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Special

Secrets of Spanish Florida

Premiere: 12/26/2017 | 00:00:30 |

Secrets of Spanish Florida – A Secrets of the Dead Special uncovers one story of America’s past that never made it into textbooks. Follow some of America’s leading archaeologists, maritime scientists, and historians as they share the story of Florida’s earliest settlers. It’s a story that has taken more than 450 years to reveal.

About the Episode

The first permanent European settlement in the United States was founded in 1565–two generations before the settlements in Jamestown and Plymouth–not by English Protestants, but by the Spanish and a melting pot of people they brought with them from Africa, Italy, Germany, Ireland and even converted Jews, who integrated almost immediately with the indigenous tribes. Secrets of Spanish Florida – A Secrets of the Dead Special uncovers one story of America’s past that never made it into textbooks. Follow some of America’s leading archaeologists, maritime scientists, and historians as they share the story of Florida’s earliest settlers. It’s a story that has taken more than 450 years to reveal.

Buzzworthy Moments

  • With claim to the east coast of the New World contested by both the French and the Spanish, a community of settlers from Spain and elsewhere arrived in 1565 and laid claim to an area that is now St. Augustine, Florida.
  • America’s original European forefathers were a melting pot of races that more closely resembled today’s population than was previously understood.
  • The discovery of 1,000 pages of manuscripts written by members of the Timucuan tribe in the late 16th century indicates that these people, who lived in Georgia and Florida, had achieved a level of literacy among indigenous peoples that has not been recognized before.
  • Nearly 125 years before the Emancipation Proclamation—in 1738—a colony of 100 former slaves had already been given their freedom and their own land in Spanish La Florida.
  • A “lost tribe” of indigenous people known as the Yamasees, survived extermination by hiding in the colony’s swamps and blending in with other tribes for generations, though their existence is still not recognized by the federal government. The documentary interviews two members of the tribe.

Enjoy Secrets of Spanish Florida? For more on early Florida settlements, check out the 4-hour extended version of “America’s Untold Story” now available on DVD.

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PRODUCTION CREDITS

Narrated by
JIMMY SMITS

Produced and Written by
ROBBIE GORDON

Associate Producers
JOSH WALLACE
JENNY MOTTIER
JAIME GRECO

Director of Reenactments
TONY HAINES

Director of Photography
JOE KARABLY

Senior Editors & Sound Design
TONY HAINES
ED DELGADO

Director of Programming Operations for WNET

Executive in Charge for WNET
STEPHEN SEGALLER

Executive Producer
STEPHANIE CARTER

A production of Small Planet Pictures Inc., Investigative Media Group Inc. and 1186 Pictures in association with the University of Florida Historic St. Augustine Inc. and THIRTEEN Productions LLC.

© 2017 University of Florida Historic St. Augustine. All Rights Reserved.

UNDERWRITERS

Funding for this program was provided, in part, by The Lastinger Family Foundation; The Hough Family Foundation; The Weaver Family Foundation Fund, through the Community Foundation of Northeast Florida; and The Joy McCann Foundation. Funding for Secrets of the Dead is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and by public television viewers.

TRANSCRIPT

NARRATOR: On Secrets of the Dead This is how America started.

By the time Jamestown was founded, St. Augustine was a community of 120 shops and homes.

Pedro Menendez and the people that went with him, they are really the fathers of the United States.

East and West Florida have been written out of the historical narrative.

Secrets of Spanish Florida on Secrets of the Dead

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