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LUCAS VASQUEZ DE AYLLON (c. t47'5-1526)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 73 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LUCAS VASQUEZ DE AYLLON (c. t47'5-1526)  ,
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Spanish adventurer and colonizer in
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America, was born probably in Toledo, Spain, about 1475 . He accompanied Nicolas Ovando to Hispaniola (Santo Domingo) in 1502, and there became a magistrate of La Concepcion and other towns, and a member of. the
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superior court of Hispaniola . He engaged with
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great profit in various commercial enterprises, became interested in a plan for the extension of the Spanish settlements to the North
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American mainland, and in 1521 sent Francisco Gordillo on an exploring expedition which touched on the coast of the
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Florida peninsula and coasted for some distance northward . Gordillo's report of the region was so favourable that Ayllon in 1523 obtained from Charles V. a rather indefinite charter giving him the right to plant colonies . He sent another reconnoitring expedition in 1525, and early in 1526 he himself set out with 500 colonists and about loo
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African slaves . He touched at "several places along the coast, at one time stopping long enough to replace a wrecked
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ship with a new one, this being considered the first instance of
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shipbuilding on the North American continent . Sailing northward, to about latitude 330 40', he began the construction of a
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town which he called
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San Miguel . The exact location of this town is in dispute, some writers holding that it was on the exact spot upon which
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Jamestown, Va., was later built; more probably, however, as Lowery contends, it was near the mouth of the Pedee
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river . The employment of negro slaves here was undoubtedly the first instance of the sort in what later became the
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United States . The spot was unhealthy and fever carried off many of the colonists, including Ayllon himself, who died on the 18th of
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October 1526 . After the
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death of their leader dissensions broke out among the colonists, some of the slaves rebelled and escaped into the
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forest, and in December the town was abandoned and the remnant of the colonists embarked for Hispaniola, less than 15o arriving in safety . See Woodbury Lowery, Spanish Settlements within the
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Present Limits of the United States (2 vols., New York, 1903-1905) .

End of Article: LUCAS VASQUEZ DE AYLLON (c. t47'5-1526)
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