Around 12,000 years ago, bands of indigenous peoples roamed the hilltops and lake shores of what are now Leon County and Jefferson County. They lived by hunting, fishing and gathering. Eventually they became more settled, making stone tools, pottery, and then domesticating plants. By 1000 A.D., the indigenous people developed agriculture and cultivated numerous plants, particularly varieties of maize, as the main staple food. Native Americans lived in scattered villages made up of farmsteads but gradually developed agricultural surpluses that allowed more population density.
Apalachee Province was closely linked by trading and cultural exchange to other Native American cultures throughout the interior Southeast, including the later Southeastern Ceremonial Complex (SECC). As many as 60,000 people lived in 40 towns scattered through the area.[2][3] Production of surpluses of maize aided in the growth of towns and more complex cultures. The elite organized workers to construct complex earthworkmounds for religious, political and ceremonial purposes.[4]
The historical Apalachee occupied the Velda Mound site from about 1450 CE-1625 CE, although they mostly abandoned the site soon after the beginning of the Spanish Mission Period, c. 1565. After the Spanish began colonization and brought in missions, they called this cultural area the Apalachee Province.
The Apalachee Province was heavily depopulated with Carolina Governor James Moore's raids into the area during Queen Anne's War. Most of the Spanish missions in the province were destroyed during the Apalachee massacre.
Towns
Anhaica was the capital of Apalachee Province, located near Myers Park in Tallahassee.
Oconi or Ocone was a town in the eastern part of the province. In 1657 the mission San Fancisco de Ocone was recorded in the town. That year the town had one satellite village.[5] A mission church may have been built in Oconi as early as 1612. The residents of Oconi claimed in 1657 that it was the first place in Apalachee in which Christianity had been established.[6] The Scott Miller site (8JE2) in Jefferson County near Waukeenah may be that of San Francicso de Oconi, although it has also been said to be the site of Ayubale.[7][8]
Velda Mound was the center of an older town located north of Tallahassee. It is now within the Killearn Estates neighborhood.[9]
^Marrinan, Rochelle A.; Peres, Tanya M (2021). "Unearthing the Missions of Spanish Florida: An Introduction to the Volume". In Peres, Tanya M.; Marrinan, Rochelle A. (eds.). Unearthing the Missions of Spanish Florida. Gainesville, Florida: University of Florida Press. pp. 10, 12. ISBN978-1-68340-251-0.