Marriages between white plantation owners and African women were common in East Florida.
"Panama" was the site of East Florida's first steam-powered sawmill in 1828.
East Florida was lost to Spain in 1781.
East Florida was returned to Spain in 1783.
The United States took possession of the remainder, East Florida, in 1819.
Appeal from the superior court for East Florida.
Starting in 1769, Romans surveyed the coastal waters of East Florida.
He served as Governor of East Florida from 1763 to 1771.
Following the war, the United States effectively controlled East Florida.
Many of the southern loyalists moved to East Florida, which became British in 1763.