Esteban Rodríguez Miró
Esteban Rodriguez Miró y Sabater (1744 - June 4, 1795), also known as Esteban Miro and Estevan Miro, was a Spanish army officer and governor of the American provinces of the Louisiana Territory and West Florida.
Miro was one of the most popular of the Spanish governors largely because of his prompt response to the Great New Orleans Fire (1788) which destroyed almost all of the city.
Early life
He was born in Reus (currently in the province of Tarragona, Catalonia), Spain. He joined the military in 1760 during the Seven Years' War. Around 1765, he was transferred to Mexico and rose to the rank of lieutenant. He returned to Spain in the 1770s and received military training before being sent to Louisiana in 1778.
Governor of Louisiana
In 1779 during the American Revolutionary War, he was a part of the forces commanded by Bernardo de Galvez in campaigns against the British in West Florida (which was at the time a British possession).
Galvez appointed Miró acting
After the war, Miró was a key figure in the boundary dispute with the U.S. over the northern boundary of West Florida. Under Spanish rule, the boundary had been 31 degrees north latitude. In 1763, it came under British control at the end of the Seven Years War. In 1767, the northern boundary was moved to 32 degrees, 28' north latitude (from the current location of Vicksburg, Mississippi east to the Chattahoochee River).
In 1783, Britain recognized the Spanish conquest of West Florida in the war, but did not specify the norther border. In the
separate treaty with the
In 1784, the Spanish government closed the lower Mississippi River to the Americans, causing significant fears of resentment among settlers in the western frontiers of Kentucky that depended on river trade. The settlers' anger was directed as much toward the U.S. government for not acting aggressively enough to protect their interests as it was against Spain. A significant faction within Kentucky considered becoming an independent republic rather than joining the U.S. One of the leaders of this faction was James Wilkinson, who met with Miró in 1787 and secretly acted as an agent for Spain.
Wilkinson's schemes to set up an independent nation friendly to Spain in the west did little except cause controversy This resurfaced later in another form through Wilkinson's dealings with Aaron Burr.
Miró fortified Nogales (present day Vicksburg) and the mouth of the Mississippi against the possibility of war with the U.S.
After the Good Friday fire on March 21, 1788 destroyed almost all of the city, he arranged for tents for the residents, brought in food from warehouses, sent ships to Philadelphia for aid and lifted Spanish regulations restricting trade to the city. The city including the French Quarter was built to new fire codes with courtyards and thick walls. Among the new buildings built under his watch was the St. Louis Cathedral, New Orleans.
Return to Spain
He surrendered governorship at the end of 1791 to return to Spain and serve in the Ministry of War. He served as Field Marshal from 1793-1795 in the war with the French Republic. He died on the battle front from natural causes.
Recognition
In 1788, North Carolina formed a judicial district called the Mero District in its western territory (the area presently around Nashville, Tennessee) named after Miró. Among Louisianians, Miró is chiefly remembered for having prevented the establishment of the Inquisition in the territory.
External links
- The Conquest of the Old Southwest
- Portrait by Andres Molinary
| Preceded by Bernardo de Gálvez |
1785-1791 |
Succeeded by Francisco Luis Hector de Carondelet |
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