Before Jamestown, There Was St. Augustine Before many Americans learned about Jamestown, Plymouth Rock, or the Pilgrims, Spanish Florida was already part of the story. In 1565, Pedro Menéndez de Avilés founded St. Augustine in what is now Florida. The city is recognized as the oldest continuously occupied settlement of European and African American origin in the United States. It was founded decades before Jamestown and Plymouth. That matters because early American history did not begin only with English settlers. It also included Spanish colonization, Indigenous land, forced labor, African presence, Catholic missions, military outposts, and communities shaped under empire. St. Augustine was built on land where Indigenous people already lived. Spanish colonists first occupied the Timucua village of Seloy, and conflict grew between Spanish settlers and Indigenous communities before the settlement later shifted to the site of modern St. Augustine. African people were also there from the beginning. When people talk about African presence in early America, many start with 1619 in Virginia. That story is important, but it is not the only beginning. In Spanish Florida, free and enslaved Africans were already part of the settlement in the 1500s. That means the Spanish chapter of American history was never only Spanish. It was Indigenous. It was African. It was European. It was forced together through conquest, survival, labor, violence, religion, and resistance. This is why the history matters. Once people understand St. Augustine, they understand that Spanish-speaking history in America did not arrive late. It was already being written before English colonies became the center of the classroom story. This was not a side chapter. It was one of the first chapters. And many people were never taught it that way. #LataraSpeaksTruth #AmericanHistory #LatinoHistory #HispanicHeritage #HiddenHistory