Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
possible coverage. The fifth district encompassed the major cattle areas of
south Florida and contained Hernando, Hil sborough, Manatee, Polk, Bre-
vard, Dade, and Monroe Counties. Veteran businessman James McKay took
proof
command of this vital area.13
Numerous problems faced White and his men as orders for Florida beef
flooded in from the fighting fronts and other segments of the Confederate
government. Cows soon became harder to find as herds shrank and cattle-
men grew less likely to sel their animals for low prices and payment in
Confederate script. The Confederate Impressment Act of 1863, which gave
officials the power to seize needed supplies from farmers, did little to foster
cooperation with supply officers and wounded civilian morale. When cattle
were col ected, they somehow had to be driven northward to at least the
Georgia rail network for further shipment. That took experienced “cracker”
cowboys able to move the nearly wild cattle and to protect them from Union
attacks that became all the more frequent on the trail. One solution was to
form a special unit of cattle herders, known as Munnerlyn’s Battalion or the
Cow Cavalry, to ensure the cows got through. Their efforts made the differ-
ence between success and failure in these operations.14
By war’s end, rebel forces had received at least 50,000 head of Florida
beef, and the stringy meat filled many a Johnny Reb’s stomach. The Confed-
erate Army of Tennessee and troops around Charleston depended heavily
on it as a part of their daily meals. Others subsisted, albeit poorly, on Florida
252 · Robert A. Taylor
cattle, and these included the starving Union prisoners of war languishing at
Andersonvil e. But in the final analysis, the peninsula state was never able to
keep up with the demands forced on it by rebel officials who lacked a clear
sense of what Florida could realistical y provide.
By 1863 the Civil War was having a definite impact on Florida’s frontier
society as the strains on the home front increased. People now knew full
well that this struggle would not be quick or cheap, and that toil and sacri-
fice was required from all Floridians. How the segments of Florida’s popula-
tion responded to these chal enges reveals much about what Florida was like
in the early 1860s. The fiery trial of war tore at the state’s social fabric and
impacted all from plantations in Leon County to Seminoles living on the
fringes of the Everglades. No Floridian could escape from it.
Florida women watched as their men marched off to fight in 1861, and
only a few truly realized what their absences would mean in their lives.
Shortages of once common consumer items became the new norm for them,
and demanded that they seek them out or manufacture substitutes them-
selves. Farms and plantations still had to be managed and worked without a
large segment of the male population. Florida women took up the slack, and
found the strength and self-confidence to step in and run family businesses
and raise children often alone. They made the clothes their families needed,
proof
taught their children when no schools were operating, and dealt with the
fear and the loneliness of separation.
Upper-class women could at least often count on relatives and the labor
of their slaves to keep things going. But the wives of common soldiers had
to somehow get by without the support of their husbands and sons, and by
1863 were joining their sisters in other Confederate states in demanding
some sort of relief from the government. While Florida women did not riot
in the street as happened in Richmond, they clearly could understand the
desperation that caused such unrest. Florida women had even more to fear
from Union troops, lawless deserter bands, Unionist raiders, and perhaps
even the Seminoles.15
Florida’s African American slave population soon felt wartime changes
like tremors from an earthquake. Slaves were often rented, or impressed,
into service for the Confederate government for tasks like building forti-
fication or col ecting food supplies. Whether there or on the farm, slaves
provided labor desperately needed to make up for the absence of so many
white males in the army. When Union forces made their presence known
around the state, they offered freedom for those with the courage to grasp
for it. Soon, crossing the Saint Johns River into Union-controlled territory
The Civil War, 1861–1865 · 253
meant emancipation for many black Floridians. Those working at the salt-
works could escape bondage when Yankee sailors came on raids from the
sea.16
Even in the face of such disruptions, the bulk of Florida’s slave popula-
tion stayed at work producing what was needed for survival. Without them
the state’s war effort would have withered at a much faster rate than it did.
In hindsight, the Federal forces should have targeted those areas of Florida
with the highest concentration of slaves, like the greater Tal ahassee area,
for military operations. Perhaps the Confederacy would have col apsed a bit
sooner through disruption of Florida’s economic support of the South.
The Seminoles also lived through the Florida Civil War experience in
their homes deep in the interior. After three devastating conflicts with
whites, news that their former foes were now waging war on each other
must have seemed strange to them. Florida officials began to worry about
whether the Seminoles would be emboldened to take the war path yet again
and seek vengeance from scattered Florida settlements? Would they be
forced to raid to secure the trade goods they needed to live? Government
leaders worked to maintain good relations by providing them with supplies
in the hope of at least keeping them neutral. Tribal leaders made certain
Tal ahassee knew about Union contacts Seminoles were having as a means
proof
to ensure trade items would keep arriving.17
Such native interaction with Federals was real, as in the case of a small
group of Mikasukis who visited Union troops based at Fort Myers in May
1864. They complained of poor treatment by Confederates and gladly ac-
cepted presents from the Yankees. The Indians looked with awe at African
Americans clad in blue uniforms serving with the garrison. In the end the
chances of a fourth Seminole war during the larger Civil War were slim,
but Florida’s native population were involved in the struggle and played a
significant role.18
Seminoles were not the only nonwhite Florida ethnic group living
through the Civil War. At least eighty citizens of Hispanic descent donned
gray uniforms out of the 15,000 or so male Floridians to do so. A significant
number of Florida Hispanics served in the Eight Florida Infantry Regiment,
which saw action from Fredericksburg to the end at Appomattox Court
House. One such soldier, William Baya of Saint Augustine, rose from ser-
geant to lieutenant colonel by 1865. Others, like Captain Celestine Gonzales,
were killed in action or died from wounds or disease. The war experiences
of this important part of the Florida community deserve to be acknowl-
edged in any account of the war.19
254 · Robert A. Taylor
As the war raged on, cracks in Florida’s social order widened. Many peo-
ple grew increasingly skeptical of Confederate victory, and of a national
government in Richmond that wanted much and seemingly gave little back.
Many soldier families lacked food or other essentials and begged for state
help. Unionist sentiment, existing in the state since 1861, grew as time and
home-front suffering went on. Confederate government policies like im-
pressment and the unpopular 1862 Conscription Act pushed many Florid-
ians into outright opposition to the Confederacy. By 1863 many sections of
the state hosted armed bands of Unionists as well as gangs of draft evaders
and army deserters. The true terrors of civil war came home to the state as
these groups clashed violently with pro-rebel forces like those led by caval-
ryman J. J. Dickison.
Northerners soon looked at Florida as a section ripe for reclamation for
the Union, and schemes to colonize Yankees there were in the works. The
Union army looked to Florida for recruits and managed to raise enough vol-
unteers to field two cavalry regiments for field service. Florida blacks took
the oath and joined units of the new Unites States Colored Troops or the
Union navy. Such forces were helped by Florida Unionists across the state
who served as an effective fifth column and aid to Federal troops operating
in Florida.20
proof
Those Union soldiers stationed in Florida found themselves having a
very unique Civil War experience. They occupied many Florida cities and
towns and were in little danger from direct Confederate assaults. Most of-
fensive operations were “expeditions” or raids into the interior seeking cattle
and other supplies to make their garrison life more comfortable. Of course
any slaves or cotton encountered would be promptly liberated for the Union
cause. The war in Florida for the most part was a low-intensity conflict that
stood in stark contrast to the titanic battles going on to the north.
Union troops serving in the Florida theater often found it delightful duty.
Limited combat and relatively low casualties made it attractive, as did the
balmy climate. Soldiers from Connecticut or New York looked on in won-
der at palm trees and picked fresh citrus fruit from nearby groves. The warm
winters stood in stark contrast to those at home, and many of these armed
tourists vowed they would return after the war. Those who did played a vital
role in Florida’s post-1865 growth and development.21
The state did not total y escape the fury of Civil War combat, however. By
early 1864, plans were under way for a campaign that would end in bloody
battle. The Olustee campaign had its roots in the Union high command’s
frustration with its failure to capture the city of Charleston, South Carolina.
The Civil War, 1861–1865 · 255
Union Major General Quincy A. Gilmore, whose command included much
of Florida, wanted to exert more pressure on besieged Charleston by cut-
ting its supplies coming up from the peninsula. Capturing Jacksonville once
again would open a ready port to export cotton and other supplies for the
North. Slaves could be freed and enlisted into the Union ranks, and with
luck Florida could be political y reconstructed just in time to help Presi-
dent Lincoln win reelection later that year. An assault on northern Florida
seemed to make perfect sense to Gilmore.22
The attack began with an amphibious strike at war-weary Jacksonville,
which once again brought it under Federal control. Gunboats and troops
continued up the Saint Johns River to capture Palatka and Picolata. Soldiers
under the immediate command of Brigadier General Truman A. Seymour
pushed westward from Jacksonvil e for the railroad junction at Baldwin.
Abandoned rebel supplies were seized there without resistance, and Sey-
mour bragged to his superiors in a message that if they “want to see what
Florida is good for come out to Baldwin.”23 Seymour’s confidence would
soon be shaken as Confederate officers reacted to his incursion by sending
reinforcements to the area at the fastest possible speed.
Confederate forces marched to meet Seymour’s 5,500 men at Olustee (or
Ocean Pond) just outside Lake City. Led by General Joseph Finegan, rebel
proof
forces stood their ground and mauled Seymour’s force in a day of bitter
fighting on February 20. Poorly trained and badly led Yankee soldiers beat
a retreat back toward the safety of Jacksonville. Only the rearguard effort of
the famous Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Infantry and the First North Caro-
lina, both African American regiments, saved the day from being a total
disaster. Finegan’s victorious men followed to the gates of Jacksonville, but
chose not to take on its fortifications. Olustee would turn out to be a Con-
federate victory and Florida’s largest Civil War battle. Union casualties ran
to 1,861, while Finegan reported losses of roughly 946 men.24
The Confederate victory at Olustee was a bit of bright news for a South
hungry for it in early 1864. Newspapers crowed about Confederate success
and Yankee ineptness. One Georgia editor summed it up by stating the Fed-
erals “marched forty miles in the most barren part of the South, fighting
the salamanders and gophers, and getting a terrible thrashing.”25 North-
ern newspapers, not surprisingly, attacked General Seymour and President
Lincoln for yet another bloody military blunder by northern forces. One
blue-clad veteran of Olustee summed up his feeling by exclaiming that “the
whole of Florida is not worth half the suffering and anguish this battle has
caused.”26
256 · Robert A. Taylor
The first months of 1865 brought one last Union effort to take control of a
large section of Florida. On March 4 a Federal force of about 1,000 splashed
ashore at Saint Marks with Tal ahassee as their ultimate objective. Local