Plan Your Visit · St. Augustine, Florida

Welcome to St. Augustine

The Nation's Oldest City — founded 42 years before Jamestown and 55 years before the Mayflower. More than four and a half centuries of conquest, fire, plague, and gilded-age splendor are layered into these narrow streets, and not all of the city's residents have moved on.

1565Founded by Pedro Menéndez de Avilés
460+Years of continuous occupation
1672Castillo de San Marcos begun — never taken by force
#1Among America's most haunted cities
The Founding

On September 8, 1565, Spanish admiral Pedro Menéndez de Avilés came ashore on the banks of a tidal inlet and claimed the land for Spain, naming the settlement San Agustín — he had first sighted Florida on the feast day of St. Augustine of Hippo. The colony rose on the site of the Timucua village of Seloy, making St. Augustine the oldest continuously occupied European-established settlement in the continental United States.

The founding was not gentle. Within weeks, Menéndez marched south and put hundreds of shipwrecked French Huguenot soldiers to the sword at an inlet that still bears the name his men gave it: Matanzas — Spanish for "slaughters." The waterway that cradles the old city is named for a massacre. That is the kind of place St. Augustine has been from its very first days.

For its first two centuries, the city was the embattled northern outpost of Spanish Florida — burned by Sir Francis Drake, sacked by pirates, and besieged by the English. Out of that violence came its crown jewel: the Castillo de San Marcos, begun in 1672 and built from coquina, a soft shellstone that swallowed cannonballs rather than shattering. The fortress was attacked repeatedly and never once taken by force.

Four and a Half Centuries in Brief

1565

San Agustín Is Founded

Menéndez lands with some 800 colonists and soldiers, establishes the settlement, and massacres the French garrison at Matanzas Inlet — securing Florida for Spain in blood.

1586

Drake Burns the Town

English privateer Sir Francis Drake raids and burns St. Augustine to the ground. In 1668 the pirate Robert Searle sacks it again, slaughtering residents in the streets — a raid that finally convinces Spain to build a stone fortress.

1672

The Castillo de San Marcos Rises

Construction begins on the great coquina fortress that still guards Matanzas Bay. It takes 23 years to complete and shelters the entire town during sieges in 1702 and 1740 — including one led by James Oglethorpe, the founder of Savannah. Both times the town burns; both times the fort holds.

1763–1821

A City of Changing Flags

Spain trades Florida to Britain in 1763; Spain takes it back in 1783; the United States acquires it in 1821. Soon after the American flag rises, yellow fever sweeps the city — many of its victims rest in the Huguenot Cemetery just outside the city gates.

1830s–70s

Prison of the Seminole Wars

The Castillo, renamed Fort Marion, becomes a military prison. The famed Seminole leader Osceola is held within its walls after being captured under a flag of truce, and Plains Indian prisoners are confined here decades later. Sorrow soaks into the coquina.

1888

Flagler's Gilded Age

Standard Oil magnate Henry Flagler opens the spectacular Ponce de León Hotel (now Flagler College) and the Alcazar (now the Lightner Museum), bringing his railroad and America's wealthy elite south. St. Augustine becomes the birthplace of Florida tourism.

1964

The St. Augustine Movement

The city becomes a major battleground of the civil rights movement. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is arrested here, and the violent scenes from St. Augustine help push the Civil Rights Act of 1964 through Congress.

Today

The Oldest City — With Its Oldest Residents

Behind the colonial charm and gilded hotels lie 460 years of massacre, siege, fire, plague, and imprisonment. It is little wonder that St. Augustine is consistently ranked among the most haunted cities in America.

Beauty & Darkness

Like Savannah, its sister city to the north, St. Augustine wears its beauty over very dark bones. The bay is named for a slaughter. The fort served as a prison where men captured under a flag of truce wasted away. Yellow fever filled the Huguenot and Tolomato cemeteries beyond the city gates, and the Old Jail, built in 1891, housed prisoners in conditions grim enough to earn its own reputation among the restless.

Visitors and residents alike report figures on the Castillo's ramparts, voices in the narrow colonial lanes, and the famous spirits of the St. Augustine Lighthouse across the bay. Four and a half centuries of tragedy leave a mark — and in St. Augustine, that mark is said to walk.

"The bay itself is named for a massacre. In St. Augustine, the dark history isn't hidden beneath the beauty — it's written on the map."

Know Your City

St. Augustine's colonial quarter is wonderfully compact — a tight lattice of narrow streets between the bayfront and the old city gates that is best explored entirely on foot. Park once, then wander. The plaza is your anchor; the bayfront is your compass.

St. George Street The pedestrian-only spine of the old city, running south from the City Gate past colonial-era buildings, shops, and eateries. Touristy, lively, and essential — walk its full length at least once.
Aviles Street The oldest platted street in the United States — a narrow, atmospheric lane of galleries, cafes, and colonial houses south of the plaza. Quieter and moodier than St. George, especially after dark.
King Street The grand east–west boulevard of the Flagler era, flanked by the former Ponce de León and Alcazar hotels — now Flagler College and the Lightner Museum. Gilded Age architecture at its most theatrical.
Avenida Menendez The bayfront drive along Matanzas Bay, connecting the Castillo to the Bridge of Lions. Sweeping water views, sea breezes, and the prettiest evening stroll in the city.
Cathedral Place & the Plaza The Plaza de la Constitución has been the heart of the city since the 1570s — America's oldest public square, anchored by the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine.
San Marco Avenue The northern approach into the old city, home to the Old Jail, the Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park, and the Mission Nombre de Dios — where the city's story began.
The Districts

The Old City / Colonial Quarter

Your home base. The Castillo, the City Gate, St. George Street, the plaza, Aviles Street, and the densest concentration of historic sites, restaurants, and inns. Most visitors never need to leave this area.

The Bayfront

Avenida Menendez along Matanzas Bay — grand views, horse-drawn carriages, the Bridge of Lions, and the Castillo standing watch as it has for 350 years.

Lincolnville

The historic neighborhood founded by freedmen after the Civil War, southwest of the plaza. Beautiful Victorian homes, deep civil rights history, and a quieter, more local atmosphere.

Uptown / San Marco

North of the City Gate along San Marco Avenue — antique shops, the Old Jail, the Fountain of Youth, and the Mission grounds where Menéndez first came ashore.

Anastasia Island

Across the Bridge of Lions — home to the St. Augustine Lighthouse, Anastasia State Park, and St. Augustine Beach. The coquina for the Castillo was quarried here.

Vilano Beach

Just north across the inlet — a laid-back beach community with a fishing pier, quiet sands, and a classic Old Florida feel. An easy escape when you need salt air.