Spain had agreed in the secret Treaty …
Years: 1810 - 1810
Spain had agreed in the secret Treaty of San Ildefonso of 1800 to return Louisiana to France in the secret Treaty of San Ildefonso of 1800; however, the boundaries are not explicitly specified.
After France sells the Louisiana Purchase to the United States in 1803, another boundary dispute had erupted.
The United States lays claim to the territory from the Perdido River (which today forms part of the boundary between the the U.S. states of Alabama and Florida along nearly its entire length and drains into the Gulf of Mexico) to the Mississippi River, which the Americans believe had been a part of the old province of Louisiana when the French had agreed to cede it to Spain in 1762.
The Spanish insist that they had administered that portion as the province of West Florida and that it was not part of the territory restored to France by Charles IV in 1802, as France had never given West Florida to Spain, among a list of other reasons.
The United States and Spain have held long, inconclusive negotiations on the status of West Florida.
In the meantime, American settlers have established a foothold in the area and resisted Spanish control.
British settlers, who had remained, also resented Spanish rule, leading to a rebellion in 1810 and the establishment for seventy-four days of the Republic of West Florida.
Many secret meetings of those who resent Spanish rule, as well as three openly held conventions, take place in the Baton Rouge district in West Florida from June to September 1810.
Out of those meetings grows the West Florida rebellion and the establishment of the independent Republic of West Florida, with its capital at St. Francisville, in present-day Louisiana, on a bluff along the Mississippi River.
Locations
Groups
- West Florida
- Mississippi, Territory of (U.S.A.)
- United States of America (US, USA) (Washington DC)
- Orleans, Territory of (U.S.A.)
- Louisiana, Territory of (U.S.A.)
- Spain, Bonapartist Kingdom of
- West Florida, Republic of
Topics
- Colonization of the Americas, Spanish
- West Florida Controversy
- Spanish American wars of independence
