Tequesta Indians lived
close to Biscayne Bay and the Miami River near what is present day
Miami. They were mainly hunters and gathers living off the coastal
fish and shellfish and gathering wild plants, nuts, and berries. The
Tequesta all but vanished due to war and disease following the arrival
of the Europeans in the 1500s.
In 1998
during excavations for a new high rise, a stone circle was found
on the bank of the Miami River. Scientists believe that the circle
was created by Tequesta Indians and site artifacts indicate that
humans lived on both sides of the river for some 2,000 years.
Read more about the Tequesta
Indians at the online exhibit "First
Arrivals" at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida.
Ponce de Leon
was the first to encounter the Miami River Tequesta during his 1913
expedition to "La Florida." In 1566, Pedro Menendez de Aviles
and his men attempted to build a mission and establish a garrison
near the site. The mission was abandoned after fighting broke out
with the Indians. In 1743, the Spanish again attempted to establish
a mission. It too failed.
For
many years, very few people lived in the area of south-eastern Florida.
Although the weather and climate were generally mild, much of the
land just beyond the coast was swampy. Mosquitoes spread disease to
people and cattle alike.
Photo courtesy
of the Florida Photo Archives.
It
wasn't until the late 1830's that a plantation/trading post was established
on the banks of the Miami River at Fort Dallas. Fort Dallas became
the first permanent settlement of a non-native community in this area.