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GBO TOPICS

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Indigenous Chiefdoms of Georgia
A guide to the numerous chiefdoms that existed throughout Georgia at the time of European contact.

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European Exploration in Georgia
A comprehensive guide to the many French, Spanish and English explorers who visited Georgia during the 16th - 18th centuries.

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English Conquest of Georgia
An overview of the final English conquest of the previous Spanish territory of Georgia..

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Dawn of Oglethorpe's Georgia
The rise of the new colony of Georgia in the disputed Spanish territory.

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Spanish Archival Sources
Information regarding the location of Spanish source material used in the creation of this website.

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Colonial Spanish Paleography
An introduction to the archaic handwriting styles used by colonial notaries.

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FAQ
Frequently asked questions regarding the Georgia Before Oglethorpe website.

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Georgia Before Oglethorpe

Originally published by John E. Worth at SpanishFlorida.net
Archived for Educational Purposes Only under U.S.C Title 17 Section 107
 ©1998-2003 John E. Worth

European Exploration in Georgia

The European exploration of Georgia began only 29 years after the Bahama landfall of Christopher Columbus, when Spanish ships in search of new sources of Indian slaves scoured the Georgia coast in 1521. Following a failed colonial attempt along the coast just five years later, the Georgia interior subsequently witnessed two major military expeditions in 1540 and 1560, followed by a series of smaller entradas between 1597 and 1628. Coastal exploration was renewed under the French in 1562, and continued through the early years of the Florida colony after 1565. Nevertheless, direct contact was not established with some indigenous chiefdoms in Georgia until as late as the mid-17th century, when Spanish visitors and later English traders pushed farther and farther into the colonial frontier.

Mainland bases from which all but the earliest exploratory ventures would be launched were eventually established by both Spanish and English settlers. Spanish Florida's twin colonial cities of St. Augustine (in present-day Florida) and Santa Elena (once located on Parris Island, South Carolina) were founded in 1565 and 1566, respectively, and explorers departed from both cities during their early years, although Santa Elena was abandoned in 1587 due to the threat of English privateers. The English colony of Virginia was established with the 1607 foundation of Jamestown, which served as the primary English base of operations along the southern frontier until the 1670 foundation of Charles Town (Charleston) and the Carolina colony. Ultimately, St. Augustine and Charles Town would become the primary centers for Spanish-English exploration and colonial expansion during the late 17th and early 18th century.

In broad perspective, Georgia's landscape was explored by Europeans in four broad phases, described below:

  • Phase I (1521-1560): Spanish Military Period -- The earliest Spanish expeditions of the early- to mid-16th century (Quejos/Ayllón, Soto, and Luna) resulted in the initial exploration of Georgia's coast, as well as the lower Flint River of southwest Georgia, the Fall Line zone of middle Georgia, and the Ridge and Valley region of northwest Georgia.
     
  • Phase II (1562-1646): Spanish Colonial/Mission Period -- Following the very brief French presence on the Georgia coast, the expansion of colonial Spanish Florida between 1566 and 1646 (including northern and western mission chains) witnessed the exploration of virtually all remaining inhabited areas of Georgia's Coastal Plain (the entire southern half of the state, including the coast), as well as minor penetration of the eastern Piedmont along the Oconee River.
     
  • Phase III (1674-1733): English Commercial Period -- Carolina traders and soldiers pushed west and north into the abandoned Spanish hinterland, re-exploring the Fall Line zone of middle and western Georgia, and finally pushing northward into the Blue Ridge section of northeastern Georgia, all in an effort to expand the trade in slaves and deerskins. The few Spanish penetrations of the northern interior during this period were either unsuccessful or hostile, and the destruction and retreat of all Spanish missions by 1685 left the coast largely unoccupied.
     
  • Phase IV (1733-1832): English/American Colonial Period -- Beginning in 1733, exploration of the rest of Georgia through English trade was increasingly dominated by direct land acquisition through negotiated land-grants between Georgia officials and Creek and Cherokee tribal leaders. In 1832, the boundaries of the modern state of Georgia were established with the formation of Cherokee county in anticipation of the removal of remaining Creek and Cherokee between 1836 and 1838.

It should be noted here that one tragic though unintentional result of the earliest European exploration in the Southeast was the introduction of European plague diseases such as smallpox and bubonic plague. Southeastern Indians had no innate resistance to these diseases, and when epidemics began during the 16th-century among Indians infected by passing soldiers, they literally devastated indigenous populations. Spreading rapidly beyond the zone of direct European contact (viruses can remain dormant on trade goods, and infected Indians can travel far beyond their point of contact), these epidemics caused rapid and massive demographic collapse among the indigenous chiefdoms of Georgia and the rest of the Southeast. Available records leave little doubt that population levels dropped by more than 90% in many areas within the first two centuries after initial European contact. These overwhelming losses caused immediate and permanent transformations in the social geography of the Southeast, resulting in the total abandonment of many areas, and the collapse of ancient chiefdoms based on tributary labor and foodstuffs. Archaeological evidence indicates that platform mound construction, a secondary indicator of the existence of substantial chiefdoms with stable hereditary leadership, completely ceased in Georgia and surrounding states by around A.D. 1600. European plagues ultimately did far more than any direct hostile action to devastate Georgia's indigenous societies.

The table below lists all of the major early European exploratory ventures that occurred along present-day Georgia's coast and in the interior. Spanish expeditions are listed in red, French expeditions are in green, and English expeditions are in blue. Please note that many other minor expeditions, such as undocumented visits by individual Franciscan friars to provinces neighboring mission provinces, or by early Carolina traders, certainly occurred during the late 16th, 17th, and early 18th centuries. Nevertheless, the following expeditions constituted the primary European exploration of the state of Georgia.
 

DATE

LEADER

REGION EXPLORED

1521

Pedro de Quejos

Georgia coast and barrier islands

1526

Lúcas Vásquez de Ayllón

upper Georgia coast and barrier islands; colony probably located on mainland inland from Sapelo and St. Catherines Islands

1540

Hernando de Soto

middle and lower Flint River and middle Ocmulgee, Oconee, and Savannah Rivers in southwest, central, and east Georgia; Coosawattee, Etowah, and Coosa Rivers in northwest Georgia

1560

Tristán de Luna

Coosawattee, Etowah, and Coosa Rivers in northwest Georgia

1561

Angel de Villafane

Georgia coast and barrier islands

1562

Jean Ribault

Georgia coast and barrier islands

1564

Hernando Manrique de Rojas

Georgia coast and barrier islands

1564

Renè de Laudonniere

Georgia coast and barrier islands

1566

Pedro Menéndez de Avilés

Georgia coast and barrier islands

1597

Fray Pedro de Chozas

Altamaha and middle Oconee Rivers in southeast and east-central Georgia

1597

Fray Pedro Ruíz

Okefenokee Swamp

1602

Juan de Salas

Altamaha and middle Oconee Rivers in southeast and east-central Georgia

1624-25

Juan Fernández de San Agustín (?)

Altamaha and Alapaha River drainages of southeast Georgia

1625

Adrián de Cañizares y Osorio

Altamaha and middle Oconee Rivers in southeast and east-central Georgia

1627-28

Pedro de Torres

Altamaha, middle Oconee, and middle Savannah Rivers in southeast and east-central Georgia

1645-46

Governor Benito Ruíz de Salazar Vallecilla

lower Chattahoochee River in southwest Georgia

1662

Nicolás Ramírez

lower Chattahoochee River in southwest Georgia

1674

Henry Woodward

middle Savannah River in east Georgia

1679

Fray Juan de Ocón

lower Chattahoochee River in southwest Georgia

1681

Francisco García de la Vera

lower Chattahoochee River in southwest Georgia

1685

Henry Woodward

middle Savannah, Oconee, Ocmulgee, Flint, and Chattahoochee Rivers along central Georgia Fall Line

1690

James Moore

upper Savannah River drainage in northeast Georgia

1715

Maurice Moore, John Herbert, George Chicken

upper Savannah, Chattahoochee, and Hiwassee River drainages in northeast Georgia

 

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