After the Spanish discovered in 1565 that France had established a colony at
Fort Caroline in Florida,
Philip II commissioned Menéndez to found a colony and expel the French from Florida. A French fleet under the command of
Jean Ribault brought supplies and reinforcements to Fort Caroline in early September 1565. Menéndez reached Florida and
founded St. Augustine just a few days later, on September 8, 1565, on a site from Fort Caroline. The French attempted to attack St. Augustine using Ribault's fleet, arriving off St. Augustine on September 11. A storm, which may have been a hurricane, struck the area on September 12, scattering the fleet. Realizing that the storm would prevent the French fleet from returning to Fort Caroline, Menéndez led 500 men overland to attack the French fort and captured it. The French fleet had suffered grievously in the storm. Three large ships had foundered and broken up near the
Ponce de Leon Inlet, with the loss of many men. The fleet's flagship,
Trinité, remained intact, but
grounded near Cape Canaveral. The survivors of the wrecks at Ponce de Leon Inlet and separately, those from the
Trinité, began walking north along the coast in an attempt to reach Fort Caroline. On September 28, Menéndez learned that the survivors from the Ponce de Leon Inlet wrecks had gathered on the south side on an inlet south of St. Augustine. Taking the French as prisoners, the Spanish ferried them across the inlet in small numbers and then, with the exception of a few who professed to be
Catholic, killed them. On October 11, Menéndez returned to the inlet after learning that the survivors of the
Trinité had reached it. On learning what had happened to the survivors who had earlier reached the inlet, about half of the French turned back to the south. The remainder were again ferried across the inlet in small groups and, with a few exceptions, killed. These
killings gave the name ("killings") to the
inlet. ==Cape Canaveral==