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in 1763. The
Apalachee and Yamasee were assisted in forming a new town north of Veracruz called San Carlos de Chachalacas along the river of the same name, and this town still exists today, though there is no documentation to demonstrate whether any of the Florida Indians who started the town still
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archaeological field school, and has been the site of several subsequent field schools which have uncovered evidence for the material culture of the
Apalachee residents of the site, the Spanish infantry and cavalary soldiers garrisoned there between 1750 and 1761, along with a series of Franciscan
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Indians, including chief Juan Marcos Isfani (also rendered as Juan Marcos Fant), who had previously settled near the mouth of the river in 1718, having gathered a group of
Apalachee refugees who had lived among the Creek Indians since the 1704 English-Creek raids that destroyed the
136:"Exploring Mission Life in 18th-Century West Florida: 2011 Excavations at San Joseph de Escambe" (by John E. Worth, Norma J. Harris, Jennifer Melcher, and Danielle Dadiego). Paper presented at the 2012 Conference of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Baltimore, Maryland.
125:"San Joseph de Escambe: An 18th-Century Apalachee Mission in the West Florida Borderlands" (by John E. Worth, Norma J. Harris, and Jennifer Melcher). Paper presented at the 2011 Conference of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Austin, Texas.
114:"Rediscovering Pensacola's Lost Spanish Missions" Paper presented at the 65th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Charlotte, North Carolina (2008).
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located far to the east in Leon County, Florida, this later
Escambe mission was inhabited by refugee
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38:. Taking its name from an earlier Apalachee mission community named San Cosme y San Damián de
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Indian residents of San
Antonio de Punta Rasa (also burned that spring) adjacent to modern
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51:. After twenty years along the northern Spanish frontier, the mission was burned in a
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Laboring in the Fields of the Lord: Spanish
Missions and Southeastern Indians.
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The archaeological site of San Joseph de
Escambe was located in 2009 by a
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mission community established in 1741 at the present-day community of
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raid on April 9, 1761, and its inhabitants resettled with the
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165:Pensacola Colonial Frontiers project homepage
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202:1741 establishments in the Spanish Empire
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67:along with the Spanish residents of
72:have any living descendants there.
167:at the University of West Florida.
30:along the Escambia River north of
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192:Archaeological sites in Florida
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171:Mission San Joseph de Escambe
154:University Press of Florida.
150:Milanich, Jerald T. (2006).
197:Spanish missions in Florida
90:Spanish missions in Florida
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77:University of West Florida
16:Spanish mission in Florida
36:Escambia County, Florida
80:friars assigned there.
63:before relocating to
20:San Joseph de Escambe
49:Apalachee Province
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65:Veracruz, Mexico
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53:Creek Indian
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181:Categories
145:References
187:Apalachee
95:Apalachee
69:Pensacola
61:Pensacola
44:Apalachee
32:Pensacola
24:Apalachee
84:See also
173:at UWF.
57:Yamasee
40:Escambe
22:was an
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101:Notes
156:ISBN
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