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St. Augustine celebrates being America's oldest city
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ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. -- This city almost erected a billboard outside Jamestown, Va., to congratulate it on its 400th birthday — and remind everyone St. Augustine passed that milestone four decades ago.

It would have said, “Happy birthday to our younger brother,” former Mayor George Gardner said.

Jamestown got a lot of attention this past spring celebrating the anniversary of its founding on May 14, 1607, making it the oldest English settlement in the nation. Queen Elizabeth paid a visit, and so did President Bush.

But St. Augustine is the nation’s oldest city, and its 442nd birthday celebration is scheduled for Aug. 28-Sept. 1, in-cluding historical re-enactments, entertainment, and yes, a Thanksgiving feast. But this one will commemorate a feast held in September of 1565 by the Spaniards and native Timucuan Indians, when the menu likely included wild turkey, venison and salted pork stew.

Historians and officials here can’t help but wonder what all the Jamestown brouhaha is about. Their city was founded Sept. 8, 1565, by Spaniard Pedro Menendez de Aviles and his expedition of 500 soldiers, 200 sailors and 100 farmers and craftsmen. Some brought their wives and children. They, not the Pilgrims, celebrated the first Thanksgiving in the New World. The first schools, hospitals and banks in what is now the United States were built here.

Not that many Americans know about it.

“We speak English and we’re reared in ... English historical traditions, which have tended to depreciate what the Spanish have contributed to history,” said Bill Adams, the city’s director of Historic Preservation and Heritage Tourism. Historians have tended “write the Spanish out of their history books or diminish their contributions. So Americans have inherited that.”

Adams says St. Augustine is also to blame for why it gets no respect compared to Jamestown and Plymouth, Mass., where the Pilgrims settled in 1620.

“It hasn’t advertised itself very well. It hasn’t gotten any press,” Adams said.

But, he said, St. Augustine’s contribution to American history should be celebrated and believes it will get more notice with the growing Hispanic population of this country and the upcoming 450th anniversary in 2015. The king and queen of Spain, who visited in 2001, will be invited back.

“I don’t know how long it will take before the Spanish people realize that St. Augustine is their Williamsburg or their Plymouth or their Jamestown,” Adams said. “St. Augustine is not only the birthplace of European culture and settlement in the United States, but of Spanish culture” in North America.

William Kelso, director of archaeology at Historic Jamestowne, who helped discover the missing fort in Virginia, said he understands the importance of St. Augustine. He attended the city’s 400th birthday celebration in 1965.

“St. Augustine is an untold story, almost like Jamestown,” Kelso said. “All the colonies have something to add to the creation story of modern America.”

Although there are similarities between St. Augustine, Plymouth and Jamestown, there are several differences, including a big one that separates St. Augustine.

“We are a living city,” Gardner said, while Jamestown and Plymouth are reconstructions. “This is the oldest town plan in the United States. It still exists. It is still intact. “There are 36 buildings dating back to colonial times and 40 that were reconstructed for the city’s 400th birthday.

Although Jamestown was Virginia’s capital from its founding until 1699, it had ceased to exist in the mid-1700s. It was settled for economic reasons; religion led to Plymouth’s founding. Spain established St. Augustine for military reasons.

“They didn’t come here to settle Florida. They didn’t come here to mine its riches. They didn’t come here to colonize. They came here to set up a military base that would prevent their enemies from establishing a position from which they could menace the treasure ships of Spain off the coast,” Adams said.

In those early years, St. Augustine’s settlers had to defend against French and British attacks, sometimes hostile Indians, mosquitoes, disease, pirates and hurricanes.

“Perseverance against tremendous odds accounted for the city’s survival,” Gardner said.

To protect St. Augustine, the Spanish built the Castillo de San Marcos, an imposing fort constructed of the stone coquina between 1672 and 1696.

In 1738, the Spanish established Fort Mose, an outpost about two miles north of the Castillo. It was the first free-black community in what is now the United States.

About 100 men, women and children lived in the settlement. Most had been enslaved by the British and were given their freedom if they could escape and make their way to the Spanish territory. As a condition, they had to serve in the militia and convert to Roman Catholicism, said Derek Hankerson, a filmmaker and member of the Fort Mose board of directors.

St. Augustine can also lay claim to the first European birth in the New World — Martin de Arguelles, born in 1566 or 1567. That beats the birth of Virginia Dare in North Carolina in 1587 and the first Pilgrim birth of Peregrine White on board the Mayflower in Cape Cod Harbor in 1620, said David Nolan, a writer and historian in St. Augustine.

“In fact, in 1577 — a decade before Virginia Dare — Pedro Menendez Marques wrote that were ‘forty-four women, sixty-two children, and 11 pregnant women’ in St. Augustine,” Nolan said.

On July 1, the University of Florida assumed management of 31 historic buildings in St. Augustine. The buildings have become too costly for local government to maintain and repair and the rent from shops and restaurants occupy-ing the spaces is not enough to pay for upkeep. The university is assessing what is needed to restore and maintain them.

“I think it’s an incredible opportunity for the whole university,” said Roy Graham, director of the university’s Col-lege of Design, Construction and Planning,who was the resident architect at colonial Williamsburg in Virginia before coming to Florida.

If You Go...

ST. AUGUSTINE, FLA.: http://www.Getaway4Florida.com or 800-653-2489. City’s 442nd birthday celebration, Aug. 28-Sept. 1; http://www.staugustinesbirthday.com.

ST. AUGUSTINE HISTORIC DISTRICT: http://www.historicstaugustine.com or 904-825-6830. The 144-square-block district includes historic buildings and the Colonial Spanish Quarter on St. George Street.

CASTILLO DE SAN MARCOS NATIONAL MONUMENT: Downtown St. Augustine; http://www.nps.gov/casa. The fort, built between 1672 and 1695, is the oldest masonry fortification in North America. It was built by the Spanish because of the menacing English presence in the Carolinas. Upon transfer of Florida to the United States in 1821, it became Fort Marion. Open daily 8:45 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Adults, $6; children 15 and under free when accompanied by an adult.

ST. AUGUSTINE LIGHTHOUSE AND MUSEUM: On Anastasia Island across the Bridge of Lions. The lighthouse has been in operation since 1874. Open 9 a.m.-6 p.m. The museum is a restored lightkeepers’ house. Except during inclement weather, the lighthouse can be climbed. Adults, $8 for the museum and tower; children, $6. Admission to just the museum is adults, $6; children, $4.

FORT MOSE: North of St. Augustine on U.S. 1; http://www.fortmose.org/. Location of the first free black settle-ment. Escaped slaves from the Carolinas were granted their freedom by the Spanish for agreeing to serve at the fort and embrace Christianity. Fort Mose operated from 1738 and 1740 and 1752 to 1763. A new visitor center is opening this fall.

CATHEDRAL-BASILICA OF ST. AUGUSTINE: On the plaza in downtown St. Augustine. The Roman Catholic par-ish of St. Augustine is the nation’s oldest religious congregation, established in 1565, at the same time as the founding of the city. Parish records detail births, baptisms and deaths from the 16th century. The building dates to 1797.


Take a look
Tourists walk past The Cuna Street Toy Shop, right, and Knock on Wood, two historic buildings on Cuna Street in the historic section of St. Augustine, Fla., July 11, 2007. The two shops are housed in two of dozens of historic buildings the University of Florida will be maintaining for the City of St. Augustine, Fla. The maintenance and upkeep of the building has become too expensive for the nation's oldest city. (AP Photo/Oscar Sosa)
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Reader comments on this story - 9 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

angie wrote on Aug 9, 2007 11:24 AM:

" the lighthouse is beautiful, definately check it out!! "

FloridaGirl wrote on Aug 4, 2007 10:46 PM:

" St. Augustine is a gem and a place everyone should visit, drunk or sober. Lighten up... you sound like a goody-two-shoes!! "

FloridaGirl wrote on Aug 4, 2007 10:41 PM:

" St. Augustine is a gem and a place everyone should visit, drunk or sober. Lighten up... you sound like a goody-two-shoes!! "

Let me repeat myself~~ wrote on Aug 4, 2007 4:59 PM:

" What a waste. "

Good times wrote on Aug 4, 2007 3:37 PM:

" I learned that beer cans make good watch towers for sand castles, body surfing is cool, surf board wax hurts chest hair, bringing your own beer in FA Cafe is not allowed, ripe tides suck, and one day off a week was a cherished occasion we all celebrated! Here's to two seasons of good times! "

A1A wrote on Aug 4, 2007 11:10 AM:

" brewery is awesome and also has a great grouper sandwich "

Re:Good times~~ wrote on Aug 4, 2007 10:17 AM:

" I was'nt drunk. I feel sorry for you, sounds like you learned absolutely nothing. What a waste. "

Good times wrote on Aug 4, 2007 9:17 AM:

" Check out Oasis, grilled grouper sandwich, Steeler fans, bikini clad biker chicks, and cold beer! Drive up beaches make it easy to hide your cooler of beer and gallon of margaritas! Watch out for the drunk chicks from IL, easy to spot with their severe sunburned lips. "

St. Augustine~~ wrote on Aug 4, 2007 8:00 AM:

" Is nothing short of FANTASTIC!!! Please, if you have the chance to go, I highly recommend it! You'll never forget the experience! "

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