Content type
Labeled tale or retelling
Primary use
Use this page for reflection, teaching, and memory work while keeping narrative value separate from factual proof.
What this page adds
It should add source-aware context, place anchors, wording limits, and a clearer next step than a raw claim or isolated source link can provide.
Evidence level
Starter
Claim status
Open
You should leave knowing what kind of story you are reading and which research lane to use if a claim needs evidence review.
How to read this tale
Source-Based Retelling
- What is fictionalized
- A source-based teaching retelling. It is grounded in a public source trail, but scene, pacing, and classroom framing may still be shaped for learning.
- What it teaches
- How a real source, site, or collection can support careful public memory without certifying identity, descent, or claim conclusions.
- What it does not prove
- This tale does not prove identity, ancestry, tribe, nationality, DNA conclusions, legal status, descent, membership, or any specific historical claim unless a separate source trail supports it.
What this tale adds
- It gives readers a clearly labeled narrative lane for memory, teaching, and reflection without disguising itself as documentary proof.
- It can make a place, feeling, or research habit easier to grasp before the reader returns to the source-led pages.
- It keeps the difference between meaning and evidence visible instead of collapsing them into one tone.
Source-Based Retelling
The night watch did not need a perfect legend to matter. It needed a place, a danger, a community, and a record careful enough to keep the story from becoming larger than the evidence.
In the retelling, a learner stands near the marsh and imagines the questions a free Black settlement outside St. Augustine might carry: who was protected, who was armed, who was named by Spanish power, who remained unnamed, and what the ground can still teach without certifying every family line.
Fort Mose matters because it interrupts the habit of treating Black freedom as only a later American story. It also requires discipline: refuge, military service, Catholic Spanish policy, Indigenous presence, and African-descended community life must be read as overlapping source trails, not one simple claim.
Reflection questions
- Which Fort Mose claims can official site history support directly?
- What would be needed before connecting a modern family claim to a named Fort Mose resident?
- How does a source-based retelling differ from proof?
Evidence handoff
Before turning this tale into a factual statement, write the claim in one sentence, identify the page or source that would have to support it, and decide whether the next lane is Wiki, Place Hubs, Source Review, Claim Review, or Safe Sharing.
Reader action after the tale
- Name which parts are story, atmosphere, memory, or teaching structure.
- Write down any factual claim that would need a Wiki page, source table, or Claim Review card before reuse.
- Keep private family details, living-person information, and identity-adjacent conclusions out of public discussion unless reviewed.
- Move from the tale into Place Hubs, Wiki, Source Review, or Safe Sharing when a reader wants evidence rather than reflection.
What remains open
The narrative may clarify mood, memory, or a teaching question, but it still leaves factual, genealogical, legal, and identity-adjacent claims to the Wiki, Source Review, Claim Review, and stronger source packets.
Reminder: Tales are not evidence and should not be used as proof. Use the Wiki and Library for source-led research.
Source trail
- National Park Service: Fort Mose – Official public-history overview of Fort Mose and its place in St. Augustine history.
- Florida State Parks: Fort Mose Historic State Park – State park context for the free Black settlement and landscape.
- FOBA Evidence Gates – Use before stronger claims about descent, identity, or continuity.
What the source trail changes
A public source trail can strengthen place, context, and collection claims around the narrative, but it still does not turn the retelling itself into identity certification or full historical proof.
Source-based does not mean certifying: A public source trail can support place, context, collection, and record-use claims. It does not certify identity, ancestry, descent, tribe, nationality, DNA conclusions, legal status, membership, Muur/Moor claims, spiritual interpretation, oral tradition, or family continuity.