Tristan de Luna lands at Pensacola, Florida. |
Was the first ever European settlement in the Gulf States
located within the confines of present-day Wilcox County?
Many of you will remember from grade school that the oldest
continuously occupied European settlement within the borders of the continental
United States is St. Augustine, in northeastern Florida, which was founded by
the Spanish in 1565. However, according to “Alabama Encyclopedia, Vol. 1: Book
of Facts,” the Spaniards actually established a settlement in Wilcox County
five years before that, in 1560.
For those of you interested in this unusual bit of trivia,
here’s what the “Alabama Encyclopedia” had to say about it – “On Boykin’s
Ridge, on Pine Barren Creek, near its influx into the Alabama River, was a
Mobillian town, Nanipacna. This town was the successor to Maubila, which was
destroyed by DeSoto in 1540. In April 1560, the Tristan de Luna expedition
established a colony of several hundred persons here. Although the colony was
short lived, it was the first European settlement in the Gulf States. The town
was shown on De Crenay’s map of 1733. The name means ‘Top of the Hill.’”
This interesting paragraph seemed to yield up more questions
than answers. Why did the famous Spanish explorer Tristan de Luna decide to
establish a colony at Nanipacna in the first place? Why was it short lived?
Where exactly was it located? Did these “several hundred persons” leave
anything behind?
With those questions in mind, I turned to a book called
“Dead Towns of Alabama” by W. Stuart Harris. In that book, under the entry for
Nanipacna, the author noted that this Indian town was located on the east side
of the Alabama River, in the northern section of present-day Wilcox County. It
went on to say that the “ill-fated” De Luna expedition “reached this town,
found it deserted, but discovered there a large supply of corn, beans and other
needed provisions.”
The town’s Indian inhabitants fled into the woods a few
minutes before the Spaniards arrived, but soon came back and welcomed the
Spanish. “Much to the Indians’ regret, the uninvited guests showed no
inclination to leave, and the food supply soon vanished, forcing all the people
to search for wild food during the winter in order to survive.”
Other sources I found indicated that most of the Spaniards
left Nanipacna, which is a Choctaw word, in late June 1560, and most of them had
returned to Pensacola by November of that year due to lack of food.
My trusty copy of the “Alabama Atlas & Gazetteer”
indicates that Pine Barren Creek enters the Alabama River a few miles northeast
of the Boykin community, which is almost due north of Camden.
As hard as it is to believe, Spanish explorers were living
in this area 457 years ago, which was years before any European colony was
established anywhere else within the confines of not only Alabama, but also
Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida. What these explorers would think
about Alabama and those other states today is hard to predict, but one thing
can be said for sure, much has changed in our part of the world during the past
four and a half centuries.
No comments:
Post a Comment