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People · The Freedom-Seeker Story

Francisco Menendez

The West African who escaped slavery and led the first free Black town in America (c. 1700 to after 1763)

The leader of the first legally sanctioned free Black town in what is now the United States was a man born in West Africa, enslaved in the English colonies, who fought his way to freedom in Spanish Florida and then spent his life defending it with a gun in his hands. His name, the one he took in Florida, was Francisco Menendez, and his story is the human spine of the freedom-seeker history that connects, at its far southern end, to the mouth of Tampa Bay. He was no relation to the conquistador Pedro Menendez; he took the name in Florida.

From the Mandinga to Carolina

Menendez was born around 1704 in West Africa, of the Mandinga people. Captured and carried across the Atlantic, he was enslaved by an English planter in the Carolinas sometime before 1720. There he learned, as many enslaved people in Carolina did, of the promise to the south: by a royal edict of the Spanish king Charles II in 1693, any enslaved man who fled an English plantation and reached Spanish Florida would be granted his freedom, provided he accepted the Catholic faith and took up arms in the militia. It was a promise worth risking everything for.

The long road to freedom

His freedom did not come easily or at once. When the Yamasee people rose against the English in 1715, Menendez escaped in the upheaval and fought alongside the Yamasee against his former enslavers, reaching Spanish Florida in the company of Yamasee allies by the late 1720s. Yet despite the 1693 edict, he and some thirty other escaped Africans were not at first granted the liberty they had been promised; they were held in a servitude of sorts even in Florida. Menendez did not accept it quietly. He became literate, was made captain of St. Augustine's free Black militia in the 1720s, and petitioned the Spanish governor again and again to honor the king's promise of freedom for himself and his compatriots.

Fort Mose and the Battle of Bloody Mose

In 1738 he prevailed. Governor Manuel Montiano freed the petitioners and established a fortified town for them just north of St. Augustine, Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose, with Francisco Menendez as its civil and military leader. It was the first free Black town in what is now the United States, and it was also St. Augustine's first line of defense against the English to the north. The test came fast. In 1740 an army under the Georgia governor James Oglethorpe invaded Florida and seized the abandoned fort, and in the ferocious counterattack that followed, remembered as the Battle of Bloody Mose, Menendez and his militia helped retake the ground and break Oglethorpe's siege of St. Augustine, though their town was wrecked in the fighting.

Privateer, prisoner, survivor

With Mose in ruins, Menendez took to the sea as a privateer aboard Spanish corsairs, raiding English shipping. His luck ran out when the English captured him; for the offense of being a free Black man in arms against them, he was brutally punished, by the accounts whipped and abused, before he escaped and made his way back to Florida. He left a written account of the ordeal, a rare first-person record from such a man in that century. He resumed his leadership, saw Fort Mose rebuilt in 1752, and governed his community for another decade.

The last voyage

When Spain ceded Florida to Britain in 1763, the free people of Mose faced re-enslavement under English rule, and they chose exile over that. Francisco Menendez sailed with them for Spanish Cuba, his name on the rolls of the evacuation, and there the documentary trail goes quiet. He had been born unfree in Africa, enslaved across an ocean, and had made himself, by will and courage and decades of struggle, the leader of free people and the first Black militia commander on the American mainland. The flight to Cuba that ended his known story was the same path the maroons of Angola, near Tampa Bay, would take two generations later, which is why his life reaches all the way to this archive.

Francisco Menendez
Origin
Born about 1704 in West Africa, of the Mandinga people
Enslaved
In the British colony of South Carolina, before 1720
Escaped
Via the Yamasee War; reached Spanish Florida by the late 1720s
Freed
1738, under Spain's sanctuary policy; led the free Black town of Mose
In war
Captain of St. Augustine's free Black militia; fought at Bloody Mose, 1740
Ordeal
Turned privateer, captured and tortured by the English, escaped
Last known
Sailed for Cuba with his people in 1763

Sources & Citations

  1. Jane Landers, “Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose: A Free Black Town in Spanish Colonial Florida,” American Historical Review (1990), and Black Society in Spanish Florida.
  2. Kathleen Deagan and Darcie MacMahon, Fort Mose: Colonial America's Black Fortress of Freedom (1995).
  3. Fort Mose Historical Society; National Park Service; Florida Museum of Natural History (St. Augustine timeline).