Category Florida History
Remembering the shameful Johns Committee: McCarthyism in Florida
Florida History Podcast: Florida’s McCarthyism Committee Senator Charley Johns (D-Starke) is one of the best known figures in the Florida Political History for multiple dubious reasons. The leader of the infamous “Pork Chop Gang”. Johns became Governor in 1953 after Governor Dan McCarty the first Governor elected from southern Florida died just months after taking […]
Florida’s First African-American statewide official- Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs
Florida History Podcast :Florida’s first statewide African-American official, Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs. Johnathan Clarkson Gibbs served as the first black statewide official . The above linked podcast from 2021 discusses his career and legacy.
Black History Month: Runaway Slaves escape via Florida to British-held territory
In this second episode of our Black History Month 2023 series, we discuss runaway slaves escaping to British-held territories in the 1800’s. You can listen to the Florida History Podcast on Anchor (which hosts our show), Spotify, Google, Apple Podcasts, Radio Public, Breaker, Overcast, Castro or Pocket Casts. Overcast, Castro, Spotify, Radio Public and Breaker have App Store apps for free which enable you to subscribe […]
Black History Month: Remembering the free blacks who saved Florida in the 18th Century
PODCAST In July 1742, decisive battles between the Spanish and British took place in and around St Simons Island, Georgia. It was the culmination of a conflict which began when the British invaded Florida, partly because of the number of runaway slaves that had come to the Spanish colonies. In the late 1600’s Spain began […]
Florida History Podcast: Runaway Slaves head to 18th Century Florida
As part of Black History Month at the Florida History Podcast ,we discuss several topics we have previously touched upon in greater detail – the impact of runaway slaves on Spanish Florida in the 18th Century, the free black settlement of Fort Mose and the critical role free African-Americans took in defending Florida from British […]
Florida’s first black Congressman- Josiah T. Walls
Florida History Podcast- Josiah T. Walls. Republican Josiah T. Walls was Florida’s first African-American Congressman, and a powerful symbol of the Reconstruction era in the state. Walls was born into slavery in Virginia and captured by the Union Army during the Peninsula Campaign. Eventually he was discharged in Florida after the Battle of Olustee and […]
Black History Month: Capitol Men
The story of the African-American members of Congress during the Reconstruction era is often forgotten. The long standing Dunning School of history made every effort to paint reconstruction as a mistake and portray that the only way to truly reconcile the nation was to let white southerners do what they want in the region. Thus […]
Black History Month: “The Lost Cause” academia and progressive-populism
“Gone with the Wind,” is one of the most famous films in history. Based on a Margaret Mitchell novel, It is a movie that tells a historically inaccurate picture of the Civil War, Reconstruction Era, North and South. It is also a film that in my opinion glorifies rape, something in this #MeToo era needs to be […]
A history of the Bulow Plantation – Florida’s largest slave-driven sugar plantation
On this week’s Florida History Podcast, we discuss the Bulow Plantation, Florida’s largest slave-driven sugar plantation which was destroyed by the Seminole Native Americans during the Second Seminole War in 1836. You can listen to the Florida History Podcast on Anchor (which hosts our show), Spotify, Google, Apple Podcasts, Radio Public, Breaker, Overcast, Castro or Pocket Casts. Overcast, Castro, Spotify, Radio Public and Breaker have App […]
Black History Month: Negro Fort – Andrew Jackson, slavery and a massacre
On a previous edition of tthe Florida History Podcast we discussed the Negro Fort on the Apalachicola River, manned by runaway slaves and armed by the British. The pro-slavery United States under General Andrew Jackson attacked the fort in 1816, violating Spain sovereignty, killing 334 mostly African-American defenders. You can listen to the Florida History […]




