Florida secedes on January 10th, 1861. American…
January 1861 CE
Florida secedes on January 10th, 1861.
American settlers had begun to establish cotton plantations in north Florida, which required numerous laborers, which they supplied by buying slaves in the domestic market.
By 1860, Florida had only 140,424 people, of whom forty-four percent were enslaved.
There were fewer than one thousand free African Americans before the American Civil War.
On January 10, 1861, nearly all delegates in the Florida Legislature approve an ordinance of secession, declaring Florida to be "a sovereign and independent nation"—an apparent reassertion to the preamble in Florida's Constitution of 1838, in which Florida had agreed with Congress to be a "Free and Independent State."
Although not directly related to the issue of slavery, the ordinance declares Florida's secession from the Union, allowing it to become one of the founding members of the Confederate States, a looser union of states.