References
The Florida War by Sprague
-p. 345 Letter of Montiano July 28 1740 with British strength by unit.
-p. 346 strength of Montiano on 25 March 1740, and population of St. Augustine.
-pp. 343-344 Montiano's letters from the start of the siege.
National Park Service
Letter of Montiano 28 July 1740 (same as previous link)
History of Georgia by Bacon
-pp 168-176 seige of St Augustine (pp. 170-171 British OOB for 1740)
-pp. 182-194 Spanish invasion of Georgia (pp. 184-185 Spanish fleet composition, p. 186 Spanish army OOB)
This site on the Spanish navy
-The composition of the British fleet in the 1740 attack on Saint Augustine.
-If I understand the Spanish correctly it also lists Antonio Castañeda (not Rodrigo de Torres) as the commander of the Spanish fleet in 1742.
Popular History of the United States by Bryant
pp 158-164 Spanish invasion of Georgia (p.159 description of British forces in 1742)
Lincoln, Lee, Grant and other Biographical Addresses by Speer
pp 129-130 Oglethorpe's account of the battle of bloody marsh of 1742
pp 137-150 Montiano's account of the invasion (says the fleet was under the command of Torres)
British
The forces available in Georgia to Oglethorpe in 1740 consisted of:
-The 42nd foot, the regiment that Oglethorpe had brought from Europe to defend Georgia. Oglethorpe was the colonel . Establishment of 650 officers and men. About 350 participated in the siege of St Augustine.
-The Highland Independent Company raised from the highlanders settled in Darien. Commanded by Hugh MacKaye
-One company of highland rangers (also known as the Georgia Mounted Rangers or Highland Mounted Rangers)
-One company of English rangers (the Georgia Coastal Rangers)
-One company english militia (Georgia militia? These were raised in Savannah)
-Some artillery procured from the Bahamas
Additional forces were:
-The South Carolina militia battalion available from March 1740 (in Charleston, so maybe April 1740 in Savannah) under Colonel Vander Deusen. This was an overstrength unit of 600 men.
-two marine companies of boatmen raised in 1741 under Noble Jones and Mark Carr
Upon the invasion of Florida in 1740 Oglethorpe had 1100 Indians with him. By the time the siege was lifted only the Alachua were left with 130 warriors. His Indian strength in 1742 was under 100 warriors, although this site (
http://www.hsgng.org/pages/marsh.htm) claims there were Chickasaws, Creek and Yamacraws present.
In game terms I see these as one battalion of regulars, one battalion of Georgia militia, one battalion of South Carolina militia, an artillery unit, one battalion of rangers and three Indian warbands. Only one warband should be available after 1740.
The ships available to Oglethorpe in 1740 (until July 5) were
-The frigate Hector, 40 guns under Commodore Peyton Yelverton, RN
-The schooner Squirrel, 24 guns under Captain Peter Warren RN
-The schooner Seaford, 24 guns under Captain Henry Scout RN
-The schooner Flamborough 20 guns under Commodore Vincent Pearce. This was a Georgian ship and remained in theater throughout the war.
-The brig Phoenix 20 guns under captain Fanshaw
-The brig Tartar 20 guns under captain Townshend
-The sloop Spense under captain Lans
-The sloop Wolf under captain Dandridge
This is probably a single unit in game terms
Spanish
Montiano’s force in St Augustine consisted of:
-8 companies of regulars or 308 men In typical Spanish fashion these consisted of detachments from the Tercios of Asturias, Catalonia, Valencia and Murcia
-The St Augustine permanent garrison of 80 men
-one battery of artillery, 100 men (basically part of the garrison)
-one squadron of dragoons about 100 men
-St Augustine militia company 61 men
- Company of free black grenadiers 40 men strong , commanded by Francisco Menendez
-A company of drafted convicts, fewer than 100 men
-50 Yamassee warriors
-6 galleys (probably shouldn’t be included in the game)
In game terms I think this is a ‘Tercio de Florida’ (as in 1779) for the regulars, possibly with one dragoon company, a fixed garrison with one company and maybe some artillery, and a militia battalion with two or three companies – the urban militia, the free slaves and the convicts. Finally an under strength Indian unit for the Yamassees.
These units were built up a little between 1740 and 1742. The reinforcement army that joined the invasion of Georgia consisted of
General De Rodendo
-One regiment of artillery
-One regiment mulatto infantry
-The Havana battalion of regulars (10 companies of 50 men each)
-The Havana militia battalion (10 companies of 100 men each)
-600 marines
The fleet that arrived with these reinforcements was
Rodrigo de Torres
-One vessel of 24 guns
-Two vessels of 20 guns
-Two scows of 14 guns
-4 schooners
-4 sloops
-23 galliots
The reinforcements left Havana in May 1742, so they could arrive offshore then. They returned to Havana by August 1742 with the failure of the expedition.
I see the reinforcements as a battalion of regulars, a battalion of militia, a battalion of marines and a battalion of Mulattos with a single company.
Almost all of the St Augustine forces joined the invasion army, including the Indians.