The first school in Fort McCoy was supposedly a log cabin that was built near the fort; and it is thought to have been abandoned during the Second Seminole War.
Its members are descendants of the 3,000 Seminole who were forcibly removed from Florida to Indian Territory, along with 800 Black Seminoles, after the Second Seminole War.
American Civil War | Vietnam War | American Revolutionary War | Cold War | Iraq War | War of 1812 | Spanish Civil War | Korean War | Allies of World War II | English Civil War | Gulf War | Franco-Prussian War | Pacific War | war | Second Boer War | Peninsular War | United States Department of War | Second Sino-Japanese War | Crimean War | Thirty Years' War | Spanish-American War | Trojan War | Union (American Civil War) | French and Indian War | War Office | Falklands War | Seven Years' War | First Balkan War | Hundred Years' War | War Department |
It was used by U.S. troops (who called it Big Snake Creek) in 1841 during the Second Seminole War, and further explored in 1881 by Naval Captain William Hawkins Fulford, whose ventured inland to what is now the city of North Miami Beach.
Halleck, with a band of seventy warriors, was finally defeated by Federal troops on April 19, 1842, near the settlement of Peliklakaha Hammock (in today's Lake County, Florida), the last battle of the Second Seminole War in Florida.