Intrigue Along the Inlet: Commerce and Conflict at Bunce’s Pass A two-part series
HERITAGE VILLAGE
No photographs of Bunce’s early camp exist, but the structures may have resembled the one in this image of an early hut from the Johns Pass area in 1900.
Part 2: A Fishing Camp Under Fire By James A. Schnur
Last week, we learned about Captain William Bunce settling in the largely uninhabited Tampa Bay region during the 1830s. He established a fishing ranchero at the mouth of the Manatee River in 1834 and sent smoked and preserved fish to markets in Havana and elsewhere. Nearly 150 Seminole Indians, runaway slaves, Cubans and others worked at Bunce’s multicultural fishing camp. His ranchero had a larger population than the small village of Tampa. Fort Brooke – a military installation once located at the current site of the Tampa Convention Center – monitored Bunce’s activities. After the second phase of the Seminole War began in 1835, federal authorities wanted Bunce to surrender many of his workers. He failed to comply. An expedition from Fort Brooke destroyed his ranchero. Sometime after that, Bunce set up a new one along Bunce’s Pass. A New Camp Familiar with the mangrove keys near the mouth of Tampa Bay, Bunce decided to establish a new ranchero along the northern side of the pass that bears his name by 1837. Similar to his earlier operation along the Manatee River, his workers built simple structures out of wood and palm thatch. Although no photographs of this camp exist, the structures may have resembled the one in this image of an early hut from the Johns Pass area in 1900. Bunce became the first white settler along the Pinellas Gulf Beaches. Workers at his new ranchero included Cubans, Spaniards, Seminoles and others of mixed or uncertain ethnic ancestry. With the second phase of the Seminole War raging in other parts of Florida, Bunce knew that the mere presence of this camp would concern federal authorities who wanted to remove Indians and
12
capture runaways and fugitives. Still, his operation at Bunce’s Pass thrived. Bunce frequently visited Tampa. He continued to bring shipments of fish and sea turtles to Fort Brooke to feed the troops stationed there. Throughout this time, Bunce regularly led fishing expeditions for those in the area, including soldiers at Fort Brooke. Hardly anonymous, Bunce even served as a delegate in the convention that drafted the territorial Constitution of 1838 in the years before Florida became a state in 1845. The captain operating a small fish camp along a Pinellas barrier island did more than represent the entire Tampa Bay region in constitutional conversations. He continued to ship large quantities of salted and preserved fish between the months of October and April. His workers also grew self-sustaining crops on the island. This camp flourished during the middle years of the Second Seminole War (1835-1842) while troops in other parts of Florida captured Seminoles and slaves. A Different Coastline, Another Attack The barrier islands of lower Pinellas had a different contour during the 1800s. Bunce’s Pass was wider than today. The area’s salt waters overflowed with fish. The community we now know as Tierra Verde is an agglomeration of various smaller keys joined together by dredging during the 20th century. Pine and Cabbage keys were separate islands in the 1800s. Smaller islands south of Cabbage Key also existed as separate entities. When you approach the last tollbooth along the Bayway before crossing Bunce’s Pass, you drive along portions of Mule Key, Listen Key and Cunningham Key, joined with Cabbage Key in the early 1960s. Bunce’s camp occupied this area. Present-day Fort De Soto Park south of the pass is also a composite of separate islands, some merged together.
theGabber.com | December 17 - December 23, 2020