Unlike British and French colonies in the present day United States, missions controlled the native populations within Spanish territories. In order to win souls for God, missionaries accompanied Pedro Menéndez de Avilés on his voyage to establish St. Augustine in 1565. They encountered a wide range of settlement patterns, languages, and environments. Native attitudes toward missionaries throughout the territory of Spanish Florida had already been influenced, in part, by earlier documented and undocumented encounters with Spaniards. In general, the Indians of north Florida and the Georgia coast were more receptive to missions than those to the south. The Timucuans and Apalachees were more sedentary, and they participated in vast prehistoric trade networks making them generally more open to outsiders. Most of the missions established in Spanish Florida during the 16th and 17th centuries were among these groups.
Among the missions of Apalachee, the Franciscans achieved their greatest success. By the time Bishop Calderón visited the Florida mission field in 1675, the bulk of the missions he visited were in Apalachee.


Nombre de Dios in present day St. Augustine was the first mission established in North America north of Mexico. Unlike the later California missions, the Florida missions did not intentionally undermine most native traditions. Missions (doctrinas) and outstations (visitas) were established in extant Indian villages near native footpaths which later became the Spaniards’ camino real connecting the missions. The Crown generally supported native leaders and their territories, although Spanish demands for food, labor, and military assistance intensified.

There were many other mitigating factors that shaped the nature of Florida missions. For example, the dispersed nature of most mission settlements enabled friars to protect many of their charges from direct abuse at the hands of Spanish soldiers and civilians. And Spaniards were always mindful of the fact that they were a minority who could be crushed by the native population. They did not have a firm hold over the Indians and therefore had to make themselves tolerable.

The Timucua Indians were by far the most numerous. Because of their close proximity to St. Augustine, however, they were the first to suffer severe population losses from overwork and disease. In 1633, the request by Apalachee chiefs to establish missions in their province became more desirable to Spanish officials in order to provision and provide labor for St. Augustine. Among the missions of Apalachee, the Franciscans achieved their greatest success. By the time Bishop Calderón visited the Florida mission field in 1675, the bulk of the missions he visited were in Apalachee.

Following the establishment of Charleston in 1670, the Guale missions were the first to be systematically destroyed by English-allied Indians. By 1680, a large influx of Christianized Guales moved to St. Augustine and sustained their contact with Spaniards throughout the 17th century. During James Moore’s 50-day siege of St. Augustine in 1702, he sacked the town but was unable to breach the Castillo walls or harm the Spaniards sequestered inside. Consequently, Moore decided to attack Spain’s more vulnerable hinterland missions. Between 1702 and 1704 nearly all of the Florida missions were destroyed and most of the remaining Indians of Spanish Florida were killed, enslaved, or exiled. As renowned historian Michael Gannon has stated, the destruction of the Florida missions was one of the most tragic episodes in the history of the South.