
It begins with the Panzacola, the Indigenous people who gave the city its name and lived along this bay long before any sail appeared on the horizon. The first Europeans came in 1559, when Don Tristán de Luna led roughly 1,500 colonists into Pensacola Bay and founded a settlement he called Santa María de Ochuse — the first multi-year European settlement in what is now the continental United States, beating St. Augustine by six years. A hurricane wrecked his fleet in 1561 and the colony was abandoned; Spain did not return for good until 1698, when it built the presidio that became the permanent town. From there began the long tug-of-war that earned Pensacola its nickname.
America's first settlement, and the cradle of Navy wings. The Spanish planted a colony on Pensacola Bay in 1559 — six years before St. Augustine — and though a hurricane swept it away, the flags kept coming: five of them, Spanish to French to British to Confederate to American, flown over one stubborn Gulf-coast city. Today the jets of the Blue Angels carve the sky over sugar-white sand, and U.S. naval aviators have earned their wings here since 1914. Five flags, the deepest bay on the Gulf, and naval aviation born over the water — this page tells the story.
Why People Visit Pensacola Florida
People come to Pensacola for both halves of it — the beaches and the history. Sugar-white sand and emerald water on the barrier islands, and four and a half centuries of layered story in the old town and the forts, with the naval-aviation heritage and the Blue Angels overhead. It's a Gulf-coast vacation and an American history lesson in one welcoming city.