Seminole Heritage Trail
The Siege of Fort CooperA Hastily Built DefenseIn March 1836, General Winfield Scott launched a campaign to surround the Seminole in the Cove with an army of approximately 5,000 men. While marching to Fort Brooke in Tampa they stopped here to leave the sick and wounded under the care of Major Mark Anthony Cooper. Scott and his remaining troops promised to return in nine days. Cooper's first priority was to build a protective fortification. In just a few days, Cooper's men felled hundreds of pine trees for the picket walls of a fort that was built on the hilltop before you.
Major Mark Anthony Cooperof the Georgia VolunteersIn addition to serving as a volunteer militia officer, the namesake of Fort Cooper was a lawyer, banker, devout churchman, pioneer industrialist, educator, farmer, and statesman. Cooper served as Solicitor General of the Georgia Circuit Court, was a member of the Georgia House of Representatives and a U.S. Congressman.
Attack and SiegeA few days after Scott departed, several hundred Seminole warriors led by Osceola attacked the fort and held it under siege for sixteen days. Although Cooper's men were safe behind the picket walls, they made several bold counterattacks in an attempt to drive off the Seminole. Finally, as provisions grew scarce, a relief column
arrived and forced the Seminole to leave. After the conclusion of Scott's campaign, Fort Cooper was used intermittently during the war as an observation and supply post.
At Home in the ForestThe Seminole warriors who attacked Fort Cooper needed no fortification for protection. Their defense was familiarity with the forests and swamps of the Cove, where they could hide unseen and travel undetected. Unlike the soldiers, they had adapted to the harsh conditions of Florida's interior - heat, humidity, rain and mosquitoes. And after a hard day's battle, the Seminole could hunt in familiar territory and return to rest in a nearby village.
Life Behind the Picket WallsIn the first few days of the siege, the Seminole stole most of the soldiers' cattle. They had nothing to eat but hard biscuits, bacon and dried beans, and were forced to slaughter some of their horses for meat. Although clean, plentiful water was available from a nearby spring, soldiers had to leave the safety of the fort to get it. Here they cared for the sick and wounded with nothing more than a tent for a hospital, limited medicine and the comforting words of a friend.
The UnconqueredRelentless Pressure to LeaveAlthough the few hundred Seminole left in Florida had been driven south of Lake Okeechobee, they continued to feel pressure to relocate to western
reservations. Their refusal to leave led to the Third Seminole War, which broke out in 1855 and lasted more than two years. With the most dangerous warriors removed and less than 200 Seminole hiding deep within the Everglades, the war was declared over, but no peace treaty was ever signed.
Proud DescendantsAfter the third war, the Seminole remained hidden in the Everglades. When drainage and road building projects came to south Florida in the 1900s, the resourceful Seminole adapted, joining the tourist trade to exhibit their culture. In the 1950s and '60s, two groups gained federal recognition: The Seminole Tribe of Florida and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida. A third group, known as the Independent Seminoles, was never federally recognized. Today, the 4500 Seminole who live in Florida are proud descendants of those courageous warriors and their families who refused to give up the homeland they loved.
Want to learn more about the Seminole Wars? Visit the nearby Dade Battlefield Historic State Park in Bushnell or the reconstructed Fort Foster at Hillsborough River State Park south of Zephyrhills. Please check with the park office for more information.
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· The Seminole used muzzle-loading rifles with superior accuracy and range to Army muskets
· "Do Your Best" by Jackson Walker
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