Fort Mose was founded in 1738 just north of St. Augustine, Florida, and it does not get talked about enough. It punches a clean hole through the myth that freedom for Africans in “early America” only started later. Under Spanish Florida, it was called Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mosé. Governor Manuel de Montiano ordered it built as a fortified settlement where freedom seekers escaping British colonies could live as free people by law. Not a rumor…not a loophole…a recognized community with a name and a mission. Spain offered freedom with conditions. Convert to Catholicism, pledge loyalty to the Spanish Crown, and be willing to help defend the colony. Yes, it was politics aimed at weakening the British. But politics still opened a door…and people ran through it anyway. Fort Mose was not just a fort. It was a neighborhood. Families building lives with legal standing in a world designed to deny them personhood. The community organized a militia, led by Captain Francisco Menéndez, proof that Africans were not only surviving…they were holding rank, defending land, and negotiating power. Life there was never soft. In 1740, during General James Oglethorpe’s siege of St. Augustine, British forces took Mosé. Days later, Spanish troops, Indigenous allies, and the Black militia counterattacked in what’s remembered as the Battle of Bloody Mose. The fort was destroyed in the fighting, but the resistance was real, and the message was louder than the smoke. Still, the receipt stands. In 1738 there was a free Black community living under law on land that would become the United States. They ran, organized, fought, and built…long before the timeline most of us were handed even “starts.” #FortMose #BlackHistory #SpanishFlorida #StAugustine #FloridaHistory #ColonialHistory #FreedomSeekers #MaroonHistory #AfricanDiaspora #HiddenHistory