Following the
Creek War of 1813-1814, Native American refugees from that conflict went into exile in
Spanish Florida. One of the rendezvous points for these people was in the
Apalachicola River valley (see
Blountstown, Florida). During the
War of 1812 the British established two military posts along the river; one at
Prospect Bluff and the other near modern day
Chattahoochee, Florida. Following the
Treaty of Ghent, British regulars and many of the
Corps of Colonial Marines were evacuated to other British colonies while the arms of these military installations were left with a contingent of the Colonial Marines (see the
Treaty of Nicolls Outpost). The British post with the remaining contingent of Colonial Marines thus became known as the
Negro Fort. The fort was considered a haven for
Maroons from the United States. In April 1816, Andrew Jackson informed Spanish Governor
José Masot of
West Florida that if he did not eliminate the Negro Fort, Jackson would. The governor replied that he did not have the forces to take the fort. Over the next two years a series of hostile actions in the region (
Battle of Negro Fort,
Battle of Fowltown, the
Scott massacre,
Battle of Ocheesee) would lead to Jackson's incursion into Spanish Florida in March 1818. The
First Seminole War saw Jackson's army and his allied Lower Creek warriors led by
William McIntosh march down the Apalachicola to build the new
Fort Gadsden as well as destroy the Native American settlements at
Tallahassee and
Miccosukee. ==Battle==