Bowman - Vicente Pazos and The Amelia Island Affair, 1817
Bowman - Vicente Pazos and The Amelia Island Affair, 1817
Bowman - Vicente Pazos and The Amelia Island Affair, 1817
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16. In December 1815, Aury broke the Spanish blockade of Cartagena and
rescued the three thousand persons, whom he carried away to safety.
Vicente Pazos Kanki, The Exposition, Remonstrance and Protest of Don
Vincente Pazos, Commissioner on Behalf of the Republican Agents Estab-
lished at Amelia Island, in Florida, under the Authority and in Behalf
of the Independent States of South America; with an Appendix (Phila-
delphia, 1818), 10-11.
17. Wilgus, "Spanish American Patriot Activity," 205n.
18. Pazos Kanki, Exposition, 12; Onis to the Secretary of State, January 2,
1817, American State Papers, Class I, Foreign Relations, 4: 184-85; Phila-
delphia Aurora and General Advertiser, January 5, 1818.
19. T. Frederick Davis, MacGregor's Invasion of Florida, 1817, Together with
An Account of His Successors, Irwin, Hubbard and Aury, on Amelia
Island, East Florida (Jacksonville, 1928), 7-8. Amelia Island was the
northeasternmost tip of Spanish East Florida. It is located near the
mouth of the St. Marys River, which forms the boundary at that point
between Florida and Georgia.
20. [Vicente Pazos Kanki], "Memorial of Vicente Pazos," Niles' Weekly Reg-
ister, April 11, 1818; J. Skinner to John Quincy Adams, July 30, 1817,
"Letters Relating to MacGregor's Attempted Conquest of East Florida,
1817," Florida Historical Quarterly, V (July 1926), 55-56; Charles Francis
Adams, ed., Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Comprising Portions of
His Diary from 1795 to 1848, 12 vols. (Philadelphia, 1874-1877), IV, 53;
Thornton to Adams, February 9, 1818, WTP, V, 799.
21. Pazos Kanki, Exposition, 13; Savannah Republican, June 5, July 10, 1817.
An anonymous friend of Pazos said that MacGregor's security given for
the financial aid advanced him was thirty thousand acres of Florida land.
Narrative of a Voyage to the Spanish Main, in the Ship "Two Friends;"
the occupation of Amelia Island, by M'Gregor, &c.-Sketches of the Prov-
ince of East Florida (London, 1819), 85-86.
22. Pazos Kanki, Exposition, 13-14; Davis, MacGregor's Invasion, 65; Daily
National Intelligencer, September 13, 26, 1817; Charleston Courier, Sep-
tember 30, 1817.
23. Philadelphia Aurora and General Advertiser, December 4, 1817.
24. Ibid., October 28, 1817; Pazos Kanki, Exposition, 14-15; Daily National
Intelligencer, October 4, 1817; James Forbes to John Quincy Adams,
April 22, 1818, State Department, Miscellaneous Letters, pp. H-J, Na-
tional Archives, Washington, D.C. Hereinafter cited as NA.
25. Thornton to Adams, February 9, 1818, WTP, V, 799; Gual to Thornton,
July 23, 1817, ibid., V, 783-84; Stanley Faye, "Commodore Aury," Louisi-
ana Historical Quarterly, XXIV (July 1941), 646.
26. Juan Canter, "El Aflo XII, Las Asambleas Generales y la Revoluci6n del
8 de Octubre," in Ricardo Levene, ed., Historia de la Naci6n Argentina
(Desde los Origenes hasta la Organizacidn Definitiva en 1862), 10 vols.
(Buenos Aires, 1936-1942), V, Sec. 2, 750n.
27. Thomas Stoughton to Jonathan Fisk, September 16, 1817, Legajo 5642,
Letter 191, pp. 800-01, SE:AHN; New-York Evening Post, September 6,
1817; New-York Columbian, September 6, 1817. Ferrero had commanded
a schooner in Sim6n Bolivar's expedition of March 1816 from Aux Cayes.
Gustave Schlumberger, ed., Mdmoires du Commandant Persat, 1806 a
1844 (Paris, 1910), 22.
28. John Kerney to Samuel Evans, September 8, 1817, in Philadelphia Aurora
and General Advertiser, January 1, 1818; Deposition of John Reilley,
September 17, 1817, Legajo 5642, Letter 191, pp. 804-05, SE:AHN; Adams,
Memoirs, IV, 75; Herman Albert Shumacher, "Biograffa del General
Agustin Codazzi," Boletin de historia y antigiiedades, IX (June 1913), 8;
Schlumberger, Mdmoires, 26.
29. Gual to Thornton, September 17, 1817, WTP, V, 786; Charleston Courier,
October 1, 1817.
34. Rufus Kay Wyllys, "The Filibusters of Amelia Island," Georgia His-
torical Quarterly, XII (December 1928), 312; Charleston Courier, October
24, November7, 1817.
35. The technicality used by the Supreme Court to justify its decision was
that Mexico did not figure among those Spanish provinces "in actual
revolt, nor was any such State de facto known to exist as the Mexican
republic," under the authority of which the commissions were issued.
James Brown Scott, ed., Prize Cases Decided in the United States Su-
preme Court, 1789-1918, 3 vols. (Oxford, 1923), II, 1080-81; Thomas
Wayne to Benjamin Homans, September17, 1817,in Philadelphia Aurora
and General Advertiser, January 2, 1818; American State Papers, Class I,
Foreign Relations, 4: 535-36.
36. Charleston Courier, November 28, 1817.
St. Augustine ever materialized for two reasons: Aury was too
preoccupied with firming up his position in Fernandina, and he
was distracted by disputes with American authorities over the
privateers and prizes entering and leaving his bailiwick.
Aury again declared martial law November 5, this time for
ten days. His proclamation to the people of Amelia Island once
more bore traces of Pazos's hand: "For days past you have
witnessed the scandalous transactions of a fraction, composed
of men, who existing and tolerated on this Island by our
generosity, have solely been engaged in subverting social order.
They are mercenaries, traitors or cowards, who abandoned the
cause of Republicanism in the hour of danger, and who either
hired by our enemies or misled by the intrigues of a few aspiring
individuals, have attempted to involve us in all the complicated
horrors of a civil war. Citizens, we are Republicans from
principle, our fortunes have been spent, and our lives oft ex-
posed for this most glorious cause. We have come here to plant
the tree of liberty, to foster free institutions, and to wage war
against the tyrant of Spain, the oppressor of America, and the
enemy of the rights of man. AWe are every ready to pay
obedience to the principles of Republicanism, but firmly deter-
mined never to adhere to the dictates of a faction." As soon as
"public peace and tranquilty" had been restored, Aury promised
the establishment of a provisional government "most suitable
to our common interest, and to the advancement of our glorious
cause.""37Difficulties with the United States navy began during
this time when martial law was imposed.
The slave schooner Tentativa, prize to the Mexican privateer
Brutus, was being brought into Fernandina on November 8 by
John Austin, prizemaster, when a boat from the American brig
Saranac came alongside and an officer asked to be allowed to
come aboard. Austin threatened to fire on the vessel if any at-
tempt was made to board the Tentativa. Muskets were discharged
under his stern, whereupon the schooner fired back and then
hastened into port.
John H. Elton was captain of the Saranac and the man re-
sponsible for patrolling the waters around St. Marys to keep out
contraband. On November 9 he wrote Aury a note demanding
48. There were probably no more than three issues of the Telegrafo pub-
lished, none of which is known to be extant. Charleston Courier, De-
cember 19, 1817; Daily National Intelligencer, January 2, 1818; T. Fred-
erick Davis, "MacGregor's Invasion of Florida, 1817," Florida Historical
Quarterly, VII (July 1928), 48; Douglas C. McMurtrie, "The Beginnings
of Printing in Florida," Florida Historical Quarterly, XXIII (October
1944), 68-69.
49. McMurtrie, Republic of the Floridas, [iv].
50. [Juan Canter?], "Inventario de documentos publicados," Boletin del In-
stituto de Investigaciones Hist6ricas, Supplement to V (January-March
1927), 94.
56. Henley and Bankhead to Aury, December 22, 1817, American State
Papers,ClassI, Foreign Relations, 4: 139-40.
57. Aury to Henley and Bankhead, December 22, 1817, ibid., 140.
58. Aury to Henley and Bankhead, December 22, 1817, in Narrative of a
Voyage, 321-23.
59. Henley and Bankhead to Aury, December 23, 1817, American State
Papers, Class I, Foreign Relations, 4:140-41.
60. Aury to Henley and Bankhead, December 23, 1817, ibid., 141; Charleston
Courier, December 31, 1817; Philadelphia Democratic Press, January 7,
1818.
61. Aury to James Monroe, December 23, 1817, State Department, Territorial
Papers, Florida, 71, NA.