First Seminole War - определение. Что такое First Seminole War
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Что (кто) такое First Seminole War - определение

19TH-CENTURY WARS BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES ARMY AND THE SEMINOLE PEOPLE OF FLORIDA
Seminole War; Florida Seminole Wars; Florida Wars; Florida war; First Seminole War; Third Seminole War; Seminole Indian War; Florida Indian War; Seminole wars; Jackson incursion; United States Senate Select Committee on the Seminole War; Second Interbellum; Battle of Big Cypress
  • The remaining Seminoles in Florida were allowed to stay on an informal reservation in southwest Florida at the end of the Second Seminole War in 1842.
  • [[Andrew Jackson]] led an invasion of Florida during the First Seminole War.
  • [[Billy Bowlegs]], 1858
  • Edmund Pendleton Gaines]] commanded Federal troops at the [[Battle of Negro Fort]].
  • Barracks and tents at [[Fort Brooke]] near [[Tampa Bay]]
  • The [[Treaty of Moultrie Creek]] provided for a reservation in central Florida for the Seminoles.
  • [[Osceola]], Seminole leader
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  • [[U.S. Marine]]s searching for the Indians during the Seminole War
  • Woodcut from ''A true and authentic account of the Indian war in Florida ... '' (1836)
  • View of a Seminole village shows the log cabins they lived in prior to the disruptions of the Second Seminole War
  • A 1903 map showing the territorial changes of "West Florida"

The Virgin of the Seminole         
1922 FILM BY OSCAR MICHEAUX
The Virgin of Seminole
The Virgin of the Seminole (sometimes listed as The Virgin of Seminole) is a 1922 race film directed, written and produced by Oscar Micheaux.
Seminole         
  •  Seminole woman, painted by [[George Catlin]], 1834
  • A Seminole spearing a garfish from a dugout, Florida, 1930
  • Captain Francis Asbury Hendry (center, standing) poses with a group of Seminole Indians
  • Sign at [[Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park]] commemorating hundreds of enslaved [[African American]]s who in the early 1820s escaped from this area to freedom in the Bahamas.
  • 30px
  • 30px
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  • Seminole]]'' clipper ship card
  • Seminoles' [[Thanksgiving]] meal mid-1950s
  • Kendall]], Florida, 1916. Photo taken by botanist, [[John Kunkel Small]]
  • [[Seminole patchwork]] shawl made by Susie Cypress from [[Big Cypress Indian Reservation]], ca. 1980s
NATIVE AMERICAN PEOPLE ORIGINALLY FROM FLORIDA
Seminole Indians; Seminoles; Seminole (tribe); Seminole Nation; Seminole Tribe; Seminole Indian; Seminole people; Simanó˙li; Seminole tribe
['s?m?n??l]
¦ noun (plural same or Seminoles)
1. a member of an American Indian people of the Creek confederacy.
2. the Muskogean language of the Seminole.
Origin
via Creek from Amer. Sp. cimarron 'wild'.
Seminoles         
  •  Seminole woman, painted by [[George Catlin]], 1834
  • A Seminole spearing a garfish from a dugout, Florida, 1930
  • Captain Francis Asbury Hendry (center, standing) poses with a group of Seminole Indians
  • Sign at [[Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park]] commemorating hundreds of enslaved [[African American]]s who in the early 1820s escaped from this area to freedom in the Bahamas.
  • 30px
  • 30px
  • 30px
  • Seminole]]'' clipper ship card
  • Seminoles' [[Thanksgiving]] meal mid-1950s
  • Kendall]], Florida, 1916. Photo taken by botanist, [[John Kunkel Small]]
  • [[Seminole patchwork]] shawl made by Susie Cypress from [[Big Cypress Indian Reservation]], ca. 1980s
NATIVE AMERICAN PEOPLE ORIGINALLY FROM FLORIDA
Seminole Indians; Seminoles; Seminole (tribe); Seminole Nation; Seminole Tribe; Seminole Indian; Seminole people; Simanó˙li; Seminole tribe
·noun ·pl A tribe of Indians who formerly occupied Florida, where some of them still remain. They belonged to the Creek Confideration.

Википедия

Seminole Wars

The Seminole Wars (also known as the Florida Wars) were a series of three military conflicts between the United States and the Seminoles that took place in Florida between about 1816 and 1858. The Seminoles are a Native American nation which coalesced in northern Florida during the early 1700s, when the territory was still a Spanish colonial possession. Tensions grew between the Seminoles and settlers in the newly independent United States in the early 1800s, mainly because enslaved people regularly fled from Georgia into Spanish Florida, prompting slaveowners to conduct slave raids across the border. A series of cross-border skirmishes escalated into the First Seminole War in 1817, when General Andrew Jackson led an incursion into the territory over Spanish objections. Jackson's forces destroyed several Seminole and Black Seminole towns and briefly occupied Pensacola before withdrawing in 1818. The U.S. and Spain soon negotiated the transfer of the territory with the Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819.

The United States gained possession of Florida in 1821 and coerced the Seminoles into leaving their lands in the Florida panhandle for a large Indian reservation in the center of the peninsula per the Treaty of Moultrie Creek. About ten years later, however, the US government under President Andrew Jackson demanded that they leave Florida altogether and relocate to Indian Territory per the Indian Removal Act. A few bands reluctantly complied but most resisted violently, leading to the Second Seminole War (1835-1842), which was by far the longest and most wide-ranging of the three conflicts. Initially, less than 2000 Seminole warriors employed hit-and-run guerilla warfare tactics and knowledge of the land to evade and frustrate a combined U.S. Army and Marine force that grew to over 30,000. Instead of continuing to pursue these small bands, American commanders eventually changed their strategy and focused on seeking out and destroying hidden Seminole villages and crops, putting increasing pressure on resisters to surrender or starve with their families.

Most of the Seminole population had been relocated to Indian Country or killed by the mid-1840s, though several hundred settled in southwest Florida, where they were allowed to remain in an uneasy truce. Tensions over the growth of nearby Fort Myers led to renewed hostilities, and the Third Seminole War broke out in 1855. By the cessation of active fighting in 1858, the few remaining bands of Seminoles in Florida had fled deep into the Everglades to land unwanted by white settlers.

Taken together, the Seminole Wars were the longest, most expensive, and most deadly of all American Indian Wars.