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17 September, 15:59

What was unusual about the people who made up the population of St. Augustine, Florida, in the early 1800s? Most people who settled in St. Augustine in the early 1800s were Cubans who were escaping from an autocratic government. Seminole raiders and slaves who had joined their cause made up the majority of the population of St. Augustine in the early 1800s. In the early 1800s, St. Augustine was declared "Indian Territory" and was home to the Seminole tribes who had been removed from their lands. Many different ethnicities made up the population of St. Augustine including Spanish, free African Americans, Seminole Indians, and Europeans.

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  1. 17 September, 17:16
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    The answer is the third one. One of St. Augustine's most fascinating structures is the previous Ponce de Leon Hotel, now some portion of Flagler College. Worked by mogul designer and Standard Oil prime supporter Henry M. Flagler and finished in 1888, the elite lodging was planned in the Spanish Renaissance style for traveling northerners in winter who voyaged south on the Florida East Coast Railway in the late 1800s.
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