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All of Pedro Menendez's settlements were gone except Santa Elena and SA
Source: The Menendez Marquez Cattle Barony at La Chua and the Determinants of Economic Expansion in Seventeenth-Century Florida #163
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It was the Spanish Crown's policy to populate the Indies and make them productive, and Florida was no exception. Spain made repeated attempts to establish a settlement there. Each successive adelantado contracted to found towns, bring in settlers, and distribute the land without dispossessing the Indians. Each family was to be given tools, seeds and cuttings, and livestock, including cattle, horses, sheep, and hogs. First, however, the land had to be conquered. That conquest began when Pedro Menendez founded St. Augustine in 1565 and Santa Elena (on present Parris Island) a year later. (Pedro Menendez de Aviles to King Philip II, October 15, 1565.) Although the great anti-corsairing captain from Asturias at one time or another had a garrisoned fort and a Jesuit located on every deep harbor from the Chesapeake south to the Keys and along the Gulf to Tampa Bay, the Spanish presence remained precarious. At the time of Menendez's death in 1574, all his fortified places had collapsed except Santa Elena and St. Augustine; the French had resumed their interrupted peltry and sassafrass trade; and even the Jesuits had departed. (King [Philip II] cedula to Pedro Menendez Marquez, July 11, 1583.) ...For another twenty-five years the Spanish confined themselves to St. Augustine, the islands off the coast of present Carolina and Georgia, and some missions along the St. Johns River. (Bushnell MM)
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