
Natural
Treasures
By Lani Kathleen
Friend
Many of the early
explorers came to this area seeking gold and silver. They would leave never knowing that the real
treasure lay all around them.
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Museum of Florida History, Division of Historical
Resources, Florida Department of State
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The first inhabitants of
east-central Florida, the ancestors of Florida's native Americans, were drawn to the area
by its natural resources: a spacious waterway to the interior on the west, the marine
bounty of the Atlantic on the east, and in between a range of habitats that nurtured an
abundance of wildlife.
Since the era when native people migrated far and wide to hunt game, the
spiny ridge of the central highland together with cypress swamps and coastal marshes have
been home to a variety of animals. These diverse habitats are part of a statewide ecology
that boasts more wildlife species than any state east of the Mississippi River.
| Abundant resources combined with a
temperate climate to make it possible for both people and animals to live off the land
year round. For these and other reasons, many cultures crossed paths along the river, the
coast, and the central interior. |

Theodore de Bry,
Brevis Narratio, Frankfort 1591
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| French Protestants came in search of religious
freedom;
Spanish explorers sought a military stronghold on the route of treasure fleets from the
Indies; Colonial planters later came from Britain and the Bahamas to establish vast plantations worked by African slaves; and settlers of
all nationalities maneuvered oxcarts and schooners through impenetrable wilderness to meet
the challenges of this new frontier. |
Many discovered a "tropical
paradise;" others found only a "green inferno." But whatever their
perspective, each wave of new arrivals left its influence.
From its beginnings, Volusia
County has been shaped by a collage of cultures: as a crossroads of trade on the river the
Creeks called "Illaka" (river that wanders); as a colonial outpost under Spanish,
British, and American flags; and as an enduring natural resort that continues to attract
visitors and residents from all over the world.
An Old New World
In 1566, the Florida river that
now forms Volusia County's western border saw two cultures collide. That was when Spanish
Admiral Pedro Menendez de Aviles rowed up the St. Johns and encountered
first Timicuans and Mayaca Indians. The year before, Menendez had
crushed a French settlement at the river's mouth (near present-day Jacksonville), and now
he returned to explore inland and southward. A chance turn of the weather helped shape the
outcome of that fateful encounter.
The Wizard of Weather
Pedro Menendez set off upriver with an Indian guide and one hundred men,
landing north of Lake George. They walked inland to the village of Chief Otina. A
six-month drought had parched the cornfields of the Timucua Indians. Menedez used his
uncanny ability to predict the weather as part of his military strategy.
Otina had heard that Menendez
performed rain miracles for other tribes and sent messengers to him requesting a similar
miracle. Menendez timed his arrival at the village to coincide with the first storm of the
season. As he marched in, dark clouds loosed a torrent of rain. Awed by his display of
supernatural power, the chief fled into the woods and refused to come out.
Menendez gave up on meeting the
chief and sent word to warn the villages upriver of his coming. He continued on with one
ship and 50 men to the village of Mayaca, south of Lake George near present day
Volusia. Once again, the Spanish found an empty village. The chief with all his people had
fled in fear. An interpreter sent to find them was told that Menendez would not be harmed
if only he would turn back.
As the Spanish brigantine pushed
against the current, bands of Indians armed with bows and arrows threatened them from the
banks. Where the stream narrowed, a row of stakes blocked their way. Menendez
fearlessly broke through the barrier.
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Sketch
by Victoria Bortolussi
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| Several
Indians sent by the chief immediately confronted the boat and made
it clear that going on would mean war. |
The guide warned the Spanish party
that the country ahead was filled with Indians. Knowing his ammunition was useless
from the rain, Menendez backed down. The Spanish remained overnight, then
retreated.
Menendez
and his men were relative newcomers to east Florida (where European exploration had begun
in the early 1500s), and the native residents they saw were only the latest in a string
reaching far back in time. More than 5,000 years before the Spanish arrived, people
already had year-round villages along the St. Johns River. Many thousands of years before
that - during times of lower sea levels, a wider Florida peninsula and a drier area - the
region's earliest residents may have lived in what is now Volusia County. While traces of
these first Paleo-Indians are scarce here, the people who followed them left considerable
evidence. Some of it has been found, but much remains to be learned about Florida's early
inhabitants.


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