Fort San Juan (Joara)

Fort San Juan was a 16th–century fort built by the Spanish under the command of conquistador Juan Pardo in the native village of Joara, in what is now Burke County, North Carolina. Used as an outpost for Pardo's expedition into the interior of what was known to the Spaniards as "la Florida", Fort San Juan served as one of six forts throughout modern–day North and South Carolina and Tennessee that were established to extend Spain's effective control further in the North American continent. In 1568, natives from Joara and the region surrounding the fort razed the Spanish settlement.

The fort is now recognized has having been the earliest European settlement in the interior of what is now the United States of America. After the fort's destruction, its exact location was lost. During the summer of 2013, archaeologists affiliated with the University of Michigan, Tulane University and Warren Wilson College announced that they had discovered the location of a defensive moat believed to belong to Fort San Juan.

Joara and the Pardo expedition
In 1566, a fleet under the command of Pedro Menéndez de Avilés established the coastal town of Santa Elena on what is now Parris Island in South Carolina. Santa Elena was established to be the headquarters for further Spanish expeditions into the interior of North America, and in this vein, Avilés ordered conquistador Juan Pardo to explore the interior of the new territory, and to find an overland route to Spain's silver-rich holdings in Zacatecas, Mexico, located at that time in the Viceroyalty of New Spain. Pardo's expedition set out from Santa Elena in December, 1566, and followed the routes of the Congaree and Wateree Rivers up to the native city of Cofitachequi, which had been visited 26 years prior by Hernando de Soto. The expedition then continued to follow the course of the Wateree past where it becomes the Catawba River (in modern-day naming conventions), arriving at the Native American city of Joara (spelled "Xuala" in later Spanish maps) in 1567.

By 1567, Joara had been occupied consistently since the 15th century A.D.

Establishment of the Fort
Pardo's expedition was forced to stop at Joara for an extended period of time due to heavy snowfall in the Blue Ridge Mountains, which prevented their forward movement. During their two week stay at Joara, Pardo's men constructed Fort San Juan in the style of a blockhouse, and possibly alos utilized a palisade and moat.

Further expeditions from Fort San Juan
After two weeks at Joara, Pardo left a garrison of 30 Spanish soldiers at the newly built fort under the command of Hernando Moyano de Morales. Pardo and the remaining Spaniards headed east, exploring away from the Catawba River, towards the modern-day city of Salisbury]. While exploring in that direction, Pardo received word that Santa Elena was being threatened by a French expedition. Pardo began the return march to Santa Elena, leaving Moyano without support at Fort San Juan. Pardo returned to Santa Elena on March 7, 1567. Meanwhile, Moyano set out on an expedition through the mountains toward the Native village of Chiaha. Pardo was tasked again with returning to Fort San Juan and locating a road to Zacatecas. Upon reaching Joara, on September 24, 1567, Pardo received word that Moyano was under attack from a force of Native Americans at Chiaha. Pardo arrived at that town on October 7, 1567, and retrieved Moyano and his men, returning with them to Fort San Juan on November 6, 1567.

Destruction
After resting and replenishing supplies at Fort San Juan for two weeks, Pardo and his men began their return voyage to Santa Elena, leaving a garrison of 31 men at the fort. Along the way back to the coast, Pardo constructed several more forts, including one named Santiago and another named Santo Tomás. Pardo arrived at Santa Elena on March 2, 1568, and never again returned to the interior of the continent. The fate of the Spanish garrison at Fort San Juan is not exactly known, but it is known that in May, 1568, a contingent of Native Americans laid siege to the fort, lured out its garrison, and killed the Spaniards, with the exception of one, Juan de Badejoz, who claimed to have escaped and hidden in the woods. Subsequent to its destruction, the occupants of Joara constructed a ceremonial mound over the site of the Fort.

Archaeological work and Location
Joara's location has been long disputed, but several archaeologists and researchers, including Robin Beck of the University of Michigan, believe that evidence uncovered at the "Berry Site", an archaeological site centered on the remains of a large Native American settlement in Burke County, North Carolina, definitively demonstrates that that site contains a portion of Joara. Previously, scholars believed that the site of Joara may have been located near the Qualla Boundary in Swain County, North Carolina, or elsewhere in the Appalachian foothills of North Carolina or Tennessee, between Knoxville and the Catawba River.

Commemoration and current status
Despite being unsure of the fort's exact location at the time, in 2008, the State of North Carolina erected a highway historical marker commemorating the fort in Morganton, North Carolina. Excavation work at and educational outreach concerning the site is supported by the nonprofit Exploring Joara Foundation.