Six of the colony’s fifteen or sixteen…
June 1689 CE
Six of the colony’s fifteen or sixteen survivors return to France, while nine others are captured by the Spanish, including the four children who had been spared by the Karankawa.
The children are initially brought to the viceroy of New Spain, the Conde de Galve, who treats them as servants.
Two of the boys, Pierre and Jean-Baptiste, will later return to France.
Of the remaining Spanish captives, three become Spanish citizens and settle in New Mexico.
The colony, although lasting only three years, has established France's claim to possession of the region that is now Texas, and will later support the claim by the United States to the region as part of the Louisiana Purchase.
Although the French colony has been utterly destroyed, Spain fears that another French attempt is inevitable.
In response, the Spanish crown for the first time authorizes small outposts in eastern Texas and at ...