this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2024
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On this day, July 27th, 1816, troops of the United States military assaulted and blew up an African-American and Native American settlement on the frontier of Spanish Florida during the Battle of Negro Fort. Negro Fort had served as a refuge for freed men and women, as well as those fleeing slavery in the South. Because of this, Georgian plantation owners feared it as a threat to the institution of slavery.

The battle that ensued in 1816 at the fort is remembered today as the beginning of General Andrew Jackson’s conquest of Florida and as either the forerunner to or first engagement of the Seminole Wars. The First Seminole War began in earnest the following year, 1817, and lasted until 1819, arising from the tension that resulted from Jackson’s expedition into Northern Florida. After the First Seminole War, the group was forced to move deeper into Florida for fear of additional reprisals.

Negro Fort, near the former British Fort Gadsden, was established after the War of 1812, when the British Royal Marines were pushed out of Georgia and settled along the Spanish side of the Apalachicola River. Initially, the fort and the surrounding area was a mix of British, African-Americans, and Native Americans. The African-American population present at Negro Fort was a detached unit of the Corps of Colonial Marines, Marine units composed of former slaves that served in the British Army.

After the end of the War of 1812, the British left the area and paid off the Marines, freeing the infantry to reside at the fort. The foundation of the black community with many former slaves so close to America loomed large in the minds of the slave owners across the border. Over the next months, hundreds of freed men and women migrated to the fort and settled there or in the area. Once word began circulating about the autonomous free black community, Georgian plantation owners sent letters to the U.S. government demanding that action be taken against them. Colonel Robert Patterson urged for the fort’s elimination, stating “The service rendered by the destruction of the fort, and the band of negroes who held it is one of great and manifest importance to the United States and particularly those States bordering on the Creek nation, as it had become the rendezvous for runaway slaves.”

In preparation to destroy Negro Fort, Jackson decided to build Fort Scott out of Camp Crawford in June of 1816 at the junction of the Flint and Chattahoochee rivers, where they joined to form the Apalachicola. To receive materials and supplies, boats going to Fort Scott needed to traverse the Apalachicola River–then Spanish territory–passing right next to Negro Fort on the way. During one of the deliveries, two gunboats stopped along the river and were met with an attack by the infantry at the fort. Almost all of the Americans were killed. The event is known as the Watering Party Massacre since they had stopped to refill their canteens. Much controversy exists today surrounding the event, specifically the idea that the event was planned by Jackson to use as justification for destroying Negro Fort. To retaliate, with the permission of the Spanish Governor and under the pretense of “national defense,”Jackson dispatched gunboats to Negro Fort. About 200 black militiamen began preparation for battle. They were accompanied by 30 Seminole warriors under a chief also ready to fight, along with 100 women and children housed in the fort.

After only a couple minutes of engagement, a cannonball entered the fort’s magazine, where ammunitions were kept, and caused an explosion that destroyed the entire post. The explosion killed 270 men, women, and children. The rest of the population suffered injuries. No casualties for the Americans were noted. General Edmund P. Gaines, who led the American troops, commented that “the explosion was awful and the scene was horrible beyond description.” Many of the survivors at the fort were taken prisoner and placed back into slavery under the claim that the Georgia plantation owners had owned their ancestors.

Both the black commander Garson, a free black man, and the Choctaw chief survived the explosion, but were captured. Garson was killed by an execution squad of the American army, as he was blamed for the Watering Party Massacre, and the Choctaw chief was handed over to the Creeks, who killed and scalped him. The Battle at Negro Fort marks the beginning of the First Seminole War and in no way depicts the end of suffering for the Seminole population in Florida. It also highlights the end of a unique population of people who transcended oppression, forming their community in hopes of freedom and diversity. After mourning the losses at Negro Fort, the Seminole population would mobilize and continue in their pursuit of avenging the forthcoming American expansionism.

from: Massacre Unveiled: Remembering the Negro Fort

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[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

day 7 of sketching 30 min a day to grind from practically-zero drawing/visual art priors: derust trace study:

yeah I skipped a couple days, had a busy weekend. tryna get back into the swing of things by plotting out assumed shapes in pixel art lea-happy some sketch detritus because I didn't bother to layer/erase much today, and ignore my bad handwriting lol

[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's pretty solid! If I could give some advice aside from keep practicing, make sure the pupils in the eyes are looking in the same direction. Anime eyes can be harder for this than others cause they're shaped different a d have giant irises. The sprite had the right iris just barely left of center and the left eye has the iris further left, where the face is on a 3/4 view it implies they're looking forward. It's not how irl works but it's how cartoon and anime characters work. It's pretty solid sketch work overall tho, everything else is angled very consistently and things diminish in size with distance very well, you're for sure on a good track.

[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Happy to help! Art advice can be really hard to give over the internet. Like, if I were there irl I could get a pen out and do some examples. Are you just going on instinct or have you looked up anything formal? If you haven't looked up 3 point perspective, it's a good tool and your already using it well but a few quick exercises on it will make it both studied and natural and it'll be good to have in your pocket when shading comes into play. Shading and inking are my favorite parts of drawing

[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I’m going on instinct thus far. I’ll look it up, thanks!

[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You have GOOD instincts. I would look up some basic art instructions like perspective works as well as line work, line work is weird as hell and very stylistically personal and will kinda depend on how you end up doing finalized pieces when it happens, but starting early in knowing how different people approach it will be useful as hell, I'd also suggest still life sketches of your own hand in as many poses as possible as many times as possible. Get hands down early and then you can realize feet are even harder later. I would also try learning some shading techniques and experimenting there. You've got a good knack already, if you keep going I'm sure you'll be doing well pretty quick. Also just like, always be drawing, you don't need to save everything or whatever, just doodle a technique you learned over and over while watching a movie for something to do with your hands, the more you repeat and experiment the faster things will go. You'll end out with a waste bin full of random stuff but that's a couple hours practice and that's how you get consistent

[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

lea-blush thanks for the advice, I’ll keep at it

[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You're gonna be so stoked on what you can do in a year or so if you keep at it, I've also found picking up some carbon paper and doing tracing on both cartoon images and photos can be really good for feeling out how different styles work and to just kinds get a vibe. Just be always drawing, and be sometimes learing it. I'd like to see something with shading sometime, light sources and shading techniques are my jam. You WILL be good at this if you keep it up

[–] Redcuban1959@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago

looking good. I think the pixel art style can be a bit difficult to trace over.