Juan Pardo
(explorer)
From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
Juan Pardo was a Spanish
explorer and conquistador who was active in the later half of the sixteenth century.
He led a Spanish
expedition through what is now North and South Carolina and into eastern
Tennessee.[1]
He established Fort San Felipe, South Carolina (1566), and the village of Santa Elena on present-day Parris
Island, the first Spanish settlements in South Carolina.
While leading an expedition deeper in-country, Pardo founded Fort San Juan at Joara, the first European settlement (1567–1568) in the interior
of North Carolina.[2]
New
World exploration
Pardo led two expeditions from Santa
Elena into the interior of the present-day southeastern United States. The
first, from December 1, 1566 to March 7, 1567, numbered 125 men and was to seek
food and to establish bases among the region's indigenous people. He established Fort San Juan at Joara, a Mississippian culture center (near present-day Morganton,
North Carolina) and left a garrison behind.
Claiming the settlement for Spain, he renamed it Cuenca in honor of the Spanish
city Cuenca.[3]
Pardo led a second expedition from
September 1, 1567 to March 2, 1568 and explored the Piedmont interior and south
along the Appalachian Mountains. He established additional forts that aimed to
supply a land route to Zacatecas in present-day Mexico, where the Spanish had silver mines
they wanted to protect. Pardo returned to Santa Elena when he learned of a
French raid there.[3]
Later in 1568, the Native Americans
turned against Pardo's garrisons in the interior, killing all but one of the
120 men and burning down all six forts. The Spanish did not return to the
interior of present-day North Carolina.
A stone believed to have been
inscribed by Pardo or one of his men is in the collection of the Spartanburg Regional Museum of History. It is inscribed with an arrow
and the year 1567. The stone (#454865) was found by a farmer in Inman, South Carolina.
Archaeological
evidence
Since 1986, archaeologists working
at the Berry Site near Morganton have found evidence of mound culture, burned
huts and 16th-century Spanish artifacts. There is strong scholarly consensus
that this is the site of Joara and Fort San Juan. In 2007, the archaeologists
fully excavated one of the burned huts. They found a Spanish iron scale typical
of what the expedition would have used.[4][5]
The wiki link on the subject can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Pardo_(explorer)
No comments:
Post a Comment