His two daughters had already each married white planters and remained in Florida.
After the war, white planters and farmers tried to reestablish dominance over a majority of the population.
Seated behind them were the families of prominent white planters within the community.
The constitution of the British colony favored the white planters.
Many were children of white planters and enslaved mothers.
But the white planter said he could not pay the Carter family because he had to send his own son to college.
They wanted to be able to obtain better prices for their products from the white planters who controlled the land.
In the process, some 4000 white planters and their family members were massacred.
Their two oldest daughters had already married white planters in Florida and remained there.
In 1790 white planters repressed claims of the free.