The oldest Spanish Settlement in Florida was St. Augustine.
Actually, Pensacola is the oldest city in the U.S. It was founded by the Spanish in 1559, but a hurricane hit and the Spanish settlers did not stay/survive, thus it is not the oldest continuous settlement.
Santo Domingo, in the Dominican Republic, is the oldest permanent European settlement in the Western Hemisphere, established by the Spanish in 1498.
The oldest European settlement in North America that is still standing today is St. Augustine, Florida. It was settled by the Spanish in 1565.
St. Augustine, Fl Thus, St. Augustine was founded forty-two years before the English colony at Jamestown, Virginia, and fifty-five years before the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock in Massachusetts - making it the oldest permanent European settlement on the North American continent.
Yes St.Augstine Is the Oldest Settlement
No the oldest settlement in Wisconsin is Green Bay.
Wichita,Kansas
If you mean the North American continent, we have that the oldest mountain range is the Appalachian Mountains. It is estimated that this chain of mountains began to form 480 million years ago.
The oldest settlement in Canada is Tadoussac Quebec est. 1599
he was spanish explorer.....uhhh he esstablished the oldest European settlement in peurto rico...
Saint Augustine, Florida is widely recognized as the oldest, continually occupied settlement of Europeans on the North American continent. That's probably the answer for your homework question. There were some earlier settlements in the Caribbean islands.