details

Service History[edit]

Create Fort Dade[edit]

There were 2 Fort Dade's; one during the Spanish-American War and one during the Second Seminole War. Pull from Egmont Key Light. Fort Dade was a fortification built on Edgemont Key in Tampa Bay during the Spanish–American War.

Fort Dade Seminole Wars: On December 23, 1836, Gen. Thomas Jesup ordered the fort to be built. Almost one year to the day before, Maj. Francis L. Dade and nearly his entire column were killed at what is now known as the Dade battle.


Battle of Withlacoochie[edit]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Ouithlacoochie

Bruno216

Create Hernando Wildcats[edit]

Hernando Wildcats. The Hernando Wildcats were a military unit that fought for the Confederacy during the American Civil War. They were established in Hernando County Florida.

Create Walter Terry Saxon[edit]

Walter Terry Saxon. "Eldest son of a prominent planter, a Confederate officer, county representative to the 1867 state legislature, and organizer of the local Ku Klux Klan."[16]

Walter's brother, Benjamin Saxon was a Sheriff in Hernando County. In 1876, at the request of state officials, Benjamin Saxon and a black Deputy Sheriff named Arthur St. Clair had to personally deliver county election results to Tallahassee.[17]

88th New York Infantry Regiment[edit]

Needs references

Chakaika[edit]

Chakaika, also spelled Chekika, was a leader of "Spanish Indians" in Florida. Chakaika was born under the name Antonio on one of the Cuban fishing ranchos and worked during his early life as a fisherman and sailor who plied the waters between Florida and Cuba.

In July 1839, Chakaika led raids against Colonial William Harney and his detachment of U.S. Army troops along the Caloosahatchee River. Historians have conjectured that these attacks in 1839 were in response to the destruction of Cuban fishing ranchos and the forcible removal of Spanish Indians during the preceding three years.[18] Then, in August 1840, he again led a raids on the Anglo-American settlement on Indian Key. Both attacks were part of the renewed hostilities which eventually became the Second Seminole War.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kersey Jr., Harry A. (1980). Pelts, Plumes & Hides: White Traders among the Seminole Indians 1870-1930. Gainesville, FL: Florida Atlantic University Press. pp. 24–25. ISBN 0813006805.
  2. ^ Brown, M.L. (1982). "Notes on U.S. Arsenals, Depots, and Martial Firearms of the Second Seminole War". Florida Historical Quarterly. 61 (4): 445. Retrieved 16 February 2024.
  3. ^ Cunningham, Horace Herndon (1958). Doctors in gray : the Confederate medical service. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 9780807118566.
  4. ^ Haskin, Major William L. "The Army of the US Historical Sketches of Staff and Line with Portraits of Generals-in-Chief: First Regiment of Artillery". U.S. Army Center of Military History. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  5. ^ Denham, James M. (1989). "The Read-Alston Duel and Politics in Territorial Florida". Florida Historical Quarterly. 68 (4): 431. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  6. ^ Denham 1989, p. 431. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFDenham1989 (help)
  7. ^ Hovatter, Ryan P. (2021). The Florida Volunteers: Territorial Militia in the Opening of the Second Seminole War (PDF) (Master's thesis). U.S. Army Command and General Staff College.
  8. ^ Seawright, John (November 6, 1996). "The Sorrows of the Alstons". Flagpole: 7. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
  9. ^ Denham, James M. (1989). "The Read-Alston Duel and Politics in Territorial Florida". Florida Historical Quarterly. 68 (4): 427. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  10. ^ Shack, Matthew. "ABRAHAM – Survivor Of The Massacre At The Negro Fort". Panama City Living. Retrieved 22 November 2023.
  11. ^ "Mention of Micco". www.digital.libraries.ou.edu/. The University of Oklahoma. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  12. ^ Pingenot, Ben E. "Sprague, John Titcomb". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
  13. ^ Pingenot, Ben E. (October 1994). "The Great Wagon Train Expedition". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 98 (2): 184. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
  14. ^ Heitman, Francis B. (1903). Historical Register and Dictionary of the United States Army. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. p. 912.
  15. ^ Camp, Paul (1979). "The Attack on Braden Castle: Robert Braden Castle: Robert Gamble t Gamble's Account". Tampa Bay History. 1 (8): 1–8. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  16. ^ Landers, Roger R. (2010). "The "Recent Unpleasantness" in Hernando County, Florida: Reconstruction, Redemption, Retrenchment, and Its Legacy". Tampa Bay History. 24 (1): 14. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
  17. ^ Landers 2010, p. 16.
  18. ^ Worth, John E. (2012). "Creolization in Southwest Florida: Cuban Fishermen and "Spanish Indians," ca. 1766—1841". Historical Archaeology. 46 (1): 142. Retrieved 3 November 2023.