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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
9 entries match your criteria.  

 
 

Related Historical Markers

Fort Cooper, The Seminole Heritage Trail, and the Second Seminole War
 
Marker detail: The siege of Ft. Cooper is depicted by Florida artist Jackson Walker image, Touch for more information
Marker detail: The siege of Ft. Cooper is depicted by Florida artist Jackson Walker
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
1 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — Fort CooperFlorida's Seminole Wars
Setting the Scene In the Spring of 1836, President Andrew Jackson ordered General Winfield Scott, commander of the U.S. Army in Florida, to punish and defeat the belligerent Seminoles. Gen. Scott devised a complicated plan in which three . . . Map (db m132055) HM
2 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — Florida's First PeopleSeminole Heritage Trail
Prior to the Spanish arrival in the 1500s, there were hundreds of thousands of Native Americans living in Florida. Evidence of their diverse culture has been discovered in the mounds, earthworks, middens and other archaeological sites found . . . Map (db m132271) HM
3 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — The Seminole in the Cove of the WithlacoocheeSeminole Heritage Trail
Seminole Migration Story of Survival The Seminole are descendants of the Muscogee group consisting primarily of Creek Indians from Georgia and Alabama. In the early 1700s, various bands of Creeks and other Muskogean peoples began to migrate . . . Map (db m132273) HM
4 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — Life Along the WithlacoocheeSeminole Heritage Trail
Adapting to Life in the Cove Necessities of Life Before the Seminole were forced to move to the Cove, they were farmers and ranchers who lived in sturdy log homes and based their wealth on large herds of cattle and extensive crops. Unlike the . . . Map (db m132276) HM
5 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — War Comes to the CoveSeminole Heritage Trail
The Second Seminole War Begins
A Year of Victory for the Seminole In the early 1830s pressure to remove Florida's Indians grew intense. Seminole leaders signed treaties in 1832 and 1833 that called for the tribe to relocate within three . . . Map (db m132277) HM
6 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — Old Military Road
This wagon trail led between Fort Brooke and Fort King along the west side of the Cove of the Withlacoochee.Map (db m132280) HM
7 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — Lonely Outpost in a Hostile LandSeminole Heritage Trail
The Siege of Fort Cooper
A Hastily Built Defense In March 1836, General Winfield Scott launched a campaign to surround the Seminole in the Cove with an army of approximately 5,000 men. While marching to Fort Brooke in Tampa they stopped . . . Map (db m132281) HM
8 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — A Costly Florida War
More than 1,500 soldiers died and $20 million was spent in the Second Seminole War. It was the most costly of three conflicts between the U.S. and the Seminoles in Florida. Fought from 1835–1842, the war broke out when Seminoles resisted . . . Map (db m101818) HM
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9 Florida, Citrus County, Inverness — Fort Cooper
Fort Cooper was constructed in April 1836 during the Second Seminole War. General Winfield Scott instructed the First Georgia Battalion of Volunteers under the leadership of Major Mark Anthony Cooper to build two bastions and a blockhouse on the . . . Map (db m93258) HM
 
 
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Apr. 27, 2024