From Potano
to Pluto
by Michael Gannon, Ph.D.
The
Franciscan ministry to the interior Apalachee tribes of Florida
was effectively destroyed by the English assault from Carolina in
1704. Two years later, English-sponsored Creek Indian raiders swept
through the western Timucuan missions farther south, including San
Francisco de Potano, near present-day Gainesville, where for a full
100 years the gospel of the Prince of Peace had been proclaimed.
In 1704, 400 Catholic refugees from the Apalachee mission town
of San Lorenzo (St. Lawrence) de Ivitachuco had fled south with
their leader Don Patricio (Patrick) Hinachuba to seek shelter
near San Francisco, where the resident Potano tribe belonged to
the Timucua nation.
But Potano remained secure for fewer than two years. During the
winter of 1705-1706 the Ivitachuco Apalachees were besieged by
Creeks, mission San Francisco was laid waste, and Don Patricio
was forced to take his people east to St. Augustine, where they
settled within a musket shot of the Spanish coquina rock castle
Castillo de San Marcos.
At St. Augustine the refugees received the consolations of religion
from Franciscan friars resident in the city. But over time their
identities as Apalachees diminished. This was owed to the fact
that their band included disproportionately more men than women.
The Apalachee sons were forced to seek wives among the Timucua.
By 1763, when Florida was ceded by treaty to Great Britain, of
the 89 surviving Christian Indians at St. Augustine who elected
to sail for Cuba with the Spaniards, only five were identified
as Apalachee. In Cuba the Christian converts were settled in the
Havana suburb of Guanabacoa. Within a year many were dead, possibly
from communicable diseases to which they had no acquired immunities.
Returning attention to Potano, the Florida Indian province where
Mission San Francisco once stood: The mission’s location
eight miles northwest of today’s Gainesville was first suggested
in the 1950s by archaeologists at the University of Florida. Early
this year, with funding from the State of Florida, UF archaeologist
Kathleen Deagan, Ph.D. and her assistant Gifford Waters, Ph.D.,
undertook an intense subsurface survey of the site - I am
the historian on the team. On last January 19th Dr. Deagan called
me with the exciting news that Dr. Waters had unearthed a shard
from a Spanish olive jar - first confirmation (among many
more confirmations to follow) that we were on the mission grounds.
I drove to the survey site where Dr. Deagan examined the shard
closely, and then placed it in my right hand. The time was 2 p.m.
While I turned the shard over and around with my fingers, I chanced
to look up at the southeast horizon where a thin white contrail
marked the ascending path of a rocket from Cape Canaveral. Dr.
Waters observed, “That’s the rocket that’s going
to Pluto.”
After
a moment’s silence Dr. Deagan said, “From Potano to
Pluto - in 400 years.”
The emotions we three shared were those of wonder and awe.
Michael Gannon, Ph.D.