Ponce de León had received assurances of…
1521 CE
Ponce de León had received assurances of support from Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros, the regent appointed to govern Castile, but it was nearly two years before he was able to return home to Puerto Rico.
Meanwhile, there had been at least two unauthorized voyages to "his" Florida, both ending in repulsion by the native Calusa and Tequesta warriors.
In 1521, realizing he must act soon if he is to maintain his claim, Ponce de León, organizes a colonizing expedition on two ships.
It consists of some two hundred men, including priests, farmers and artisans, fifty horses and other domestic animals, and farming implements.
The expedition lands on the southwest coast of Florida, in the vicinity of Caloosahatchee River or Charlotte Harbor.
The colonists are soon attacked by Calusa warrioirs and Ponce de León is injured when, historians believe, an arrow poisoned with the sap of the manchineel tree struck his thigh.
After this attack, he and the colonists sail to Havana, Cuba, where he soon dies of the wound.
He is buried in Puerto Rico, in the crypt of San José Church from 1559 to 1836, when his remains will be exhumed and later transferred to the Cathedral of San Juan Bautista.