Secession Comes to FloridaOn January 10, 1861, Florida’s General Assembly voted 62 to 7 for secession, making it the third southern state to leave the Union, following South Carolina and Mississippi. By some, Florida was referred to as “the smallest tadpole in the dirty pool of secession.” The Civil War was soon to follow. In early January, Confederate troops took control of the Castillo, then known as Fort Marion. Blockaders Arrive in St. AugustineOn April 19, six days after the firing on Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor by Confederate forces, President Abraham Lincoln declared a naval blockade of the Southern states that were in a “state of rebellion” against the Federal Government. The purpose of the blockade was to isolate the Southern states in order to prevent much needed war materials from reaching the Confederacy. By March of 1862, the grip of the naval blockade on Florida began to tighten. The USS Wabash of the United States Navy’s Southern Blockading Squadron arrived in St. Augustine and accepted the town’s surrender. Other Union Navy vessels took up blockading stations up and down Florida’s coast. Blockade Running at Matanzas InletThe Matanzas Inlet, approximately 14 miles south of St. Augustine and the defenses of Fort Marion, proved to be an attractive location to break the blockade. It was the “back door” water approach to the town and its loyal Confederate citizens. The War Comes to an EndBy April 1865, the Civil War was over, and the work of rebuilding a unified nation began. For more than four years, the citizens of St. Augustine had suffered through the hardships of military conflict and the blockade’s stranglehold on Southern commerce. Florida, with its agricultural areas and valuable natural resources, would play a critical role in rebuilding the post-war South. |
Last updated: August 23, 2018