Enrique White


Enrique White was an Irish-born Spanish soldier who served as Governor of West Florida and of East Florida.

Biography

Enrique White was born in Dublin, Ireland. He later immigrated to Spain, where he served the Spanish Crown from age 22 until his death. The young man joined the Spanish Royal Army, eventually rising to the rank of colonel. In 1779 he was appointed commander of the third battalion of the Louisiana Infantry Regiment, with the title Sargento Mayor. serving several times in that capacity, and eventually attained the rank of brigadier.
On May 15, 1793, White was appointed acting Governor of West Florida, and remained in the position until June 1795.
White was appointed Governor of East Florida in the spring of 1796, and arrived in its capital, Saint Augustine, on June 5. He assumed his duties on June 20. Construction of the cathedral of St. Augustine, initiated by his predecessor Bartolomé Morales, was completed the next year in 1797. It was in January of 1797 that Governor White received news that Spain was at war with England. This conflict would last until 1802 and was part of the larger Napoleonic Wars in Europe.
New construction was encouraged in St. Augustine during White's governorship, with numerous new houses being built. The military preparedness of the city and its fortifications were strengthened. The garrison's morale improved as well with better conditions. White was very strict in granting the concession of lands from the public domain, and often enforced the laws more rigorously than the legal code itself would allow.
In 1799, English corsairs took Amelia Island along the much contested Florida-Georgia border. Officials in Georgia's Camden County corresponded with White whenever American fugitives crossed the southern border fleeing the law.

Illness & Death

White fell ill in 1800, and was temporarily replaced by Lt. Col. Bartolomé Morales, who had previously served as acting governor of East Florida, accompanied by Gonzalo Zamorano, Commissary of the army and accountant of the royal finance. White recovered from his illness in 1801 and resumed his office, remaining in that position until March 1811, when he fell ill again and died on April 13 of that year in St. Augustine. He is buried in Tolomato Cemetery in St. Augustine.

Personal life

Governor White never married. He owned several slaves, who gained their freedom when he died.

Legacy

In 1811, White officially named a town on Amelia Island "Fernandina," in honor of the Catholic monarch Ferdinand VII of Spain. This renaming followed Napoleon's invasion of Spain and the Court's exile.
The street running east and west in Fernandina called "White Street" was named after Enrique White.