Bancroft - History of California 1
Bancroft - History of California 1
Bancroft - History of California 1
OF
THE WORKS
VOLUME XVHI.
HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA.
VOL.
I.
1542-1800.
SAN FRANCISCO
A. L.
HUBERT
In the
Office of
H.
BANCROFT,
PREFACE.
THE
The period
with
its
lively social
monotony,
is
a fascinating
ture struggles between church and state, the political controversies of the Mexican regime, the play at
war and
Over the mountains presently came adventurous pathfinders, followed by swarms of Anglo-Saxon immigrants to seek homes by the Pacific; and their
Ciii)
PEEFACE.
iv
Graham
the
'
terest.
affair'
of flag,
world's interest.
And
of industrial progress, of agricultural wealth, of transcontinental railways, of great towns on the Pacific;
an epoch that in a measure places California side by
side with older states
in a career of progressional
prosperity.
resources for writing a history of California are
shown, in the accompanying list of authorities, and in
My
Chapter
is
and valuable.
volume, where a
classifica-
given.
Existing printed
in the aggregate exten-
is
The famous
collectors
and editors
Then the
PREFACE.
of
atten-
Cutts, also
making
papers, have forever abolished the necessity of searching the unprinted state and county archives.
Of
PREFACE.
vi
Some members
like
conquest.
party,
My
PREFACE,
vii
and used them to test, corroborate, or supplement notes from other sources. This duplication of
data, and the comments of the profession on the thousands of documents submitted alternately to partisan
heat and judicial coolness in the crucible of litigi.ti jn,
have not only doubled the value of those papers/ at
have greatly aided me in making proper use of o: or
fied,
And
the
testiYiiOijy ot
credit
is
due to investigators of
the path,
so, far as original research on an extended scale ir
o
concerned, has to this time remained untrodden.
the several classes
writer Las even approximately utilized the informaon extant in print. It has now been collected tod
studied for the
first
time in
its entirety.
Yet
so nmcl'i
PREFACE,
viii
Never has
it
been
new a
CALIFORNIA that I have entered more fully into details than in any other part of the
general work. The
plan originally announced carries inc from national
history into local annals as I leave the south for the
PREFACE.
north
ix
treatment
exhaustive character.
history of California is a
record of events from year to year, each being given a
space, from a short paragraph to a long chapter, in
proportion to its importance. Any considerable reits
events
I.
it
PREFACE.
There
will
am
is
/alifornians.
what
of any political, social, industrial, or religious institution; on the occurrences of any year or period; on the
or friar or prominent
citizen or early pioneer'; on the visit and narrative of
life
official
And
may
To government officials of nation, state, and counties, who have afforded me and my agents free access
to the public archives, often going beyond their official
obligations to facilitate my investigations, most hearty
TREFACE.
xi
than simply to comply with the requests of their suAcknowledgments are also due to Father
periors.
Homo
and
me
Santa Ba>-
Nor must
I forget the representatives of native Californian and early pioneer families, duly mentioned by
name elsewhere
and
in this history,
patriotically given
me
of their
temperate climes
my
grateful thanks.
and
I.
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
PAGE
History of the North Mexican States, 1520 to 1769 Corte"s on the Pacific
Coast His Plans Obstacles Nuilo de Guzman in Sinaloa Hur-
and Jimenez
tado, Becerra,
man
Cabeza de Vaca
Niza
Work
Mixton
to 1000
Annals of
New Mexico,
CHAPTER
II.
List of Authorities
Books
Histories
Local Annals
One Thousand
Titles of
Manuscripts-
Archives, Public, Mission, and Private Vallejo and Larkin Documentary Titles Scattered Correspondence Dictations of Natives
and Pioneers
Manuscripts
xiii
34
CONTENTS.
xiv
CHAPTER
III.
Name
Origin of the
Discovery
California?
Ulloa,
Juan Rodriguez
Cabrillo,
Point Concepcion
Drake, 1579 New Albion
CHAPTER
64
IV.
and Serra
March
Jose
'
of the
Army
'
Tidings of Success
110
CHAPTER
OCCUPATION OF SAN DIEGO
V.
Voyage
Miracle
Arrival of Rivera y
Moncada
Crespi's
Coming of
Bias
sion
CONTENTS.
CHAPTEE
FIRST EXPEDITION
xv
VI.
PAGB
Portold,
cessful
Causes of the
Error
Northward.
along the Coast In Sight of Port San Francisco under Point Reyes
Confusion in Names Mystery Cleared Exploration of the Peninsula
Discovery of a
dition to
CHAPTER
VII.
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY
SA1T
ANTONIO,
1770-1771.
San Diego A Disheartened Governor California to be Abandoned Rivera's Trip to the South Prayer Answered Arrival of
the 'San Antonio' Discovery of Monterey In Camp on Ca,rmelo
Bay Founding of the Presidio and Mission of San Cdrlos Despatches
Sent South by Land and Sea Portold Leaves Fages in Command
Reception of the News in Mexico Ten Padres Sent to California
Palou's Memorial Mission Work in the North Arrival of the New
Padres Stations Assigned Founding of San Antonio Transfer of
San Carlos to Carmelo Bay Events at San Diego Desertions Retirement of Parron and Gomez Establishing of San Gabriel" Out-
Affairs at
rages
by
Soldiers
164
CHAPTER
PROGRESS OF THE
NEW
VIII.
ESTABLISHMENTS.
1772-1773.
Events of 1772
Crespi's Diary
Alameda, and Contra Costa Counties
Fages Discovers San Pablo Bay, Carquines Strait, and San
Joaquin River Relief Sent South Hard Times at Monterey
Living on Bear-meat Fages and Serra Go South Founding of San
Luis Obispo Events at San Diego A Quarrel between Commandant and President Serra Goes to Mexico Cession of Lower Californian Missions to Dominicans New Padres for the Northern
Establishments Palou's Journey to San Diego and Monterey in
1773...
183
CONTENTS;
xvi
CHAPTEE
FIRST
IX.
Palou's Report of December, and Serra's in May Condition of California at Close of the First Historical Period Names Applied
Junta
California
Serra's
CHAPTEE
Serra
Homeward Bound.
193
X.
BECOKD OF EVENTS.
1774.
Want
in the Missions
from Sonora
Return
mand
CHAPTEE
XI.
California-bound Fleet
the 'San Antonio'
of Trinidad
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
xvii
XII.
Anza and
his
PAGE
Colony
Immigrants
Itinerary Map A Tedious March to San GaAnza Goes to the Relief of San Diego Rivera Excommunicated Anza Brings his Force to Monterey His Illness Rivera
Comes North and Anza Goes South A Quarrel Rivera versus Anza
and the Friars Strange Actions of the Commandant His March
Southward Insanity or Jealousy Anza's Return to the Colorado
and to Sonora Explorations by Garcds Up the Colorado Across
the Mojave Desert '-Into Tulare Valley A Remarkable Journey
257
Pominguez and Escalante
Missionaries Left
briel
CHAPTER
FOUNDING- OF THE PRESIDIO
XIII.
1776-1777.
Dolores
Early Progress
Annals of 1777
and Commandant
279
CHAPTER
XIV.
Provincias Internas
Governor's Reports
governor at Loreto
Precautions against Captain Cook Movements of Vessels Neve's
Plans for Channel Establishments Plans for Grain Supply
Experimental Pueblo Founding of -San Jose" Indian Troubles in the
South
A Soldier
Killed
Execution in California
The
First Public
.
293
CONTENTS.
xviii
CHAPTEE
XV.
A DECADE COMPLETED
1778-1780.
Period of Preparation Schemes for the Future Government Reforms Pueblos Channel Establishments Neve Wants to Resign
and is Made Colonel Sacrament of Confirmation Episcopal Powers
Neve
Ecclesiastic Prerogative
Presidio Buildings
317
CHAPTEE
A NITW REGLAMENTO
COLONISTS
XVI.
AND RECRUITS
1781.
ments
March
reto
Instructions
Settlers
Early Progress
Survey San Jose"
Distribution in 1783 Map Local Items Laying the Corner-stone
of the Church at Santa Clara Movements of Vessels and Mission-
Map
of
333
aries
CHAPTEE
XVII.
Founded
Disgust of
the
No
Yumas
Mission-pueblos
Powers of Friars Curtailed Franciscan
A New System
A Dangerous Experiment
Criticism
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
xix
XVIII.
"82.
Missionaries Expected Neve's Instructions to Ortega
Precautions against Disaster Indian Policy Radical Changes in
Ready to Begin
Events
Local
Death
of
Mariano
Carrillo
Death
of
Juan
372
Crespi
CHAPTER
RULE OF FAGES
XIX.
GENERAL RECORD.
1783-1790.
An
Family to California DonaEulalia A Jealous Catalan A MonFages and Soler Inspection of Presidios
Troubles with Habilitados Governor
Soler's Proposed Reforms
and Franciscans A Never Ending Controversy General Reports of
Palou and Lasuen Charges and Counter Charges Franking Privihis
Horseback
Mission Escorts
387
CHAPTER XX.
RULE OF FAGES, DEATH OF SERRA, AND MISSION PROGRESS.
1783-1790.
Illness
and Death
Honors
Mugartegui as Vice-president
torical Works
Vicla de Junfpero
Noticias de California
Map
CONTENTS.
xx
CHAPTER
XXI.
PAGE
No
Isolation of California
Fears of Foreigners
War
Contributions
Mission System
Commerce
The
The Fur-trade
Salt-trade
Va-
CHAPTER
The Chigoes
426
XXII.
STATISTICS.
1783-1790.
450
Comisionado
CHAPTER
XXIII.
RULE OF ROMEU.
1791-1792.
Resignation of Pedro
to the
New
Fages
Governor
Life
Instructions
and Character
'
CONTENTS.
xxi
PAGE
Misfortune
Q uarrelsome Padres
Flouring Mill
Alonso Isidro Salazar Baldoraero Lopez Manuel Fernandez
Founding and Early Annals of Soledad Mission Immoral Friars
Dedicated
Mariano Rubi
481
Statistics
CHAPTER XXIV.
RULE OF ARRILLAGA
VANCOUVER'S
VISITS.
1792-1794.
fornia
501
CHAPTER XXV.
RULE OP BORICA, FOREIGN RELATIONS, AND INDIAN AFFAIRS.
1794-1800.
Diego de Borica
Arrival at Loreto
Branciforte Viceroy
Borica's Jour-
ney to Monterey
Promised Reinforcements
French
War
Contribution
Foreign Ves-
Precautions
sels
of Boston
Volunteers
Coasting Vessels
War
The 'Eliza'
Minor Hostilities
of California
Afiairs
Contribution
War
with England
Distribution of Forces
Map
raga
CHAPTER XXVI.
EXPLORATIONS AND
RULE OF BORICA
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
1794-1800.
Pozas
Encino
Pale"
CONTENTS.
zxii
PAGE
CHAPTER
XXVII.
MISSION PROGRESS.
1791-1800.
Arrival and Departure of Padres General Statistical View The President Episcopal Powers The Inquisition Revilla Gigedo's Report
Views
of Salazar
Controversies
on Horseback
Ecclesiastical Miscellany
575
CHAPTER
PUEBLOS, COLONIZATION, AND LANDS
XXVIII.
INDUSTRIES AND INSTITUTIONS.
1791-1800.
Pueblo Progress Statistics Jordan's Proposed Colony Reports of Government Marriage Encouraged Inns Views of Salazar, Seuan,
and Costans6 Women Wanted Convicts Foundlings Tenure of
Lands Pueblo and Mission Sites Chronological Statement, 177390 Presidial Pueblos Provisional Grants Land-titles at End of
raising
CHAPTER XXIX.
INDUSTRIES AND INSTITUTIONS.
1791-1800.
Commerce
CONTENTS.
xxiii
PAGE
Military Force and Distribution Civil Government Proposed
Separation of the Californias Administration of Justice A Cause
Execution of Rosas
Celebre
Official
Care of Morals
Borica's Efforts
The
Use
of Li-
First Schools
624
CHAPTER XXX.
LOCAL EVENTS AND PROGRESS
SOUTHERN DISTRICT.
1791-1800.
San Diego Presidio Lieutenants Zu.fi iga and Grajera Military Force
Population Rancho del Rey Finances Presidio Buildings Vancouver's Description Fort at Point Guijarros Indian Affairs Precautions against Foreigners Arrivals of Vessels Mission San Diego
Fuster
trano
Statistics
Buildings
Officers, Forces,
CHAPTER XXXI.
LOCAL EVENTS AND PROGRESS
MONTEREY
DISTRICT.
1791-1800.
Montery
rilla
Military Force and Inhabitants Officers Leon ParHermeiiegildo Sal Perez Fernandez Presidio Buildings
Presidio
Miguel Pieras
Benito Catalan
Bartolome" Gili
Miguel Giribet
Indian Troubles
677
CHAPTER XXXII.
LOCAL EVENTS AND PROGRESS
1791-1800.
Military Force
covered
Plan
Castillo de
Alberni's
Company
Wreck
of
the
'San Carlos'
The
CONTENTS.
xxiv
PAGE
CHAPTEE
XXXIII.
End
a Decade and Century Borica's Policy and Character IndusFruitless Efforts Governor's Relations with Friars,
trial Revival
of
of Santiago
AUTHOEITIES QUOTED
IN THE
HISTOEY OF CALIFORNIA.
[There are more than one thousand titles of works actually consulted in these volumes, and many
of them named in foot-notes, which do not appear in this list. The catalogue is, however, complete doivn
The omissions of later date are
to the discovert/ of gold in 1848, and practically so down to 185G.
general works of reference, cyclopedias, etc.; speeches, addresses, orations, not directbj historical in their
or
to
various
nature; publications emanating from
California institutions, associations, comrelating
panies, orders, churches, banks, courts, schools, etc.; legal briefs, county and municipal regulations, law
but space docs not permit a full catalogue, and lam obliged to restrict the list with few exceptions to
material that bears directly on histori/. See chapter it. of this volume for a classification of the works
here named.]
Aa
1707. SO vols.
1850.
Abbott (John S. C.), Christopher Carson.
York, 1876.
Abell (Alexander), Copy of agreement on behalf of U. S. in relation to island
of Santa Cruz [32d Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 87].
Washington,
1852.
* Abella
(Ramon), Correspondencia del Misionero. MSS. in various archives.
Abella (Ramon), Diario de un Registro de los Bios Graiides, 1811. MS.
Abella (Ramon), Noticia de una Batalla entre Cristianos y Gentiles, 1807. MS.
Abrego (Jos6), Asuntos de la Tesoreria. MSS. in various archives.
Abrego (Joso), Cai-tas sobre la Colonia de 1834. MS.
Abrego (Jose), Relation. MS.
Acosta (Josef de), Historia Natural y Moral de las Indias. Sevilla, 1590.
Act of Congress Creating the Office of Shipping Commissioner. S. F. 1873.
Actas de Eiecciones. MS. In Archivo de California.
Adam (George), Dreadful Sufferings and Thrilling Adventures of an Overland Party of Emigrants to California. St Louis, 1850.
Abbey
New
See Speeches.
Adventures (The) of a Captain's Wife.
Ley den,
New Albany,
Addresses.
New York,
etc., 1877.
Aimard
Alaman
Alaman
Alaman
I.
folio.
xxv )
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxvi
Albany
(Or.) Register.
Albatross (The ship), Log of a Voyage to the N. W. Coast, 1809-12. MS.
1816. MS,
Albatross and Lydia, Comunicaciones relativas.
Alberni (Pedro), Comunicaciones del Teniente Coronel, 1796-1800. MSS.
different
[In
archives.]
Alberni (Pedro), Parecer sobre el sitio de Branciforte, 1796. MS.
Album Mexicano.
ings' Cal.
Mag.,
v. 58, 115.
Modoc Independent.
Alvarado (Juan Bautista), Campana de Las
Alturas,
Flores, 1838.
MS.
MS.
1840.
MS.
1839.
el
Visitador
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxvii
trangeros.
1840.
Misiones, 1839.
MS.
MS.,
1817-50.
Alviso (Jos6 Antonio), Campafia de Natividad, 184G. MS.
Amador (Jose" Maria), Memorias sobre la Hist, de Cal. MS.
Amador (Pedro), Diario de la Expedicion para fundar la Mision de S.
Jose",
1797.
MS.
Richmond, 1850.
London, 1865.
Anaheim, Gazette, Review, etc.
Anaheim, Its People and its Products. New York, 1869.
Anderson (Alexander C.), Northwest Coast History. MS.
Anderson (Alexander D.), The Silver and Gold of the Southwest, etc. Sfc
Louis, 1877; The Silver Country, etc. New York, 1877.
Anderson (David C.), Statement of Theatrical Events. MS.
Anderson (Mary E.), Scenes in the Hawaiian Islands and California. Boston
[1865].
Annals of Congress.
42
vols.
Annual
MS.
(E. M.), Siskiyou County Reminiscences.
Antioch, Ledger.
Auza (Juan. Bautista), Descubrimiento de Sonora a California, 1774. MS.
Anza (Juan Bautista), Diario de una expedicion desde Sonora a S. Francisco,
Anthony
'
Cal., 1775-6.
MS.
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxviii
of California.
MS.
MS.
MS.
1797.
Argiiello (Jos6), Cartas de un Gobenaador de las Californias. MSS. In the
different archives.
MS.
Argiiello (Jose"), Informe sobre Rancho del Rey en S. Francisco, 1798.
Argiiello (Jose"), Instruccion que ha de observar el teniente Luis Argiiello en
S. Francisco, 1806.
MS.
Argiiello ( Jose"), Respuesta a las quince Preguntas sobre at>usos de Misioneros,
MS.
1798.
Argiiello (Luis Antonio), Cartas del Comandante y Gobernador. MSS. In
the different archives.
Argiiello (Luis Antonio), Hoja de Servicios hasta 1828. MS.
Argiiello (Santiago), Correspondencia del Comandante y Prefecto. MSS,
Archives, passim.
Argiiello (Santiago), Correspondencia Particular. MS.
Annan (H. M. Van), The Public Lands of California. San Francisco, 1876.
Annona (Matias), Carta do 1770. In Doc. Hist. Mex. serie iv., tom.ii. p. 156.
Armstrong (William), '4$ Experiences. MS.
MS.
(Jose"), Recuerdos de Un Comerciante.
Arrangoiz (Francisco de Paula), M6jico desde 1808 hasta 1867.
Arnaz
1871-2. 4 vols.
Arricivita (J. D.), Cr6nieaSerafica
Madrid,
MS.
Arrillaga (Jose" Joaquin), Hojas de Servicio, 1791-8.
Arrilln.ga (Jose" Joaquin), Informe sobre el estado de Indios, Misiones, etc.,
1804.
MS.
Arrillaga (Jose" Joaquin), Informe al Virey sobre Defensas, 1793. MS.
Arrillaga (J'ose" Joaquin), Papel de Puntps para conocimiento del Gobernador,
MS.
1794.
Arrillaga (Jose" Joaquin), Preceptos Generales para Comandantes, 1806. MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxix
Arrillaga (Jos6 Joaquin), Relacion del estado que guardan los Presidios y
Pueblos, 1806. MS.
MS.
Arrillaga (Jose Joaquin), Testamento, 1814.
Arroyo de la Cuesta (Felipe), Cartas del Misionero. MS. In mission and
secular archives.
r
Arroj o de la Cuesta (Felipe), Grammar of the Mutsun Language. "New York,
1861; also original MS.
Vocabulary or Phrase Book of the Mutsun
Arroyo de la Cuesta (Felipe),
Language. New York, 1861; also original MS.
Arteaga (Ignacio), Tercera Exploracion, 1779. MS.
Ascension (Antonio de la), Descubrimiento de California, 12 Oct. 1620. In
1
San
Francisco, 1866.
Ashland (Or.), Tidings.
MS.
(L. H.), Memoir of Early Times.
Baird (Spencer F.), Fish and Fisheries [45th Cong., 2d. Sess,, Sen. Mis. Doc.
49].
Washington, 1377.
Baker (E. D.), Speech before California Senate Feb. 1st and 2d. 1854. San
Francisco, 1854; also other speeches.
Baker City (Or.), Herald.
Bacon
AUTHORITISE QUOTED.
xxx
1836.
MS.
Bandini
Bandini
Bandini
ber
Pap. passim.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Barrow
(Jolin),
The
xxxi
Life,
London, 1843.
in a
Hunter
""s
Camp. Bos-
ton, 1869.
San
Francisco, 1873.
MS.
Bausman
Bean (Edwin
Belden
Belden
Bell
(J. C.),
Memory
Discourse,
May
1,
xxxii
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
"New
(Calhoun), Testimony in behalf of the U. S. vs. Gutter.
Helvetia." San Francisco, 1861.
Benicia, Chronicle, New Era, Pacific Churchman, Tribune, etc.
Benicia, Official Documents in Relation to Land Titles.
Suisun, 1867.
Lecture. San Francisco, 1870. *
Bennett (H. C.), Chinese Labor.
Benham
Blanchet
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Bliss (William E.), Paradise in the Pacific.
New
xxxiii
York, 1873.
Secretary.' MS.
B'nai B'rith. Various pamphlets of different lodges of the Society.
Bodega y Cuadra (Juan Francisco), Comento de la Navegacion, 1775. MS..
Bodega y Cuadra (Juan Francisco), Navegacion y Descubrimiento, 1779. MS-.
Bodega y Cuadra (Juan. Francisco), Segunda Salida, 1779. MS.
Bodega y Cuadra (Juan Francisco), Viage de 1775. MS.
Life in Cal.
In Duhaut Cilly,
Viag.
Botts (C. T.), Address, Speech, etc.
Bouchacourt (Ch.), Notice Industrielle sur la Californie. Lyon, 184<X
Bouchard Affair, Testimonio de Prisioneros acerca de'InSurgeivtes, 1818. MS.
Bound Home, or the Gold Hunter's Manual. New York, 1852.
Bowcn (Asa M.), Statement on San Pascual, 1846. MS.
Bowers (Stephen), Santa Rosa Island. In Smithsonian Report, 1877.
Bowie (Aiig. J.). Hydraulic Mining in California. San Francisco, 1878.
Bowie (Richard I.), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep., June 6, 1850, on the Californian Question. Washington, 1850.
Bowles (Samuel), Across the Continent. Springfield, 1866; Our New West.
Hartford, etc., 1869; The Pacific Railroad. Boston, 1869.
Boyer (Lanson), From the Orient to the Occident. New York, 1878.
Boynton (J. S.), Statement of a Pioneer. MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Bracket* (Albert G.), List of Officers of California Battalion, 1846-7. MS.
Brackett (Albert G.), Sketch of 1st Regiment New York Volunteers. MS.
Brackett (Albert G.), Sketch of the Mormon Battalion. MS.
MS
MS.
MS.
my
i.
In Pioneer,
129.
Brooks (Charles Wolcott), Chinese in California. S. F., 1877; Early Migrations of Ancient Western Nations. S. F., 1876; Early Migrations, Origin
of Chinese Race.
S. F. 1876.
NewsS. F., 1876; Japanese Wrecks.
paper Reports of Papers on Origin of the Japanese Race. Scraps.
Brooks (H. S.), The California Mountaineer. San Francisco, 1861.
Brooks (J. Tyrwhitt), Four Months among the Gold-finders. London, 1849;
New York, 1849; Paris, 1849; Vier maanden onder de Goudzoekers in
Opper-Californie. Amsterdam, 1849; Vier Monate unter Goldnndeni ia
Ober Kalifornien. Leipzig, 1849; Zurich, 1849.
Brooks (James), A Seven Months' Run. New York, 1872.
Brooks (N. C.), A Complete History of the Mexican War. Phrl., 1849.
Brooks (R. S.), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep., June 14, 1854, on Pacific Railroad.
Washington, 1854.
Bross (William), Address on Resources of Far West. Jan. 25, 1866. New
York, 1866.
Brown (Charles), Early Events in California. MS.
Brown (Elam), An old Pioneer. In San Jose" Pioneer, Jan. 26, 1878.
Brown (H. S.), Early Days of California. MS.
Browne (J. Ross), Address to the Territorial Pioneers of California. In S. F.
News Letter, Sept. 11, 1875; Hubert H. Bancroft and his Literary Undertakings. In Overland Monthly; Lower Cal. See Taylor; Relacion de los
Debates tie la Convencion de California, Set. y Oct., 1849, Nueva York,
1851; Report of Debates in Convention of California.
Sept. and Oct.,
1849, Washington, 1850; Report upon the Mineral Resources of the States
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxxv
find Territories "West of the Rocky Mountains. Washington, 1867; Washington 1868; San Francisco, 1868; Reports upon the Mineral Resources
of the United States.
Washington, 1867; Resources of the Paciiic
MS.
MS.
Instruccion del Virey.
17 Agosto, 1773.
Instruccion del Virey. 30 Set., 1774. MS.
Providencias del Virey. 26 Mayo, 1773. MS.
Buchanan (James), Instructions of the Secretary of State to Thos. 0. Larkin
MS.
as Confidential Agent of the U. S., 1845.
Buchanan (James), Instructions to Vorhies, Oct. 7. 1848. In Cal. and N.
Mex., Mess, and Doc. 1850. p. 6.
Buelna (Antonio), Cartas de un Vecino de S. Jose. MS.
Buelna (Felix), Narracion sobre Tiempos Pasados. MS.
Buffalo (N. Y.), Courier.
Buffum (E. Gould), Six Months in the Gold Mines. Philadelphia, 1850;
London, 1850.
Burnett (Peter H. ), Recollections and Opinions of an Old Pioneer. N. Y. 1880.
Burnett (Peter H.), Recollections of the Past. MS. 2 vols._
Burney (James), Chronological History of the Discoveries in the South Sea,
or Pacific Ocean.
London, 1803-17. 4to. 5 vols.
Burns'(Aaron), Statement of Vigilance Committee. MS.
Burr (H. T.), Chart showing Age, etc., of Officers of State and Members of
Sacramento, 1866.
Legislature, 1865-6.
,
MS.
MS.
(John), Official and Private Letters.
(Mrs M. A.), Biographical Sketch. MS.
(Richard F.), City of the Saints, etc. London, 1861; N. Y., 1862.
London, 1687; London, 1710.
(Robert), The English Hero.
Bushnell (Horace), Characteristics and Prospects of California. San FranSan Francisco, 1858; Movement for a University in California, etc.
Burton
Burton
Burton
Burton
cisco, 1857.
California,
MS.
Bustamante (Carlos Maria), Apuntes para la Historia del Gobierno del General
Santa Anna. Mexico, 1841-3. MS. 3 vols. also print. Mexico, 1845.
Bustamante (Carlos Maria), Cuadro Hist6rico de la Revolucion Mexicana.
;
MS.
1820.
Bustamante (Carlos Maria), El Nuevo Bernal Diaz del Castillo 6 sea Historia de
la Invasion de los Anglo- Americanos en Mexico.
Mexico, 1847. 2 vols.
Bustamante (Carlos Maria), Suplemento d Los Tres Siglos de Cavo. Jalapa,
1870.
MS. 9
la Patria, Continuacion.
Mexico, 1837-9.
vols.
San Francisco,
1875,.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxxvi
Cabrillo (Juan Rodriguez), Relation 6 Diario. In Florida, Col. Doc., 173; also
in Pacheco and Cclrdenas, Col. Doc., xiv. 165. (Probably by Juan Paez.)
Cahuenga, Capitulacion de 13 de Enero, 1847. MS.
Caldwell (George Alfred), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep. June 7, 1850, on the
California and Territorial Questions.
Washington, 1850.
California, 1799, in Viagero Universal, xxvi.
S. F., 1858 et seq.
Calif ornia Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the.
California Agriculturist.
San Jose", 1871 et seq. 4to.
about California. San Francisco, 1870; Id,, 1873 and Supple1875 and Supplement.
California, Amount collected from customs.
[31st Cong., 1st Sess., H. Ex,
Doc. 72.] Washington, 1849.
California, All
ment;
Id.,
1867.
California,
California
etc.,
New York
of
(1849).
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Xxxvii
my
ings: Act; Adjutant-general's Report; Agricultural, Mining, and Mechanical Arts College, Reports; Assembly, Rules; Attorney-general, Reports;
Bank Commissioners, Reports; Bribery Investigating Committee; Citizen's
Hand Book; Common Schools, Acts, etc.; Corporations; Deaf, Dumb, and
Blind Institute; Educational Directory; Electors; Fees and Salaries;
Fisheries; Inaugural Addresses of Governors; Insane Asylum Reports;
Insurance Commissioners; Land Acts; Laws; Memorials; Messages of
Govejnors; Militia; Mines and Mining; Pioneer Silk Growers Political
Code Amendments; Public Lands; Revenue Laws; Sacramento River
Drrinage District; Sacramento Valley Irrigation and Navigation Canal;
School Law; Secretary of State, Reports; Senate and Assembly Bills;
Senate Standing and Joint Rules; Special Messages of Governors; State
;
etc.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxxviii
California Pioneers,
Copy
of Archives.
of the
Society; Scrap-book.
MS.
California Pioneers, Sketches of Fifty.
San Francisco, 1866 et seq.
California Prison Commission, Annual Reports.
Middle
Class
Colonies,
for
California, Project
n.pl., u.d.
San Francisco, 1876.
California, Public Lands of.
[40th Cong., 2d Sess., H. Mis. Doc. 23.]
California, Relief of Settlers in.
San Francisco, etc., 1851California, Reports of Cases in Supreme Court.
81.
58 vols.
California, Round Valley Indian Reservation. [43d Cong., 1st. Sess., H. Ex.
Doc. 118.]
California Statistical Chart.
Sacramento, Jan. 1. 1855.
California Statutes, 1st to 24th Sess.
Sacramento, etc., 1850-81. 24 vols.
San Francisco, etc., 1852 et seq. See also
California Supreme Court Briefs.
Briefs.
California, Tarif de Douanes de la Californie, 1851.
Paris, 1851. 4to.
California Teacher.
San Francisco, 1863 et seq.
San Francisco, 1852.
California Text Book.
California Volunteers, Correspondence Relative to the Discharge.
[30th
1st.
H.
Ex. Doc. 138.] Washington, 1865 et seq.
Sess.,
Cong.,
California Wine, Wool, and Stock Journal.
San Francisco, 18Q3 et seq.
California Workingmen's Party,
Epitome of its Rise and Progress. San
Francisco, 1878.
California and
Mexico, Message and Documents, 1848. [30th Cong., 2d
Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 1.]
Washington, 1848.
California and
Mexico, Message and Documents, 1850. [31st Cong., 1st
Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 17.]
Washington, 1849.
Californian (The). San Francisco, 1880 et seq.
Californian.
See Monterey Californian.
Californias, Reglamento Provisional.
1773. MS.
Californias, 'Junta de Fomento,' q. v.
Californie, Histoire Chre"tienne.
Plancy, 1851.
San Francisco, 1869.
Californie, Ses Ressources Gene'rales, etc.
An
New
New
','alif ornien,
Ausfuhrliche Mittheilungeu
liber.
Kreuz-
Manual, etc.
Calvo (Charles), Recueil Complet des Trace's de PAm<rique Latine.
Paris,
18G2-9. 16 vols.
Camdcn
(William), Annales
dini, 1615-27.
Campaign
of
Rervm Anglicarvm
et Hibernicarvm, etc.
Lon-
2 vols.
In Monterey, Californian.
Campbell
(J.
Pacific.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xxxix
Carrillo (Anastasio) Muchas Cartas del Comandante de Sta Barbara, etc. MS.
Carrillo (Carlos Antonio), Cartas del Diputndo de Alta Cal., 1831-2. MS.
Die. 1836.
MS,
Carrillo (Carlos Antonio), Cartas al General Vallejo.
MS.
Carrillo (Carlos Antonio), Correspondencia Miscelanea.
Carrillo (Carlos Antonio), Discurso al tomar el maudo politico en Los Angeles,
6 Die. 1837. MS.
Carrillo (Carlos Antonio), Exposicion sobre el Fondo Piadoso. Mexico, 1831.
Carrillo (Cdrlos Antonio), Pedimento de Reos, 1814. MS.
MS.
Carrillo (Domingo), Cartas Sueltas.
MS.
Carrillo (Domingo), Documentos para la Historia de California.
MS.
Carrillo (Joaquin), Escritos en varies Archives.
MS.
de
California.
Carrillo (Jose), Documentos para la Historia
Carrillo ( Jos6 Antonio), Accion de S. Pedro contra los Americanos, 1846. MS.
Carrillo (Jose" Antonio), Comuuicaciones Varias del Diputado y Mayor Gene-
MS.
ral.
Carrillo
Carrillo
Carrillo
Carrillo
Carrillo
(Julio), Narrative.
MS.
1782. MS.
(Mariano), Testamento 6 Inventario.
(Pedro C.), Documentos para la Historia de Cal.
MS.
New
San
Cassell's
adulterio, 1836.
MS.
Mexico, 1871.
MS.
Castillo (Felipe), Itinerario desde Sonora hasta Cal., 1845.
Castillo Negrete (Luis), Consejos al Ccmandante de Sta Barbara, 1836.
MS.
AUTHOEITIES QUOTED.
xl
MS.
Castillo Negrete (Luis), Escritos del Juez de Distrito.
Castillo Negrete (Luis), Exposicion que dirige el Juez de Distrito al Aytint.
de Los Argeles sobre el Plan Revoluciouario de Monterey, 1836. MS.
Castro (Jose), Correspoudencia oficial y Particular del General, 182G-46. MS.
Castro (Jos6), Decretos de la Diputacion erigida en Congreso Constituyente,
Nos. 1-10. Monterey, 1836.
Presidente de Congreso Constituyente.
Castro (Josd), El C(Despacho
de Coronel Expedido d D. Juan B. Alvarado.) Monterey, 11 Die., 1836.
Castro (Jose'), 6rden del Com. Gen. acerca de Emigrados de los E. U., G Nov.
,
1845.
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
Castro
MS.
(Jose"),
Monterey.
MS.
(Macario), Cartas del Sargento.
(Macario), Diario de su Expedicion a las Rancherias, 1799. MS.
(Manuel), Carta d D. Pio Pico. Revolution de Flores, 1847. MS.
(Manuel), Cartas de un Prefecto. MS.
(Manuel), Documentos para la Historia de California. MS. 2 vols.
(Manuel), Informe en Sonora, 7 Junio, 1847. MS.
MS.
pamphlets.
Cerruti (Enrique), Historical Note-books, 1821-46.
Cerruti (Enrique), Ramblings in California. MS.
MS. 5
vols.
Chicago
terey, 11
Mayo
1836.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xli
Chico (Mariano), Dos Palabras sobre Memoria del Ex. Gobemador Doblado.
Guanajuato, 1847.
Chiles (Joseph B. ), Visit to California in 1841. MS.
Chinese in California: Coolie Trade; Immigration; Question; Testimony; etc.
Many pamphlets.
Choate (D. ) and E. W. Moore. See San Diego and Southern California.
Choris (Louis), Voyage Pittoresque autour du Monde. Paris, 1822. folio.
Chronicle Annual. San Francisco, 1882.
Churches. See Institutions.
Cincinnati (0.), Commercial, Enquirer, Times, etc.
Civil Service Reform Association of California, Purposes of.
San Francisco,
1881; other pamphlets.
Clark (Francis D.), A Pioneer of 1847. In S. Jose" Pioneer, July 5, 1879; Roll
of Survivors of the 1st Regiment of New York Volunteers. 1ST. Y. 1874.
Clark (Galen), Reminiscences of the Old Times. MS.
Clark (Hiram C.), Statement of Facts from 1851. MS.
Clark (Mrs), Antipodes and Around the World. London, 1870.
Clark (Samuel), Life and Death of Sir Francis Drake. London, 1761. 4to.
Clarke (Asia Booth), The Elder and the Younger Booth. Boston, 1882.
Clarke (Charles E.), Speech on Admission of California in U. S. H. of Rep.,
May 13, 1850. Wash. 1850; Speech on California Claims in U. S. Sen.,
Apr. 25, 1848. Wash. 1848.
Claudet (F. G.), Gold. New Westminster, 1871.
Clavigero (Francisco Saverio), Storia della California. Venezia, 1789. 2 vols.
Clemens (J.), California Territorial Governments. Speech in U. S. Sen.,
May 16 and 20, 1850. Washington, .1850.
Cleveland (Chauncey F.), Speech in U. S. H. of Rejp., Apr. 19, 1850. .Constitution of California. Washington, 1850.
Cleveland (Richard J.), Narrative of Voyages. Cambridge, 1842. 2 vols.;
.
Boston, 1850.
Clippings from the California Press in regard to Steam across the Pacific. San
Francisco, 1860.
Cloverdale, News, Reveille.
Clubs. See Institutions.
Clyman (James), Diary of Overland Journey, 1844-6. MS.
Clyman (James), Note Book, 1844-6. MS.
Coast Review. San Francisco, 1871-80. 15 vols.
New
York, 1879.
n.pl., n.d.
Coignet (M.), Rapport sur les Mines de New Almaden. Paris, 1806.
Coke (Henry J.), A Ride over the Rocky Mountains to Oregon and California.
London, 1S52.
Cole (Cornelius), Australian Mail Line. Speech in U. S. Sen. July 9, 1870.
Washington, n.d.; and various Speeches.
Cole (R. Beverly), Statement on Vigilance Committee in San Francisco. MS.
Cole (William L.j, California Its Scenery, Climate, etc. New York, 1871.
Coleccion de Documentcs Ine"ditos para la Historia de Espaila. Madrid,
1842-80.
71 vols.
[S. F. Law Library.]
Colegio Seminario de Maria Santisima de Guadalupe de Sta
ciones.
Ine"s.
Constitu-
MS.
Coleman (William
T.),
Vigilance Committee
of '56.
MS.
MS.
Colton, Advocate, Semi-tropic.
Colton (Walter), Correspondence, 1876-7. MS.
Colton (Walter), Deck and Port. New York, 1850; New York, 1860; The Land
of 'Gold. New York, 1860; Three Years in California. New York, 1850.
HIST. CAL.,.VOL.
I.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xlii
men to de
1825.
In Junta de Fo-
Cal.
1832.
MS.
MS.
14 vols.
MS.
Consejo General de Pueblos Unidos de Cal., Bando de Mayo 13, 1846. MS.
Constitucion Espanola de 1812, Bandos del Virey sobre su jura, 1820. MS.
Constitutional Convention; Declaration of Rights. Autograph of Members,
1849.
Contemporary Biography
1881. 4to. 2 vols.
Conversation, Practical
Francisco, 1865.
of California's Representative
Men.
San Francisco,
San
MS.
P.), Annals of San Francisco.
(De Guy), Resources of San Luis Obispo County. San Francisco, 1875.
San Francisco, 18V6.
(Ellwood), Forest Culture, etc.
(John B. R.), Accounts, 1827. MS.
Miscelaneas
de un Navegante, 1824 et seq. MS.
B.
Cartas
(John
R.),
(John B. R.), Log of the California, 1839-42. MS.
Coon (H.
Cooper
Cooper
Cooper
Cooper
Cooper
Copper
City, Pioneer.
Copperopolis, Courier.
Cordoba (Alberto), Cartas del Ingeniero, 1796-8. MS.
Cordoba (Alberto), Informe acerca del Sitio de Branciforte, 1796.
Cordoba (Alberto), Informe al Virey sobre Defensas de Cal., 179G.
Cornwallis (Kinahan), The New El Dorado. London, 1858.
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xljU
Corwin
(Closes B.),
fornia.
Jour., v. 59.
County
registers, poll-lists,
tions, cited by name of
laws and regulations, and other official publicacounty but not named in this list.
Courts.
See Institutions.
Coutts (Cave J.), Diary of a March to California in 1848. MS.
Covarrubias (Jos6 Maria), Correspondencia del Secretario. MS.
Cox (Isaac), Annals of Trinity County. San Francisco, 1858.
Coxe (Daniel), Description of Carolana. London, 17*22; other editions.
Coyncr (David H.), The Lost Trappers. Cincinnati, 1859.
Cram (Thomas J.), Report on the Oceanic routes to Cal., Nov. 1856. [34th
Cong., 3d Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 51.] Washington, 1856; Topographical
Memoir on the Department of the Pacific. [35th Cong., 2d Sess., H. Ex.
Doc. 114.] Washington, 1859.
Crane (James M.), The Past, Present, and Future of the Pacific. San Francisco, 1856.
Crary (Oliver
archives.
MS.
3, 1850,
on Admission of Cali-
xii.
Phfla., 1847.
522.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xliv
MS.
itn
los Californios 6
[1864.]
In
S.
1878.
D'Avity
folio.
(Pierre),
5 vols.
Le Monde ou
Paris, 1637.
MS.
(Peter), Occurrences in California.
D. B.), De Bow's Review and Industrial Resources.
Orleans,
etc., 1854-7. 7 vols.; Encyclopedia of Trade and Commerce of the U. S.
London, 1854. 2 vols.
Decreto del Congreso Mejicano sobre Colonizacion, 18 Agosto 1824. MS.
Decrcto del Congreso Mejicano, secularizando las Misiones. 17 Agosto 1833.
Dean
New
De Bow (J.
Sacramento, 1852.
Dempster
(C. J.),
Den
Washington, n.d.
Departmental Records. MS. 14 vols. In Archive de Cal.
Departmental State Papers. MS. 20 vols. In Archive de Cal. Id. Angeles.
12 vols.; Id., Benicia. 5 vols. Id., Benicia Custom-house. 8 vols.; Id.,
Benicia Com. and Treas. 5 vols. Id., Benicia Prefecturas y Juzgados.
6 vols. Id., Benicia Military, vols. 53 to 87; Id., Monterey. 8 vols.; Id.,
San Jose. 7 vols.
Derby (E. H.), The Overland Route to the Pacific. Boston, 1869.
Derby (G. II.), and R. S. Williamson. Reports on Geology and Topography
of California.
[31st Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 47.]
Wash., 1850.
De Rupert (A. E. D.), Californians and Mormons. New York, 1881.
Historia
Verdadera de la Conquista do la Nueva
Diaz del Castillo (Bernal),
Madrid, 1632. 4to.
Espaiia.
;
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xlv
New
etc.
York, 1867. 2
vols.
Sonoma
[En verso.]
[1838].
In Petit-Thouars, Voy.,
iv.
la Historia.
1846-8. In Loa Angeles, Southern California.
MS. 4 vols.
la Historia de California.
la Historia de Mexico.
Mexico, 1853-7. 20 vols. 4 series,
serie iii., in folio and in four parts.
Domenech (Emmanuel), Seven Years' Residence in the Great Deserts of North
Documentos para
Documentos para
Documentos para
America.
London,
I860'.
2 vols.
i.
377.
les
deux Ameriques.
Paris,
1836.
Lands
in California.
Douglas (Sir James), Private Papers. 1st and 2d series. MS. 2 vols.; Voyage from the Columbia to Cal., 1841. MS. In Id. Journal.
Douglas City, Trinity Gazette.
Dowell (B. F.), Journal and Letters. MS.
Downey City, Courier, Los Nietos Valley Courier.
Dovvnieville, Democrat, Mountain Messenger, Sierra Advocate, Sierra Age,
Sierra County News, Sierra Democrat, Standard, etc.
Dows (James), Statement of Vigilance Committee in San Francisco. MS.
Doyle (John T.), Address at Inauguration of New Hall of Santa Clara Colon the Railroad Policy of Calilege, Aug. 9, 1870. S. F., 1870; Address
S. F., 1873; Brief History of the Pious Fund of California, ii.pl.
fornia.
Memorandum as to the Discovery of the Bay of San Francisco.
n.d.
.
Worcester. 1874.
Drake (Francis), Drie Voornaamc Zee-Togten. In Aa, Naauk. Vers. xviii.
Francis Drake Revived,
The Famous Voyage. In Hakluyt's Vcy., iii.
n.pl.
[1030
J;
Encompassed [Hakluyt
Soc. ed.]
London
London, 1854.
1023. 4to;
The World
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xlvi
Drama, Copy
1831. MS.
Duran (Narciso), Proyectos de Secularizacion, 1833. MS.
Durkee (John L.), Statement pn Vigilance Committees in San Francisco. MS.
Dutch Flat, Enquirer, Forum.
Dutch Flat Swindle (The Great). S. F. n. d.
Dwindle John W.), Address before the Pioneers. 1866. S. F. 1SGG; Colonial
(
MS.
MS.
los Encargados de Justicia en las
MS.
Misiones, 1833.
Echeandia (Jose" Maria), Reglamento de Secularizacion, 18 Nov. 1832. MS.
Echcveste (Juan Jos6), 'Reglamento,' q.v.
Eco de Espana. Mexico, 1853-4.
Eco Nacional. Mexico, 1857-8.
Eco de Occidente. Guaymas, 1878 et seq.
Edelman (George W.), Guide to the Value of California Gold. Phil., 1850.
Edinburgh Review. Edinburgh, 1802 ct seq.
Edwards (Philip L.), Diary of a Visit to Gal., 1837. MS.
MS.
Eliot de Castro (Juan), Papeles Tocantes & su arrestacion, 1815.
Elliot (George H. ), The Presidio of San Francisco.
In Overland, iv. 336.
Ellis (George E.), The Red Man and the White Man.
Boston, 1882.
Emory (W. H. ), Notes of a Military Reconnaissance. [30th Cong., 1st Sess.,
Sen. Ex. Doc. 7.] Washington, 1848.
Escalante (Sylvestre Velez), Carta de 28 de Octubre, 1775. MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xlvii
in California.
In
Hunt's Merchants' Mag., xxxi. 385.
Evans (Richard S.) and H. W. Henshaw, Translation, Voyage of Cabrillo.
In U. S. Geog. Surv., Wheeler, vii., Arch., 293.
Expedieute sobre el modo de dividirse las misiones, 1770. MS.
Expediente sobre las Enfermedades de la Tierra, 1805. MS.
Expediente sobre Reciprocas Quejas del Gobernador y Religiosos, 1787. MS.
Expulsion of Citizens of the U. S. from Upper Cal. President's Mess. [28th
Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Doc. 300.] Wash., 1843.
Ezquer (Ignacio), Memorias de Cosas Pasadas. MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xlviii
Farnham
Famliam
a",
1831-2.
Figueroa
MS.
(Jose"),
al
MS.
Figueroa
Figueroa
Figueroa
Figueroa
Figueroa
Figueroa
1833.
(Jose"),
(Jose"),
The Manifesto
(Jose"),
(Jose"),
(Jose"),
(Jose"),
of.
S.
MS.
Francisco, 1855.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
xlix
Mar.
5,
In Sonorense,
1847.
MS
Fondo Piadoso de
Fondo Piadoso de
Fondo Piadoso de
MS.
Californias, 1773.
Californias, Decreto 24 Oct. 1842.
MS.
Californias, Demostracion de los sinodos
MS.
Religiosos, 1811-34.
Fondo Piadoso de Californias, Ley
que adeuda d
los
Foster (G. G.), The Gold Regions of California. New York, 1848; N. Y., 1849.
Foster (Stephen C. ), Angeles from '47 to '49. MS.
Foster (Stephen C. ), First American in Los Angeles. In Los Angeles Express.
Foster (Stephen C. ), Various Writings. MS.
34th Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Doc. 1C9; Sen Ex. Doc. 63; Sen. Misccl.
74; 36fh Cong. 1st Sess. H. Rept. 7; Id. Court Claims 204, 229; Sen. Rept.
198.
Also Cong. Globe 1847-8, 1852-3; and many scattered documents
in the various archives; Correspondence 1844-7.
MS.; Correspondence
1847-8 in Stockton's Life, App. Court Martial. Extract in Stockton's
8;
App.; Court Martial 1847. In 30th Cong., 1st Scss. Sen. Ex.
Doc. 33; Discussions in Congress on his trial and services, 1847-8.
Cong. Globe, 1847-8. Index, 'Fremont'; Geographical Memoir upon UpLife,
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
New York, n.d.; Report of Exploring Expedition. WashCollection; Fremont Songster. New York,
ington. 1845; Pamphlets.
1856; Boston, 1856.
Frdmont (John C.) and W. H. Emory, California Guide Book. New York,
1849.
Frere (Alice M.), The Antipodes and Round the World. London, 1870.
Buchanan.
MS.
Galvez
(Jose" de),
1769.
MS.
MS.
izacion, 1833.
MS.
MS.
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
li
Gay
1853.
Gibson (H. G.), Address at the Fourth Annual Banquet of New York California Pioneers.
In San Jose" Pioneer, Feb. 15, 1879.
Gibson (Otis), Chinaman or White Man, Which? San Francisco, 1873; The
Chinese in America. Cincinnati, 1877; other articles on Chinese.
Giddings (George H.), The case of Contractor on the Overland Mail Route.
.Washington, 1800.
Gift '(George W.), The Settler's Guide. Stockton, 1857.
Gift (George W. ), Something about California. Mariii County, S. Rafael, 1875.
Gilbert (Frank T.), See Histories of San Joaquin and Yolo Counties.
Gillespie (Archibald PL), Correspondence of a Government Agent. MS.
Gillespie (Charles V.), Vigilance Committee.
MS.
7,
Gomez
Gomez
Gomez
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
lii
Goodrich (Samuel G.), History of tho Indians of North and South America.
Boston, 1844; Boston, 1855; Boston, 18G4.
San Frattcisco, 1877.
A.), Coal Mines of the Western Coast.
Gottfricdt (Johann Ludwig), Neuc Welt.
Franckfurt, 1G55. folio.
Gougenheim (Adelaide and Joey), Histrionic Memoirs, etc. S. F. 1856.
Goycoechea (Felipe), Diario de Exploracion, 1708. MS.
Goycoechea (Felipe), Escritos del Comandante de Sta Barbara, 1785-1806. MS.
Goycoechea (Felipe), Medios para el Fornento de Californias, 1805. MS.
Goycoechea (Felipe), Oficio Instructive para el Ten*^. R. Carrillo, 1802. MS.
Goycoechea (Felipe), Respuesta a las Quince Preguntas sobre Abusos de
Misioneros, 1798. MS.
Graham (J. D.), Report on Boundary Line between U. S. and Mexico [32d
Cong., 1st Sess., Sen, Ex. Doc. 121.] Washington, 1851.
Graham (Mary), Historical Reminiscences. San Francisco, 1876.
Graham (Isaac) and John A. Sutter in New Mexico, Some Facts. MS.
Grajera (Antonio), Escritos del Comandante de S. Diego, 1794-9.
Gi\"j era (Antonio), Respuesta a las Quince Preguntas, 1799. MS.
Grantsville, Weekly Sun.
Grass Valley, Foot Hill Tidings, National, Union.
Gray (A. B.), Resolution communicating report and map relative to Mex.
Boundary. [33d Cong., 2d Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 55.] Wash. 1853.
Gray (W. H.), History of Oregon, 1792-1849. Portland, 1870.
Great Registers, cited by name of county. Not in this list.
Greeley (Horace), Overland Journey. New York,'lSGO.
Green (Alfred A.) Life and Adventures of a '47 er. MS.
Green (Talbot H.), Letters, 1841-8. MS.
Goodyear (W.
Greenhow
MS.
Grimm
MS.
The Chinese Must Go.
Grimshaw (William
Guerra
Guerra
Guerra
Guerra
y Noriega
y Noriega
1819.
MS?
(Jose),
(Jose"),
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
liii
Gutierrez (Nicolas), Varias Cartas del Capitan y Gefe Politico, 1832-6. MS.
Gwin (William M.), Argument on the Subject of a Pacific Railroad. Wash.,
Land Titles in California. Speech
18GO; Congress Record,
n.pl., n.d.
in reply to Mr Benton in U. S. Sen., Jan. 2, 1831. Wash., 1851; Navy;
MS.
Habersham (A. W.), North Pacific Surveying and Expl. Ex. Phila.,
Hacke (William), Collection of Original Voyages. London, 1699.
Hakluyt (Richard), The Principal Navigations. Lond., 1599-1600.
1858.
folio.
Cal. and N. Mex., Mess, and Doc., 1850; Mexican Land Laws. MS.;
Report on Land Titles in California. [31st Cong., 1st. Sess., H. EK.
Doc. 17.] Wash., 1850.
Halley (William), Centennial Year-book of Alameda County. Oakland, 1876.
Hamilton (Nev.), Inland Empire.
Hancock (Samuel), Thirteen Years' Residence on the Northwest Coast. MS.
Hanford, Public Good.
Hansard (T. C.), Parliamentary Debates from 1803. London, 1812-77. [S. F.
Law
Library.]
Hardenbergh
(J. R.),
General Land
Ansv/er to charges
Office.
California.
MS.
seq.
Bibliotheca.
Harris (John), Navigantium
London, 1705. folio. 2 vols.
Harrison (Henry W.), Battle-Fields and Naval Exploits. Phila., 1858.
Hart (Albert), Mining Statutes of the U. S., Cal., and Nev. S. F., 1877.
Hartman (Isaac), Brief in Mission Cases.
Hartmann (Carl), Geographisch - Statistische Beschreibung von Californieii.
Weimar, 1849. 2 vols.
Hartmarm (Joh. Adolph), Dissertatio Geographies de vero Calif ornia3 situ et
.
Conditions.
Marburg, 1739. 4to.
Hartnell (Teresa de la G.), Narrativa de una Matrona de Cal. MS.
MS.
Hartnell (William E. P.), Convention of '49.
Original Records.
Hartnell (William E. P.), Diario del Visitador Gen. de Misiones, 1839-40. MS.
Hartnell (William E. P.), English Colonization in California, 1844. MS.
Hartnell (William E. P. ), Miscellaneous Correspondence from 1822. MS.
'
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
liv
Cincinnati, 1849.
MS.
Hayes
Hayes
Hayes
Hayes
Hayes
Hayes
Hayes
River Flag.
Heap (Gwinn
Hearn
Harris), Central
Route to the
Pacific.
Philadelphia, 1854.
MS.
S.
Herrera (Antonio
las Islas
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Iv
New
1870.
Associations.
large number of publications cited by name of
the Association.
Honolulu, Friend, 1843 et seq.; Hawaiian Spectator; Polynesian, 1857 et
seq.; Sandwich Island Gazette, 183G et seq.; Sandwich Island News,
184G ct seq.
Hooker (Wm. J.) and G. A.W. Arnott, Botany of Captain Beechey's Voyage.
Homestead
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ivi
Humason (W.
L.),
From
of Voyages.
London, 1836.
the Atlantic Surf to the Golden Gate.
Hartford,
18G9.
Humboldt
Humboldt
Idaho City,
'
(Id.)
World.
MS.
Independence
(Cal.),
Who
Conquered
vols.
Inyo Independent.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ivii
Johnson (Theodore
Notes.
May
22, 1858.
Kalama, Beacon.
Kearny (Stephen W. ), Orders and Correspondence, 1847. In Cal. and N. Mex.,
Mess. & Doc. 1850; Proclamation, March 1, 1847. Original MS.; also
in print;. Report to Adjutant -General Jones, March 15, 1847.
[31st
Cong., 1st Sess., H. Ex^Doc. 17, p. 283.] Washington, 1848; Reports
of San Pascual.
[30th Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. No. 513-16.]
Washington, 1848.
A History of
Kelley (Hall
J.),
Memoir on Oregon,
1839.
I.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Iviii
vols.; Paris,
La Harpe (Jean
Langsdorff (G. H. von), Voyages and Travels, 1803-7. Lond., 1813-14. 2 vols.
La Perouse (J. G. F. de), Voyage autour du Moade. Paris, 17C3. 4 vols.
atlas, folio; Voyage round the World, 1785-8.
London, 1703. 3 vols.;
Boston, 1801.
Laplaco (Cyrille P. T.), Campagne de Circumnavigation. Paris, 1841-54. 6
vols.
La
London,
3voh.
MS.
MS.
Larkin (Thomas
1844-9.
0.), Official
vols.
Correspondence as U.
S.
Consul and
Navy Agent.
MS. 2
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
lix
New
S.
New York,
MS.
MS.
Lloyd
Loa a
San Francisco.
MS.
What They Are,
1873,
MS.
San Francisco, 1876.
etc.
San Francisco, 1873.
Lobscheid (W.), The Chinese;
Local histories, see name of county, town, or author.
Lockwood (R. A.), Vigilance Committee Speeches. San Francisco, 1852.
Lodi, Valley Review.
Log-books, Fragments from the Larkin Collection. 3 vols. MS.
Lompoc, Record.
London, Echo, Engineer, Grocer, Mechanic's Magazine, Morning Post, Spectator, Times, etc.
Lopez (Baldomero), El Guardian a los Padres, prohibiendo el uso de Carruajes, 1820.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ix
al P.
'
MS.
MS.
Lord (John Keast), The Naturalist in Vancouver Island. Lond., I860. 2 vols.
Lorenzana (Apolinaria), Memorias de la Beata. MS.
Loreto, Libros de Mision. MS. [In possession of 0. Livermore.]
Los Angeles, Archive, Copies and Extracts. MS. 5 vols.
Los Angeles, Ayuntamiento Records. MS.
Los Angeles, Cronica, Express, Herald, Meridional, Mirror, Morning Journal,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Angeles,
Los
1876.
Oakland, 1880.
folio.
1870.
ad Rhenum, 1692.
McAllister (Hall), Statement on Vigilance Committee. MS.
McChristian (Patrick), Narrative on Bear Flag. MS.
McClellan (R. Guy), The Golden State. Phil., etc., 1872; Republicanism in
America. San Francisco, 1869.
McCloskey ( J. J. ), The Early Drama in California. In San Jose" Pioneer, Dec.
13 and 14, 1877.
McClure (A. K.), Three Thousand Miles through the Rocky Mountains.
Philadelphia, 1869.
McCollum (William
McCue
S.), California as I
Saw
it.
Buffalo, 1850.
21,
1871.
McDougall (James
on Pacific Railroad in
U.
S.
H. Rep. Jan.
16,
A.), Speech
1855.
Washington, 1855.
McFarlane (James), The Coal-regions of America. New York, 1873.
McFie (Matthew), Vancouver Island and British Columbia. London, 1865.
McGarrahan (William), The Quicksilver Mines of Panoche Grande. Wash
A Collection of Documents. San Francisco,
ington, 1860; Memorial.
,
1870.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
History of the Donner Party.
McGlashan
(C. F.),
cisco, 1880.
Ixi
McGowan Edward)
(
'
'
in S. F. Post,
in California, etc.
Philadelphia, 1850.
(Joseph TV.), Recollections of a Chief
McKay
Company. MS.
McKinstry (George), Papers on the History of California. MS.
McLean (Finis E. ), Speech, June 5, 1850, on Constitution of Cal. Wa^h. 1850.
McPherson, Letters of Juanita. [In various newspapers.].
McPherson (W.), Homes in Los Angeles. Los Angeles, 1873.
McQueen (John), Speech, June 3, 1850, on Admission of Cal. Wash., 1850.
McWillie (W.), Speech, March 4, 1850, on the Admission of Cal. n.pl., n.d.
Machado (Antonio), Escritos de un Sindico. MS.
Machado (Juana), Tiempos Pasados de California. MS.
Madelene (Henri de la), Le Comte Gaston de Raousset-Boullfon. Paris, 1876.
Maglianos, St Francis and Franciscans.
Maguire (John Francis), The Irish in America. New York, 1S6&
MS.
i.
580.
in S. F.
MS.
New York,
1868.
MS.
(John), Letter to Commodore Jones, 1842.
(John), Letter to Lewis Cass, 1846. In Pacheco Contra Costa Gazette,
Dec. 21, 1867.
Marsh (John), Letters of a Pioneer Doctor. MS.
Marshall (H.), Speech, Apr. 3, 1850, on Cal. Message. Wash., 1850.
Marshall (Henry), Statement, 1843. MS.
Marshall (T. W. M.), Christian Missions. New York, 1864. 2 vols.
Marshall (W. G.), Through America. London, 1881.
Martin (Juan), Visita & los Gentiles Tulareiios, 1804. MS.
Marsh
Marsh
Martin (Thomas
S.),
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixii
Martinez,
Martinez
Martinez
Martinez
Martinez
Martinez
MS.
MS.
(Luis Antonio), Correspondencia del Padre.
(Este"van Jose) and Gonzalo Lopez de Haro, Cuarta Exploracion,
1788.
MS.
Marvin (John
Marysville, 1853.
archives.]
Mason (Richard
'49er.
MS.
Matthewson
MS.
MS.
(Francisco Antonio) Diario del Viage de la Sonora, 1775.
(Francisco Antonio), Compendio de Noticias, Viage de, 1774. MS.
(Francisco Antonio), Journal of a Voyage in 1775.
London, 1780.
MS.
(Francisco Antonio), ,Navegacion, 1779.
Maxwell (R. T.), Visit to Monterey in 1842. MS.
Mayer (Brantz), Mexico, Aztec, Spanish, etc. Hartford, 1852. 2 vols.
collection of 30 copies from Mex. archives.
Mayer Manuscripts.
May field, Enterprise, Pastor.
Mayne (R. C.), Four Years in British Columbia. London, 1862.
Maurelle
Maurelle
Maurelle
Maurelle
Mazatlan, Times.
Meade (Edwin
R.),
New York,
1877.
MS.
Affair, 1840.
Francisco. Report of Industrial Exhibitions.
4to.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixiii
Mexican Ocean Mail and Inland Company, Reports. New York, 1853 ct seq.
Mexican War. A Collection of U. S. Government Documents, Scraps,
Pamphlets,
etc.
12 vols.
Mexican War.
Sess.,
H. Ex.
1843.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QtlOTED.
Ixiv
MS.
Miclicltorena (Manuel), Reglamento de Escuelas Amigas, 1S44.
Micheltorena (Manuel), Reglamento de Milicia Auxiliar. Monterey, 16 de
Julio, 1844.
Millennial Star.
Manchester, Liverpool, etc., 1841-79. 41 vols.
Miller (Joaquin), The Danitesdn the Sierras. Chicago, 1881; Life among the
Modocs. London, 1873; First Fam'lies of the Sierras. Chicago, 1876;
Sierra Wedding. In San Jose"
Shadows of Shasta. Chicago, 1881;
Pioneer, Nov. 17, 1877.
Millville,
Miner
(The).
Miners'
Own Book
etc.
Cited by
name
of
company.
Not given
list.
1813.
MS.
Mone
Amsterdam.
1671. folio.
Mi
Padron General,
1836.
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixv
Morehead
S. Jose", 1782.
MS.
Mormon
and Men.
MS.
New
York, 1832.
Sacramento, 1854.
'
lar, 1806.
MS.
Nacion
(Jose"
(La).
Antonio), and
1777.
Washington, 1859 et
seq.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixvi
Nava
1801.
MS.
script.
New
New
New
Courier.
Helvetia, Diary of Events in 1845-8. MS.
Orleans (La.), Advertiser, Bee, Commercial Times, Courier, Picayune,
Tropic.
Newspapers of California and other states of the Pacific U. S. The most
important are cited under the name of the town where published, and
many of them named in this list.
New
New
Norman
(Lucia),
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Nuez (Joaquin
Ixvii
MS.
javas, 1819.
Nugent (John), Scraps of Early History.
In
S. F.
Argonaut, April
Ama-
13, 1878.
Oakland, Alamcda Democrat, Argus, California Cadet, College Echo, Democrat, Diamoni Press, Dominion Press, Herald, Home Journal and
Alameda County Advertiser, Homestead, Independent Itemizer, Journal,
Mirror, Monthly Review, Ncvloeaii Review, News, Notes of Wording,
MS.
Moliclo, cu lengua de Indies por Padre Arroyo.
Oroville, Lutte County Press, Butte County, Butte Record, Mercury.
Orr (:[. M.), The City of Stockton; Its Position, etc. Stockton, 1874.
Oro
Ortega (Felipe Maria), Diario qtte forma. Iveeonociiniento de Sitios, 1 705. MS.
Ortega (Joso Francisco), Comunicaciones del Comandante de S. Diego d Rivera
y Moncada, 1774-6.
MS.
B.),
Osufca
Cartas.
Californien
(Jv.r.n Z.Iaria),
1
(il. Fr.),
MS.
und Seine
Verhaltnisse.
Owl
(The),
et seq.
Leipzig, 1849.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixviii
this title.
Pacific Railroad Reports.
Washington, 1855-00. 4to. 13 vols.
Pacific School and Home Journal.
San Francisco, 1877 et seq.
Pacific Wagon Roads, Reports upon [35th Cong., 2d Sess., H. Ex. Doc. 108;
Sen. Ex. Doc. 3G.] Wash., 1858.
Paddock (A. G.), The Fate of Madame La Tour.
York, 1881.
Padre's (Josd Maria) Correspondencia de un Republicano.
MS.
Padre's (Jose" Maria), Protesta que dirige al Gefe Politico, 1835.
MS.
New
Palmer
Palmer
Bucareli.
MS.
1804.
MS.
Parkman
mento, 1870.
Paschal (George W.), Speech, in the Case of Win. McGarrahan.
Wash., 1869.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixix
MS.
(J. A.),
Salem, 1874.
Speech, Apr. 29, 1852, Affairs in California. Washington,
1852.
Peckham
MS.
(R. F.), An Eventful Life.
San Francisco, 1880.
A.), Biography.
MS.
A.), Journals of Voyages, 1839-42.
In Mies' Register.
A.), Letter of 1842.
MS.
A.), Memoranda of a Xavigator.
Peirce (Henry
Peirce (Henry
Peirce (Henry
Peirce (Henry
Peirce (Henry
Pefia (Cosme),
Peiia (Tomas),
Peiia (Tomasj,
A.),
Rough
Escritos de
Sketch.
MS.
un Abogado.
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixx
Wash.
[1850].
don, 1837.
Pico
Pico
Pico
Pico
Pico
Pico
Pico
Mexico. MS.
Pinart (Alphonse), Documents on Russian America. MS.
Pinart (Alphonse), Documents for the History of Chihuahua, 1786-1855. MS.
and print. 2 vols.
Pinart (Alphonse), Documents for the History of Sonora, 1784-1863. MS.
and print, folio. 5 vols.
Pine (George W.), Beyond the West. Utica, 1871.
Pinkerton (John), General Collection of Voyages and Travels. London,
1808-14. 4to. 17 vols.
MS.
In
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxi
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Nueva
Villa,
News.
1834.
West
Shore.
Viage a
la California, 1769.
MS.
1850.
1850.
Putnam's Magazine.
New York,
1863 et seq.
Wash.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxii
Quarterly Review.
London, 1809 et
seq.
MS.
to.
Ramsey
Reading, Independent.
Recopilacion de Leyes de Los Reynos de las Indias mandadas Imprimir y
Publicar por Carlos II. Madrid, 1791. folio, 4 vols.
Redding (Benjamin B.), In Memoriam. San Francisco, 1882.
Rednitz (L. ), Getreuester und Zuverlassigster Wegweiser und Rathgeber zur
Reise nach und in Amerika und Calif ornien. Berlin, 1852.
Redwood City, San Mateo Journal, San Mateo Times and Gazette.
Reed (James F.), The Donner Tragedy. In Pacific Rural Press, and San
Jose*
Pioneer, 1877.
Registro de Licencias Militares, 1839. MS.
Reglamento de 24 de Mayo, 1773. In Palou, Not., i. 556.
Reglamento de Contribuciones sobre Licores, 1824. MS.
Reglamento de Defensores de la Independencia, 1845. MS.
Reglamento, Determinacion de 8 de Julio, 1773. In Palou, Not., i. 589.
Reglamento sobre Ganados, 1827. MS.
Reglamento para el Gobierno Interior de la Junta Departmental, 1840. MS.
Reglamento de Misiones Secularizadas, 1834. MS.
Reglamento Provisional para el gobierno interior de la Diputacion. Monterey, 1834.
[The first book printed in California.]
Reid (Perfecto Hugo), Cartas. MS.
Keid (Perfecto Hugo), Los Angeles County Indians. In Hayes Mission Book,
i., from Los Angeles Star.
Rejon (Manuel C.), Observaciones del Diputado saliente contra
los Tratados
de Paz. Quere-taro, 1848.
Relacion de las Embarcaciones que han conducido los Situados, 1781-96. MS.
Rengel (Jos6 Antonio), Comunicaciones de Provincias Interims, 17846. MS.
Requena (Manuel), Documentos para la'Historia de California. MS.
Requena (Manuel), Escritos de uii Ciudadano de Angeles. MS.
Restaurador (El), Mexico, 1846 et seq.
Retes (Manuel), Portentosas Riquezas. In Estrella de Occid. Oct. 19, 1860.
Revere (Joseph Warren), Keel and Saddle. Boston, 1871;
Tour of Duty
iu California.
N. Y. etc., 1849.
'Revilla Gigedo (Virey), Carta de 27 Die., 1793.
MS.
Revilla Gigedo (Virey), Carta sobre Misiones, 1793. In Dice. Univ., v. 426.
Revilla Gigedo (Virey), Comunicaciones al Gobr. de Cal., 1790-4. MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxiii
lu Bustamante, Suple-
mento,
iii.
112.
MS. 2 vols.
Revilla Gigedo (Virey), Instruccion que dej6 escrita, 1789-94.
Revista Cientifica y Literaria de Mexico. Mexico, 1845 et seq.
Revue des Deux Mondes. Paris, 1839 et seq.
Reynolds
(J.
N.), Pacific
Doc. 105.]
ii.,
In Tikhmdnef,
Rhoads
1837-8.
H. Ex.
In Honolulu
1849.
Richardson
Richardson
Richardson
Richardson
Sess.,
Istor. Obos.,
Appen.
MS.
Hartford, 1867.
(Benjamin), Mining Experiences. MS.
(H. D.), History of the Foundation of Vallejo. MS.
(William A.), Letters of a Pioneer Sailor. MS.
(William A.), Salidas de Buques del Puerto de San Francisco,
MS.
MS.
MS.
MS.
(Philip A.), Historical Facts from 1849.
Rabbins (Thomas M.), Diary, 1843-6. MS.
Roberts (George B. ), Recollections of Hudson's Bay Co. MS.
Robinson (Alfred), Life in California. New York, 1846.
Robinson (Alfred), Statement of Recollections from 1829. MS.
Robinson (Fayette), California and its Gold Regions. New York, 1849.
Robinson (Marshall),
Trip in Southern California. Carson, 1879.
Robles (Sccundino), Relacion de un Californio. MS.
Rodenbough (Theo. F.), From Eyerglade to Canon. New York, 1875.
Roach
MS.
I.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxiv
d los
Alumnos de
la
Romeu
Romeu
(Jose"
Rosa (Luis de
ico, 1853.
la),
Ensayo sobre
la
Mex-
4to.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxv
Sal (Hermenegildo), Informes sobre los Edificios de San Francisco, 1792. MS.
Sal (Hermenegildo), Instruccion al Cabo de la Escolta de Sta Cruz, 1791. MS.
Sal (Hermenegildo), Reconocimiento de la Mision de Sta Cruz, 1791. MS.
MS.
Sal (Hermenegildo), Respuesta a las Quince Preguntas, 1798.
Sala (George A.), America Revisited. London, 1882. 2 vols.
Salazar (Alonso Isidro), Condicion Actual de California, 1796. MS.
tain
News, Register.
San
San
San
San
San
San
San
San
San
cisco, 1823.
MS.
Sanchez (Jos<3 Antonio), Journal of the enterprise against the Cosemenes, 1826.
In Beechey's Voy., ii. 27.
Sanchez (Jose" Antonio), Notas al Reglamento de Secularizacion, 1832. MS.
Sanchez (Jose" Ramon), Notas Dictadas por el Ciudadano. MS.
Sanchez (Vicente), Cartas de un Angelino. MS.
Sanchez, Fidalgo, and Costans6, Inforaie sobre auxilios que se propone enviar
aCal., 1795. MS.
Sancho (Juan), Informe del Guardian al Virey, 1785. MS.
Sancho (Juan), Informe del P. Guardian al Virey. 20 Agosto, 1785. MS.
*
Saudels.
See King's Orphan.
'
'
San
San
San
San
San
San
Diego,
Diego,
Diego,
Diego,
Ixxvi
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
San
San
San
San
San
San
Cal. Courier, Cal. Farmer, Gal. Leader, Cal. Rural Home Journal, Cal.
Spirit of the Times, Cal. Star, Californian, Call, Catholic Guardian,
San Francisco Public Schools, Annual Reports. San Francisco, 1850 et seq. ;
and many other Documents on the schools.
San Francisco, Reglamento del Puerto, 1846. MS.
San Francisco, Remonstrance of the City to the Legislature against the Extension of the City.
San Francisco. 1G54.
San Francisco, Report of Board of Engineers upon City Grades. San Francisco, 1854.
San Francisco, Reports of City Surveyor. San Francisco, 1S56 et seq.; also
reports of other city officers and boards.
San Francisco, Report in relation to the defence of the harbor [32d Cong.
2d Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 43]. Washington, 1852.
San Francisco, Report for the transportation of mails from New York, New
Orleans, and Vera Cruz [32d'Cong., Special Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 1],
Washington, 1853.
San Francisco, Resolution in relation to the proceedings of the Vigilance
Committee [34th Cong., 3d Sess., Sen. Ex. Doc. 43]. Washington, 1856.
San Francisco, Supervisors, General Orders. San Francisco, 1809 ct seq.
San Francisco, Town Council, Proceedings of. San Francisco, 1849 et seq.
San Francisco del Ati, Libros de Mision. MS.
San Francisco Solano, Libros de Mision. MS.
San Francisco Solano, Padron de Neoutos. MS.
,
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxvii
Jose",
MS,
San
San
San
San
San
San
Advocate, Tribune.
Luis Obispo, History, Laws, and Ordinances.
Luis Obispo, Libros de Mision. MS.
Mateo, Times.
Mateo County,
Illustrated History.
San Francisco, 1878. atlas folio.
Miguel, Libros de Mision. MS.
Miguel (Juan Rodriguez de), Documentos relatives al Piadoso Fondo de
Misiones de California. Mcx., 18-15; Rectification de Graves Equivoca-
Tocsin.
San Rafael and Coast Range Mines, Report. San Francisco, 1879.
Santa Barbara, Archive, 1839-49. MS.
Santa Barbara, Correspondencia cntre Virey, Guardian y otros, sobre Padres
para las Nucvas Misiones del Canal, 1781. MS.
Santa Barbara, Democrat, Gazette, 1855-7, Independent, Index, News, Post,
Prc^s, Republican, Times.
Santa
Santa
Santa
Santa
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxviii
S.
Buenaven-
MS.
Santa Monica, The Coming
tura, 1795.
Sarria
Sarria
Sarria
Sarria
Sarria
MS.
(Vicente Francisco),
(Vicente Francisco),
(Vicente Francisco),
(Vicente Francisco),
(Vicente Francisco),
MS.
E.), Statement on Vigilance Committee.
Schlagintweit (Robert von), Californien Land und Leute. Coin, etc., 1871.
Schmidt (Gustavus), Civil Law of Spain and Mexico. New Orleans, 1851.
Schmiedell (Henry), Statement of California Matters from 1849. IMS.
Schmolder (Capt. B.), Neuer Praktischer Wegweiser fur Nord-Amerika.
Mainz, 1849.
School Scandal of San Francisco. Proceedings before the Investigating Committee.
San Francisco, 1878.
Schools, Colleges, Academies, etc.
Catalogues, reports, etc. cited by name
of the institution.
Not in this list.
Schwarz (J. L.), Briefe eines Deutschen aus Kalifornien. Berlin, 1849.
Scribner's Monthly Magazine (later the Century).
New York, 1871 et seq.
Seattle, Intelligencer, Pacific Tribune, Pnget Sound Despatch.
MS.
Secularizacion, Decreto de las Cortes, 1813.
Seddon (J. A.), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep,, Jan. 23, 1850, on the Action of
Executive in Relation to California. Washington, 1850.
Sedgley, Overland to California in 1849.
Semblanzas de los Miembros del Congreso de 1827 y 1828. Nueva York, 1828.
Semple (Robert), Letters of 1846-9. MS.
Seiian (Jose Francisco de Paula), Cartas Varias;' MS.
Seiian (Jose" F. de P.), Circular del Vicario Foraneo, 1815.
MS.
Seiian (Josd F. de P.), Informes Bienrles de Misiones, 1811-14, 1820-2.
MS.
Seiian (Jose" F. de P.), Respuesta al Virey sobre condicion de Cosas en Cal.,
Schenck (George
1796.
MS.
etc.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxix
Seward (George
F.),
New York,
Chinese Emigration in
its
1881.
Seward (William
California.
-i
Shasta, Courier.
New York,
1855.
London, 1726.
Correspondence of Lieut., 1847-8. In Cal. & N.
Mex., Mess. & Doc., 1850; Memoirs. N. Y., 1875. 2 vols.
Sherwood (J. Ely), California. New York, 1848; The Pocket Guide to Cal
Sherman (William
ifornia.
T.),
N. Y., 1849.
Mexico, 1837.
Siskiyou County Affairs.
Sitjar (Antonio),
MS.
1795.
MS.
la
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxx
Slacum (William A.), Report on Oregon, March 26, 1837. [25th Cong., 3d
Sess., H. Kept. 101.]
Washington, 1838.
Sloat (John D.), Despatches on the Conquest of Cal.
[29th Cong., 2d Sess.,
H. Ex. Doc. 4, p. 640; 31st Cong., 1st Sess., H. Ex. 1, pt. ii., p. 2J; also
correspondence 1846.
MS.
Smith (Persifer F.), Military Correspondence. [31st Cong., 1st Sess., Sen.
Doc. 52.] Washington, 1849.
Smith (Persifer F.), Bennett Riley et als. Reports in Relation to the Geology and Topography of California and Oregon. [31st Cong., 1st Sess.,
Sen. Ex. Doc. 47.] Washington, 1849.
Smith (Truman), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep., March 2, 1848, on Physical
Character of Northern States of Mexico, etc. Washington, 1848.
Smithsonian Institution, Annual Reports. Washington, 1833 ct seq.
Smucker (Samuel H.), Life of Col. J. C. Fremont. .New York, 1856.
Snelling, Merced Banner, Merced Herald.
Soberanes (Clodomiro), Documentos para la Historia de California. MS.
Sobrantes, Survey of Rancho. San Francisco, 1878.
Sociedad Mexicana de Geografia y Estadistica, Boletin. Mexico, 1801 et seq.
[Includes Institute) Nacional.]
Societies.
See Institutions.
1818.
MS.
MS.
New
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxf
Paris, 1853.
New
York, 1S56.
Stockton and Copperopolis Railroad, Engineers' Report, Oct. 18G2.
Stockton,
18G2; other reports.
Stone (R. C.), Gold and Silver Mines of America. New York, n.d.
Stout (Arthur B.), Chinese Immigration. San Francisco, 1CG2.
Strahorn (Robert E.) To the Rockies and Beyond. Chicago, 1G01.
Strceter (William A.), Recollections of Historical Events, 1813-78. MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxii
..}
~~7
other newspapers.
(EsteYan),
(Este"van),
(Este"van),
1800.
MS.
California.
S. F., 1876.
MS.
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxiii
MS.
(Christopher), Oregonians in the California Mines, 1848.
(Mart), The Gold Digger's Song Book.
Marysville, 185G.
(William), California JLife Illustrated. New York, 1858.
(William), Seven Years' Street Preaching. New York, 1857.
Tehama, Independent, Tocsin.
Temple (Francis P. F.), Recollections, 1841-7. MS.
Temple (John), Letters of a Los Angeles Merchant. MS.
Territorial Pioneers, Annual Meetings.
S. F., 1874etseq.; Constitution and
By-La ws. San Francisco, 1874; First Annual. S. F., 1877.
Terry (David S.), Trial of, by the Committee of Vigilance. S. F., 1856.
Tevis (A. H.), Beyond the Sierras. Philadelphia, 1877.
Tevis (Lloyd), Address before the American Bankers' Association, Aug. 10,
1881.
n.pl., u.d.
Thomes (R. H.), Life of an Immigrant of 1841. MS.
Taylor
Taylor
Taylor
Taylor
nia Question,
Cali-
and Japan,
Speech
[1853].
n.pl.
in U. S. H. of Rep.,
June
5,
n.pl., n.d.
of
counties.
of California.
N. Y., 185G.
Opinions on California Private Land Claims. San Francisco, 1853; Speech in Cal. 'Sen., Feb. 8, 1SG1.
Sacramento, 1801.
Thornton (J. Quinn), Oregon and California in 1848. N. Y., 1849. 2 vols.
Thurman (J. 11.), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep. June 8, 1850, on the California
Thornton (Harry
J.),
Washington. 1850.
Speech in U. S. H. of Rep., Mar. 25, 1850, on the admission of California.
Washington, 1850.
Tikhmenef (P.), Istoritcheskoe Obosranie. St Petersburg, 1861. 2 vols.
Tilford (Frank), Argument on San Francisco Outside Lands.
Sac., 1808.
Tinkham (George H.), History of Stockton. San Francisco, 1880.
Todd (John), The Sunset Land. Boston, 1870.
Toombs (Albert G.), The Pioneer Overlanders of 1841. In S. F. Bulletin,
July 27, 1868.
Toombs (R.), Speech in U. S. H. of Rep., Feb. 27, 1850, on President's Message Communicating the Constitution of California. Washington, 1850.
Torquemada (Juan de), Monarquia Indiana. Madrid, 1723. 3 vols. folio.
Torre (Estdvan dc la), Reminiscencias, 1815-48. MS.
Torre (Josa Joaquin), Varios Escritos. MS.
Torres (Manuel), Peripecias de Vida Californiana. MS.
Trait d'Union (Lc). Mexico, 1SG1 ct seq.
Trask (John B. ), Earthquakes in California from 18CO to 1804. In Cal. Acacl.
Science, Proc. vol. iii. pt. ii. 130; A Register of Earthquakes in California.
San Francisco, 1&G4.
Tratado de las Flores entre Alvarado y Carrillo, 1888. MS.
Tratado de Paz, Amistad, Lim.tes y arrcglo definitive entre la Republica
Mexicana y los Estados-Unidos. Mexico, 1848.
Treasure City (Nev.), White Pine News.
Treasury of Travel and Adventure. New York, 1865.
Question.
Thurston
(S. R,),
S. F., 1874.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxiv
Brigham 'Young.
New
Women
New
York, 1877.
n.pl., 1881.
Tyson (James
Tyson (Philip
L.),
T.),
MS.
Ukiah, City Press, Constitutional Democrat, Democratic Despatch, Mendocino County Press, Mendocino Democrat, Mendocino Herald.
Ulloa (Francisco), Relatione dello Scoprimento, 1539. In Ramusio, Viaggi,
iii.
330.
los
Estados
Boston, 1856.
Pl-.i^VjIphia,
Voyage to California. Philadelphia, 1878; Songs of tho
Argonauts. Philadelphia, 1876.
Urrea (Miguel), Noticias Estadisticas. In Soc. Mex. Geog., Bolctin, torn. ii. 42.
),
1878; Notes of a
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
lxxxv>
Graham,
1840.
MS.
'
Monterey, 1836.
Vallejo (Mariano G.), Proclama del Comandante Gen., 1837. Sonoma, 1837.
Vallejo (Mariano G.) [Proclama la Conspiracion de Francisco Solano.] Sonoma, 6 Octubre 1838.
Vallejo (Mariano G.), Report on County names, 1850. In Cal. Jour. Sen.
1850, p. 530.
Vallejo
Vallejo
Vallejo
Vallejo
MS.
Vallejo (Salvador), Aviso al Publico. Los Rancheros Principales de la Frontcrn de S. Francisco.
Sonoma, 15 Agosto, 1839.
MS.
Vallejo (Salvador), Notas Historicas.
Vancouver (George), Voyage of Discovery to the Pacific Ocean. Loncl., 1798.
3 vols. 4to. Atlas in folio; Lond., 1801. 6 vols.; Voyage de Ddcouvertes
""V^a 1'Ocean Pacifique, etc. Paris, An., viii. 3 vols. 4to. Atlas iu folio.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxvi
1881.
California Pioneers.
MS.
J.), Letters of Don Luis del Aliso.
Vila (Vicente), Instrucciones para el Viage de 1709 d California. MS.
Villa Seiior y Sanchez (Jose Antonio), Theatro Americano. Mex., 1740. 2 vols.
"igne3 (Louis
MS.
Wadsworth (James
C.),
MS.
Walker
MS.
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxvii
Warner
Warner
Warner
(J. J.),
(J. J.),
MS.
(J. J.), Reminiscences of Early California.
Warner, Hayes, and Widaey. See Los Angeles History.
Wan-en (G. K.), Memoir upon the Material used, etc., Railroad Routes to
Pac. R. R. Repts, xi. pt. i.
Pacific.
Washington (Cal.), Alameda Independent.
Washington (D. C.), National Intelligencer, Union.
Watkins (William B.), Statement on Vigilance Committee in S. F. MS.
Watson (Frank), Narrative of a Native Pioneer. MS.
Watsonville, Cal. Transcript, Pajaro Valley Times, Pajaronian, Transcript.
Waverly, Log-Book of, 1828-9. MS.
Weavervillc, Trinity Journal.
'
Weed
(Joseph),
A View
S. Sen.,
March
of California as it
is.
23, 1848,
on Mexican War.
S. F., 1874;
Vigilance
Com-
Widber
(J.
MS.
MS.
16, 1848,
on Acquisition
AUTHORITIES QUOTED.
Ixxxviii
Pioneer
MS.
(0. M.), Indian Affairs, 1849-50.
Wright (J. W. A.),ThcOwensRiver War. In San Francisco Post, Nov. 15, 1879.
Wright (William), History of the Big Bonanza. Hartford, etc., 1077.
Wytfliet (Corn.), Descriptipnis Ptolemaicce AugmentUm. Lovanii, 1597.
Wozencraft
(Jose"
(Jose"
Maria), Diario
MS.
i.-xi.
HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA.
CHAPTER
I.
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
HISTORY OF THE NORTH MEXICAN STATES, 1520 TO 1769 CORTES ON THE
PACIFIC COAST His PLANS OBSTACLES Nu NO DE GUZMAN IN SINALOA HURTADO, BECERRA, AND JlMENEZ CORTES IN CALIFORNIA DlEGO
DE GUZMAN CABEZA DE VACA NIZA
ULLOA CORONADO DIAZ
ALARCON
f
ALVARADO
MIXTON
WAR NUEVA
GALICIA
NUEVA
Viz-
CAYA MISSION WORK TO 1600 CONQUEST OF NEW MEXICO COAST VOYAGES SEVENTEENTH CENTURY ANNALS MISSION DISTRICTS OF NUEVA
VIZCAYA TEPEHUANES ANDTARAHUMARES-^JESUITS AND FRANCISCANS
REVOLT IN NEW MEXICO SINALOA AND SONORA KINO IN PIMERIA
VIZCAINO
GULF EXPEDITIONS OCCUPATION OF BAJA CALIFORNIA
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY ANNALS OF NEW MEXICO^ CHIHUAHUA, SONORA,
AND BAJA CALIFORNIA, TO THE EXPULSION OF THE JESUITS IN 1767.
As
Aguas
Calientes,
San Luis
I.
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
he could -avoid the vexatious complications that called
to Mexico, or Central America, or Spain.
Before the middle of May 1522 Cortes had founded
a town at Zacatula, and begun to build there an explorBy this time it had become apparent that
ing fleet.
the old geographical theories must be somewhat modiThis was shown by discoveries in the Pacific
fied.
farther south than the conqueror's ship-yard. .Evidently the Mexican region was distinct, though not
necessarily distant, from Asia, being separated from
that continent by a strait in the north; or else it was
a south-eastern projection of Asia from a point farther
north than the knowledge of the old travellers had
extended.
Cortes proposed to solve the mystery by
simply following the coast, first northward, then westIf a
ward, and finally southward, round to India.
strait existed he was sure to find its mouth; and if
not, he would at least reach India by a new route,
and would at the same time add many rich islands
and coasts to the Spanish domain. That such islands
existed no one -ventured to doubt; and one romancer
of the time went so far as to invent a name for one
of them, and people it with the offspring of his imagi-
him
nation.
his
wait.
GUZMAN A RIVAL OF
CORTES.
The
vessels
Cortes to
sail in
Having presided
at the trial of
INTRODUCTORY
back to
Jalisco.
of the
new
province,
name
Mayor
the
of
made Nueva
of which was
Espafia.
Galicia, instead
capi-
also
The
latter, after
INTRODUCTORY RESUM&
and probably identical with La Paz; and there Jimenez was killed with twenty of his men. The few survivors brought the ship to Chametla, where they were
imprisoned by Guzman, but escaped with the news to
Cortes, carrying also reports of pearls in the northern
waters.
The captain-general now resolved to take command
in person; and, having sent three vessels from Tehuantepec early in 1535, he set out with a force overGuzman wisely kept out of the way, contenting
land.
himself with complaints and protests.
The sea and
land expeditions were reunited at Chametla, and Cortes sailed in April with over one hundred men, about
one third of his whole force. Jimenez' bay was reached
and named Santa Cruz. After a year of miswhich a part of the remaining colonists were brought over with their families, Cortes
went back to Mexico. He intended to return with a
new fleet and succor for the colony; but he sent instead
a vessel in 1536 to bring away the whole party.
He
had had quite enough of north-western colonization.
On the main there was occasional communication
between San Miguel and the south indeed, one party
of Cortes' colonists went from Chametla to Culiacan
by land. In 1533 Diego de Guzman reached the Rio
Yaqui and it was he that learned the fate of Hurt ado.
There was no prosperity at the villa. The garrison
lived at first by trading their beads and trinkets for
food; then on tribute of the native towns; and at last,
when the towns had been stripped, they had to depend
on raids for plunder and slaves.
On one of these excursions to the Rio Fuerte in
1536 a party under Alcaraz were surprised to meet
three Spaniards and a negro, who were brought to
San Miguel to tell their strange tale of adventure.
They were Alvar Nunez and his companions, the only
survivors of three hundred men who, under Narvaez,
had landed in Florida in 1528. Escaping in 1535 from
May 3d,
fortunes, during
but Viceroy
Having questioned
Cabeza cle Vaca, and having bought his negro, he resolved to send an army to the north. The command
was given to Vasquez de Coronado, governor of Nueva
Galicia. To prepare the way a Franciscan friar, Marcos de Niza, was sent out from Culiacan early in 1539.
With the negro Estevanico, Niza went, "as the holy
field,
infection.
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
He left a
departed from Culiacan in April 1540.
followed
Niza's
in
Sonora;
route,
cursing
garrison
the friar's exaggerations, and reached Zuni in July.
Tobar was sent to Tusayan, or the Moqui towns;
Cardenas to the great canon of the Colorado; and
Alvarado far eastward to Cicuye, or Pecos. Then
the army marched east to spend the winter in the
NORTHERN NEW
SPAIN.
later
New
when
INTRODUCTORY RESUM&
10
It was explored and conquered. The audiwas established at Compostela in 1548, and moved
licia here.
encia
was erected
missions.
in 1544.
The
A bishopric
IB AURA IN
NUEVA VIZCAYA.
11
San
Felipe.
Before 1590 the Franciscans had eight or nine missions in Durango and Chihuahua. When the Jesuits
undertook northern conversion in 1590, fathers Tapia
and Perez, and soon six more, came to San Felipe de
Sinaloa and began work on the rivers Peiatlan and
Mocorito.
They had twenty pueblos and four thouFather Tapia reached
sand converts before 1600.
the Rio Fuerte and the mountains of Topia, but was
martyred in 1594; yet missions were founded in Topia
in 1600,
East
a kind of presidio in 1596, under Captain Diaz.
of the mountains the Jesuits also began work among
the Tepehuanes at Zape and Santa Catalina, and at
Santa Maria de Parras in the lake region of Coahuila.
Saltillo was founded in 1586; and about 1598 the town
of Parras was built in connection with the Jesuit
mission there.
New
Mexico was
before 1600.
12
INTRODUCTORY RESUM&
Humana murdered
his
the natives.
In 1595 the viceroy made a contract
for the conquest of New Mexico with Oiiate, who as
governor and captain-general left Mexico with a large
13
INTRODUCTORY BJ&SUM&
14
at peace.
was
Nueva Vizcaya
MISSIONS OF
NUEVA VIZCAYA.
15
whom
there
resistance
16
INTRODUCTORY Bfe3UM&
The Tarahumara district adjoined that of the Tepehuanes on the north, in northern Durango and the
mountains of southern and western Chihuahua. At
Parral a Spanish settlement was founded in 1631;
and about the same time the Jesuits in their northern
tours obtained four or five hundred Tarahumares,
and with them founded two towns, San Miguel de las
Bocas and San Gabriel, just south of the modern line
of Durango; but there were no regular missions in
Tarahumara until 1639-40, when fathers Figueroa
and Pascual came and founded San Felipe and San
Geronimo Huexotitlan on or near the Rio Conchos
below Balleza. In 1648 there were eight pueblos and
four missionaries, when war broke out, mainly in consequence of oppressions by Spaniards who wished to
use the natives as laborers in their mines, looking
MISSIONS IN
to
restore
submission, the
Spaniards
being
17
often
Spanish interests.
I.
fuel, this
18
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
19
five
The Mayos, friendly from the first, received padres in 1613, and never revolted. The Yaquis,
who after defeating the Spaniards in three campaigns
had voluntarily submitted about 1610, received Father
Ribas in 1617, and were soon converted. In 1621
missions were founded among the Chinipas on the
Tarahumara frontier; and the work was extended
up the Yaqui to the Sahuaripa region. There were
now thirty-four Jesuits at work in this field; and the
called Fuerte.
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
20
Perea
killed
many
rebels,
was
less
than 500.
includes the three ancient provinces of Sonora, Ostimuri, and Pimeria; but in the
SONORA MISSION.
21
that of the valley in which Arizpe, Ures, and Hermosillo now stand. The name was sometimes extended
for a long distance over adjoining regions, especially
northward; but never covered the Yaqui missions or
in the
eastern tribes.
22
INTRODUCTORY RESUM&
23
near San Bias, in 1627, for the gulf; and Ortega, completing it, made a pearl voyage in 1632. He repeated
the trip in 1633-4, founding a colony at La Paz.
Many natives were baptized; some inland explora-
until food
authorized pearl-seeking voyages in those times. Carbonel's expedition made by Ortega's pilot in 1636 was
an utter failure. It was in 1640 that Fonte sailed
through the net-work of straits, lakes, and rivers in
the northern continent until he met a Boston ship
from the Atlantic! Canas by the viceroy's orders
crossed over from Sinaloa and explored the California
coast for some forty leagues in 1642, accompanied by
the Jesuit priest, Cortes. Casanate's operations were
in 16438; but after great expense and much ill-luck
the only results were a cruise about San Lucas by
Barriga in the former year, and in the latter a vain
24
INTRODUCTORY
two
25
the darkest days, and before 1700 they had two missions and a guard of thirty men.
and
in
tierra de
26
INTRODUCTORY
was
the
reenforced
27
and
aid,
period;
during
slightly
chiefly in the form of agricultural implements, came
from time to time for the settlers, as did a salary for
few mines were opened in
the friars, from Mexico.
become Christians.
The Apaches
five
28
INTRODUCTORY
abandoned.
their struggle
1714 founded six new missions at the jnnction of the Rio Conchos and Rio
Grande, which, however, had to be abandoned within
ten years. In the Spanish settlements curates relieved
the friars, and the missions of the region about Paso
del Norte were secularized in 1756 only to be restored
to the missionaries for a time in later years.
Also in
1756 the Jesuit missions of the Tepehuane and Baja
Tarahumara districts were secularized. These missions
and those of Alta Tarahumara had been constantly
Their troubles and those of their Jesuit
declining.
directors at the hands of savage invaders, revolting
neophytes, Spanish settlers and miners, and secular
officials, were in every essential respect similar to those
of the Sonora establishments to be noticed presently.
against paganism, and
in
29
and
north becomes
less
INTRODUCTORY RESUME.
30
*J
JESUIT MISFORTUNES.
31
own
adopted and none effectual. In 1740-1 there is a serious revolt of the Yaquis and hitherto submissive
Mayos. The presidio of Pitic at Hermosillo is now
founded, afterwards being transferred for a time to
Horcasitas. In 1745 there are estimated to be sixteen hundred Spanish inhabitants, possibly men, in
Sinaloa, Ostimuri, and Sonora, besides about two
hundred soldiers in the different presidios. Yisitador
General Gallardo in 1749 reported the province to be
INTRODUCTORY
32
up
revolt.
Yet there
are Spaniards
who
33
many
82
encouragement
country.
I.
CHAPTER
II.
LIST or AUTHORITIES
list
of authorities
CLASSIFICATION OF WORKS.
35
my
2
So far as works on California are concerned, the only previous attempt at
anything approaching a complete list is Alex. S. Taylor's Bibliocjrafa Californica published in the Sacramento Union of June 25, 1863, with additions
in the same paper of March 13, 1866.
In a copy preserved in the Library of
the California Pioneers in San Francisco, there are manuscript additions of
still later date.
This work contained over a thousand titles, but its field was
the whole territory from Baja California to the Arctic Ocean, west of the
Rocky Mountains, only about one half of the works relating to Alta California proper. Dr Taylor's zeal in this direction was most commendable, and his
success, considering his extremely limited facilities, was wonderful; yet his
catalogue is useless. He never saw one in five of the works he names blunders average more than one to each title; he names many books that never
existed, others so inaccurately that they cannot be traced, and yet others
His insufferable pedantry and afseveral times over under different titles.
fectation of bibliographic patois unite with the typographic errors of the
newspaper press to destroy for the most part any merit that the list might
otherwise have. I have no doubt there may be a few of Taylor's items representing books or documents that actually exist and are not in my list; but to
select them would be a well nigh hopeless task.
;
36
but
may
1769.
37
600, of which 270 are books or pamphlets, 250 documents or articles, and 90 periodicals or collections that
siderably
in
38
8
navigators, and a like number of important documents
relating to this primitive epoch, which were not known
9
As I have said, Califorin print until modern times.
nia was but incidentally mentioned in the books of
this early time; a few contained all that visitors had
revealed of the coast; while the rest were content with
a most inaccurate and superficial repetition eked out
with imagination to form the wonders of the Northern
Mystery.
works
far
their
selves,
11
For the
rest
12
39
America;
matter on California; 13 and as
14
voyages and travels.
many
collections of
18
The
40
head of the
visitor),
by
different authors.
21
22
24
25
26
and Hughes.
41
28
pamphlets, printed in Mexico on California*! topics.
Then there are sixteen Mexican government documents containing valuable allusions to California, 29
and many more if mere mentions be counted; and
finally, we have thirty-five general works on Mexico,
with like information often of some value, about a
dozen of which are the writings of Carlos Maria Bustamante, found also more complete in nay library in
the original autograph manuscript. 80
Passing from books to documents, the productions
of the Californian press merit first mention.
They
are fifty-five in number, each separately printed. 81
"
Three or four are proclamations of United States officials, one is a commercial paper, one an advertisement,
and one took a poetical form; but most were official
documents emanating from the Hispano-Californian
government. Then I note sixteen Mexican govern-
ment documents
in
seven others of a
collections or newspapers;
semi-official, nature;
32
and
while there
Carillo, Castanares,
and San'Miguel.
29
31
F-ages, Galitzin,
42
periodicals, or publications
that
appear in my
forty of them Mexican
but
as
more
in different
doubtless
catalogue;
many
a
of this
of
world
at
least
mention
the
contained
parts
one
I
name
ten
at
time
or
another,
only
pubcountry
lished in California, the Hawaiian Islands, and Oreseventy
titles
38
all valuable
sources of information.
Niles
gon,
is
I
found
most
the
eastern
have
that
Register
journal
useful in
my
task.
which might easily be multiplied; United States documents relating to the conquest and military rule, but
printed after 1848; Russian works containing information on the Ross colony; one or two narratives of
visitors and a number of works on the Mexican war.
Those appearing under the names of Dwinelle, Ido,
Lancey, McGlashan, and Palou are the most impor39
tant.
Documents and articles of this class are about
;
37
In California were four, or rather combinations of two; Monterey CalSan Francisco Californian, San Francisco Star, and San Francisco
Star and Californian. At Honolulu, five; the Friend, Hawaiian Spectator,
Sandwich Island Gazette, Sandwich Island News, and Polynesian. In Oregon^was the Spectator.
ifornian,
39
43
Of works
44
States government,
like
41
45
more
title to
after 1840,
me in the
which I
and of personal
Of the
government
46
42
With a view to the convenience of the pubpapers.
rather
than my own, I have made the numbers of
lic,
of copies and extracts correspond in most
volumes
my
litical,
military, judicial,
and
ecclesiastical; national,
foundation for history is universally understood. Spanish archives are not less accurate than those of other
nations; and, since few happenings were so petty as
not to fall under the cognizance of some official, they
furnish a much more complete record of provincial
M
42
list.
MISSION RECORDS.
47
appear.
Also
in
leather-bound registers of baptisms, marriages, burials, and confirmations at each establishment remained, and for the most part still remain, in
the possession of the curate of the parish.
Other
mission papers were gradually brought together by
the Franciscan authorities at Santa Bdrbara, where
they now constitute the largest collection extant.
From such documents as were not thus preserved,
remaining in the missions or scattered in private
hands, Taylor subsequently made a collection of five
large volumes, now in the archbishop's library in San
Francisco.
third collection, chiefly of libros de
is
that
of the bishop of Monterey and Los
patentes,
These
have furnished me, under four titles,
Angeles.
volumes
of copies, or not less than 10,000
eighteen
the
old
45
documents, and my own efforts have resulted in four
volumes of very valuable original documents, about
46
Then the
2,000 in number, under three titles.
mission
of
collections
twenty-two
registers already
mentioned as in custody of the curates, the libros de
44
There are at least seven collections in
list, which are public archives
similar to those before named, except that instead of being copies they are
the originals obtained by me from private sources.
See headings, Larkin,
my
48
papers.
As I have said, neither the public nor mission
Documents wr ere not all^
archives are complete.
turned over as they should have been to the United
States and to the church; nearly every Mexican official retained more or less records which remained
in his family archives together with his correspondI have
ence and that of his ancestors and relations.
made an earnest effort to collect these scattered
papers, and with flattering success, as is shown by
about fifty collections of Documentos para la Ilistoria
purpose, being largely composed of the private correspondence of prominent citizens and officials on current public affairs, of which they afford almost an
unbroken record. Twenty-nine of these collections
of private or family archives bear the names of the
.
47
Monterey Parroquia (S. Cdrlos), Purisima, S. Antonio, S.
tura, S. Diego, S. Fernando, S. Francisco, S. Gabriel, S. Josd, S.
Buena\7 en-
Juan Bau-
PRIVATE ARCHIVES.
49
Vallejo, in thirty-seven
Documents for
Mr
49
'
'
50
tives
My
MANUSCRIPT DIARIES.
51
Romeu,
54
Sola, Vallejo,
and Victoria.
52
cipal,
arid reports>from
Perez Fernan-
Californi as,
Alvarado, Arancel,
Colonizacion, Constitucion, Decreto,
Echeandia, Galvez, Indies, Instrucciones, Mexico, Micheltorena, Ordenanzas,
and
Secularizacioh.
Pico, Pitic, Plan, Reglamento,
56
Bestard, Branciforte, Calleja, Gasol, Garijo, Lopez, Lull, Pio VI., Pangua, and Sancho.
57
Duran, Garcia Diego, Indies, Lasuen, Misiones, Payeras, Sanchez,
Sarrfa, Senan, Serra, and Tapis.
58
Abella, Autobiograf ia, Catala, Catecismo, Colegio, Escandon, Expediente, Facultad, Fermndez, Fondo Piadoso, Faster, Hayes, Horra, Inform?,
Lasuen, Lopez, Marquinez, Mission, Monterey, Mugartegui, Munguia, Gibe's,
Palou, Paterna, Pena, Protesta, Purisima, Ripoll, Salazar, San Buenaventura, San Jose", Santa Barbara, Serra, Tapis, and Zalvidea.
69
Alvarado, Argiiello, Bandini, Carriiio, Castillo Negrete, Castro, Gomez,
Guerra, Osio, and Vallejo.
60
Estab. Rusos, Los Angeles, Monterey, Ross, Rotschef, and San Francisco.
01
MISCELLANEOUS MANUSCRIPTS.
53
be named here.
Thousands of times in my foot-notes I have occasion to accredit certain information in this manner:
'Padre Lasuen's
torn.
'
p. --';
Hist. Cal., torn.
,
'
'
Larkin to
(date), in Prov. St. Pap.';
in
June
Doc.
Hist.
1826,
CaL,
,
Id.,
Leidesdorff,
iv.,' etc., etc.
Now
65
mon
Taylor.
Compaiiia Extrangera, Ford, Hartnell, Ide, Leese, Marsh, Morris, MurHelvetia, Ortega, Prudon, and Vigilantes.
Am ad or, Argiicllo, Arrillaga, Carrillo, Castro, and Ortega.
08
Cahuenga, Carrillo, Conferencia, Consejo, Instrucciones, Junta, Plan,
Pronunciamiento, Soils, Tratado, and Zamorano.
69
Buchanan and Larkin.
60
ray,
New
67
70
71
54
made a
ticed.
to be nohistorical
officials, all
PERSONAL REMINISCENCES.
55
Ve>r.
56
praise as authorities.
if
57
It is no part of
escape severe and merited criticism.
narratives
to
out
defects
in
individual
my duty point
written for my use, but rather to extract from each
all that it contains of value,
passing the rest in silence.
And in criticisingO this material in bulk, I do
not allude to the few clumsy attempts in certain
dictations and parts of others to deceive me, or to the
falsehoods told with a view to exaggerate the importance or otherwise promote the interests of the
narrator, but to the general mass of statements from
honest and intelligent men.
In the statements of
events
made
of
the
best
men from memory
by
past
and I do not find witnesses of Anglo-Saxon blood in
any degree superior in this respect to those of Spanish race
will be found a strange and often inexplicable
mixture of truth and falsehood. Side by side in the best
narratives I find accounts of one event which are models
of faithful accuracy and accounts of another event
not even remotely founded in fact.
There are notable instances where prominent witnesses have in their
statements done gross injustice to their own reputation or that of their friends.
There seems to exist a
to
general inability
distinguish between the memory
of real occurrences that have been seen and known,
and that of idle tales that have been heard in years
If in my work I have been somewhat
long past.
over cautious in the use of such testimony, it is a
fault on which the reader will, I hope, look leniently.
'
The history, and with it the bibliography, of California after the discovery of gold may be conveniently
divided into two periods, the first extending from
1848 to 1856 over the 'flush times/ and the second
from 1857 to date. For the first period a larger part
of the authorities are in manuscript than would at first
glance appear, though with the advent of newspapers
and printed government records the necessity of
searching the archives for the most part disappears;
for it is to be noted that most of the documentary
58
numerous
75
state
Woodbridge.
59
There are twenty-one books and pamphlets descriplife and events therein during
them having also an admixture of past annals and future prospects. 77
Fifteen
are
of
records
Californian
comsocieties,
pamphlets
tive of the country, with
the flush times, most of
79
rectories;
official
60
its
attendant phenomena. 89
Then
Abbey, Adam, Allsop, Auger, Berry, Ballenstedt, Borthwick, BouchaBound Home, Brooks, Bryant, Buffum, Cal. (Emig. Guide, Gold Reg.,
court,
Gids Naar, Its Gold, Its Past, Notes), California, Californien (Ant. Nach.,
Rathgeber, Und sein Golt, sein Min.), Cassell, Colton, Diggers, Edelmari,
Farnham, Ferry, Foster, Gerstacker, Gold -finders, Gregory, Hartmaiin,
Helper, Holinski, Hoppe, Johnson, Kelly, King, Kip, Kunzel, Lambertie,
Letts, McCollum, Mcllvaine, Marryat, Mason, Meyer, Oswald, Palmer,
Parkman, Praslow, Robinson, Ryan, Schwartz, Sedgley, Seyd, Seymour,
Shaw, Sherwood, Simpson, Solignac, St Amant, Stirling, Taylor, Thompson,
Tyson, Walton, WejK, Weston, Williamson, Wilson, and Woods.
86
Such as Aimard, Amelia, Ballou, Bigly, Champagnac, Gerstacker, Payson,
Abell, Alexander, Bartlett, Beale, Beckwith, California (Amount, Commission, Copy, Dent, Establishment, Indians, Land Com., Message, Volunteers), Cooke, Cram, Dei*by, Flagg, Fort Point, Frdmont, Gibbons, Graham,
Gray, Halleck, Homer, Jones, King, Mason, Meredith, Mex. Boundary, Pac.
Wagon Roads, Reynolds, Riley, San Francisco, Sherman, Smith, Sutter, Ty87
son,
88
U.
U.
S.
S.
of
Congress, Congressional Debates, Cong. Globe, Benton's Abridgment, Smithsonian Reports, and Pac. R. R. Reports.
89
Atlan. & Pac. R. R., Browne, Cal. Appeal, California, Fremont, Limantour, Logan, Ringgold, Pac. M. S. S. Co., S. F. Custom House, S. F. Land
Assoc., Stillman, and Thompson.
MODERN
TIMES.
61
fifty
rado. 93
etc., etc.
62
.swell the
See in the list, besides the names of counties and towns: Banfield, Barton, Bledsoe, Butler, Cooper, Cox, Dwinelle, Frazee, Gift, Hall, Halley, Hare,
Hawley, Hittell, Huse, Lloyd, McPherson, Menefee, Meyrick, Orr, Owen,
Perkins, Sargent, Soule", Thompson, Tinkham, Western Shore, and Willey.
95
See Alric, Ames, Barry, Bartlett, Bates, Beers, Bell, Blake, Bonner,
Brooks, Browne, Bryant, Burnett, Buslmell, California (Arrival, Biog.,
Hardy, Leyes, Med. Soc.), Carvalho, Chandless, Clark, Contemp. Biog.,
Cooke, Cornwallis, Cronise, Coyner, Dixon, Gleeson, Fields, First Steamship,
Fisher, King, Gray, Grey. Hittell, Hoffman, Hughes, Labatt, McCue, McGarrahan, McGlashan, Mollhausen, Morgan, Moulder, New Almaden, Norman,
O'Meara, Palmer, Parsons, Patterson, Peabody, Peirce, Peters, Phelps,
Player-Frowd, Randolph, Raymond, Redding, Rossi, Saxon, Schlagintweit,
Sherman,' Shuck, Simpson, Stillman, Tuthill, Tyler, Upham, Vallejo, Vischer, Wetmore, Willey, and Williams.
ALPHABETICAL INDEX.
them but
63
added to the
taining to the period of 1848-56. For further bibliographic information, including full or slightly abridged
title, summary of contents, circumstances attending
the production, criticism of historic value, and biographic notes on the writer of each work mentioned
in the different classes and subdivisions of this chapter,
I refer the reader not only to the list at the beginning
of this volume but to the foot-notes of all the seven
volumes, which may be traced through the alphabetical index at the end of the work.
CHAPTER
III.
in the original
it.
document
'
is
named
(Mi
65
down the coast in 1539, and the name California first appears in Preciado's diary of that voyage.
It was applied, not to the whole country, but to a
locality
probably but not certainly identical with
sailed
66
An
Amadis of Gaul,
1526 in
"on the
5
Hale's discovery was first published in the Amer. Antiq. Soc., Proceed.,
Apr. 30, 18G2, 45-53; also in Atlantic Monthly, xiii. 265; Hale's His Level
'
name was
applied in derision
67
by
At
his disgusted colonists on their return in 1536.
was
name
can
be
no
doubt
the
rate
there
adopted
any
from the novel between 1535 and 1539. The etymology of the name and the source whence Montalvo obtained it still remain a field for ingenious guesswork.
Indeed most of the old conjectures may still be applied
to the subject in its new phase. But this is not an
historical subject, nor one of the slightest importance.
In such matters the probable is but rarely the true.
What brilliant etymological theories might be drawn
out by the name Calistoga, if it were not known how
Samuel Brannan built the word from California and
6
Saratoga.
The name
peninsula, was
68
of usage the
years, however, without any uniformity
known
as
be
California
to
Sepupper country began
tentrional, California del Norte, Nueva California, or
California Superior. But gradually Alta California
became more common than the others, both in private
and official communications, though from the date of
the separation of the provinces in 1804 Nueva California became the legal nam,e, as did Alta California
after 1824. In these later times Las Californias meant
not as at first Las Islas Californias, but the two
provinces, old and new, lower and upper. Down to
1846, however, the whole country was often called by
in official
documents
a peninsula.
It
is
is
view.
Thus
strictly
CABRILLO'S VOYAGE.
69
upon the
subject, is
chapter.
On
Cabrillo,
good they
felt
nothing."
7
On the fitting-out of the expedition and its achievements south of California, see Hist. North Mex. States, this series.
8
Cabrillo, Relation 6 diario, de la navegacion que hizo Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo con dos navios, al descubrimiento del paso del
del Sur al norte, etc.
Original in Spanish archives of Seville from Simancas, certified by Navarrete,
Mar
Munoz
70
coast.
71
were timid
whom
in their intercourse
called
Guacamal
72
Taquimine.
Six or seven leagues bring them on the 13th past
two islands each four leagues long and four leagues
from the coast, uninhabited for lack of water, but
with good' ports. 15 The next anchorage is two leagues
farther, opposite a fine valley, perhaps Santa Barbara, where the natives are friendly and bring fish in
canoes for barter. The ten leagues of October 15th
carry them past an island fifteen leagues in length,
which they name San Lucas, apparently Santa Rosa. 16
not very strict in their use of geographical terms; but to suppose that the
little laguna would have been called by them an 'ensenada grande' is too
absurd for even refutation; 'inlet' is not a correct rendering of ensenada.
Taylor identifies the ensenada with the cove or roadstead of Santa Barbara.
First Voyage to the Coast of California.
He points out the glaring deficiencies
in all that had been written on the subject, and flatters himself that by the
aid of men familiar with the coast he has followed the route of the navigators
very closely; and so he has, just as far as he copies Navarrete, blundering
fearfully in
most besides.
w Navarrete
is
unin-
telligible.
15
Anacapa and the eastern part of Santa Cruz as seen from a distance and
as explained by the natives' signs, which were not understood.
]6
Six leagues from the main, and eighteen leagues from Pueblo de Canoas.
It was said to have the following pueblos: Niquipos, Maxul, Xugua, Nitel,
Macamo, Nimitopal. Later it is stated that San Lucas was the middle island,
having three pueblos whose names do not agree with those here given. There
is a hopeless confusion in the accounts of these islands, but no doubt that this
was the group
visited.
73
Monday
in a region
exhumed
in late years
by
The region
by people who
antiquarians.
in early times
many
respects to
much
17
The pueblos, beginning with Canoas, were, Xucu, Bis, Sopono, Alloc,
Xabaagua, Xocotoc, Potoltuc, Nacbuc, Quelqueme, Misinagua, Misesopano,
Elquis, Coloc, Mugu, Xagua, Anacbuc, Partocac, Susuquey, Quanmu, Gua
(or Quanmugua), Asimu, Aguin, Casalic, Tucumu, Incpupu, Cicacut (Sardinas), Ciucut, Anacot, Maquinanoa, Paltatre, Anacoat (or Anacoac), Olesino,
Caacat (or Caacac), Paltocac, Tocane, Opia, Opistopia, Nocos, Yutum, Quiman, Nicoma, Garomisopona, and Xexo; and on the islands. On Ziquior Juan Rodriguez, or Posesion (San Miguel), Xaco (or Caco) and
Nimollollo.
On Nicalque, or San Lucas (Santa Rosa), Nichochi, Coycoy,
and Estocoloco (or Coloco). On the other San Lucas. See note 16. On Limu
or
San Salvador (Santa Cruz), Niquesesquelua, Pocle, Pisqueno,
(or Limun)
muymu,
On the Indians of this region see Native Races, i 402-22; iv. 687-97. See
on archaeological researches U. S. Geoff. Survey, Wheeler, vol. vii. Archaeology, Washington, 1879, passim.
18
also
74
The
size.
Navarrete
seems to
20
Perhaps not so far, as the point named is nearer 15 than 10 leagues
from Point Concepcion. I find no good reason to suppose it was off San Luis
Obispo, as Henshaw thinks, which is over 24 leagues.
21
Sardinas is identified by Henshaw with the present Goleta, which is not
Taylor loses his head completely, making Todos Santos the modunlikely.
ern San Luis Obispo, and identifying Sardinas with San Simeon.
.37
30'.
The
sierra is that
75
now
called
day
heave
Of
to.
lates
it.
76
'
'
DEATH OF CABRILLO.
At La
77
two months, and they renamed the island Juan Rodriguez from their brave commander Cabrillo, who died
there January 3, 1543. He had had a fall on the
island in October, had made the northern trip suffering from a broken arm, and from exposure the injury
became fatal. His dying orders were to push the
exploration northward at every hazard. He was a
Portuguese navigator in the Spanish service, of whom
nothing is known beyond the skill and bravery displayed on this expedition, and the fact that his repu-
island of
'
>2li
78
Two
isle, to recover
there and obtain water, then to Port Sardinas for other supplies, and back to San Salvador,
whence they finally sail the 18th of February. With
a north-east wind they follow a south-west course in
quest of certain islands, which they see at nightfall,
again,
first for
anchors
left
27
number, having sailed about twelve leagues.
At dawn they are ten leagues to windward of these
islands.
With a wind from the w. N. w., they stand
2
off south-westward for five days, * making a distance of
about one hundred leagues. Then they turn their
course landward on the 22d with a south-west wind
which blows with increasing violence for three days
until at dawn on Sunday, the 25th, they sight Cape
Pinos, and anchor at night on a bleak coast twenty
leagues to windward near a point where the coast
turns from N. w. to N. N. w. 29
that is at Pigeon Point,
or thereabout in 37 12'.
Herrera names it Cabo de
30
Fortunas, or Cape Adventure.
From this point the narrative furnishes but little
ground for anything but conjecture. There are no
longer recognizable landmarks but only courses and
winds with one solar observation. The latitude on
Wednesday the 28th is 43. If we go by this alone,
deducting the two degrees of excess that pertain to
all of this navigator's more northern latitudes, we have
41, or the region between Humboldt and Trinidad
bays, as Ferrelo's position; but if. we judge by his
starting-point, and probable progress as compared
with other parts of the voyage, it is more probable
six in
27
Of course the islands could have been no others than San Clemente,
Santa Catalina, Santa Barbara, San Nicolas, and Beggs Hock, with Cataliua
appearing as two to make six ; though these are not south-west of the northern
group.
i8
By
79
31
Feb. 25th, midnight to dawn, course w. N. w., wind s. s. w; Feb. 26th,
course N. w., wind \v. s. \v. very strong; Feb. 27th, course w. N. w., with
lowered foresail, wind s. S. w. All night ran s. with w. wind and rough sea;
Feb. 28th, wind s. w. and moderate; latitude 43. In the right course N. w.
with much labor. March 1, a furious gale from the s. s. w., with a high sea
breaking over the ship; course N. E. towards the land. The fog thick, but
signs of land in the shape of birds, floating wood, etc., also indication of
rivers.
At 3 p. M. a N. wind came to save them, and carried them s. all
night. March 2d, course s. with rough sea; in the night a N. w. and N. N. w.
March 3, cleared up at noon; wind N. w.;
gale, course s. E. and E. s. E.
sighted C. Pinos.
32
Herrera says they took an observation in 44 on March 1st. Venegas
follows him, but makes the date March 10th.
33
Perhaps Juan Paez as already explained. Herrera calls Ferrelo Ferrer.
The original uses both the forms Ferrelo and Ferrer.
34
Navarrete puts it ' 43 con corta diferencia segun el error de exceso que
generalmente se not6 en sus latitudes;' but he himself makes the average
excess 1 30', so that the limit was 41 30'.
Henshaw was not, as he implies,
the first to note the uniform excess.
He thinks the southern boundary of
Oregon not far out of the way.
'
'
80
i. 693.
Venegas, Not. Cal., i. 181-3, seems to have been
to state that Cabrillo discovered and named the cape. Lorenzana, in
Cortes, Hist. N. Espafia, 325-6, and Cavo, Tres Siylos, i. 135, make the same
statement; and it is followed by most later writers. The early writers, however, all imply that the cape was discovered before Cabrillo's death and not
by Ferrelo, doubtless identifying it with the nameless cape in 40, really Aiio
Nuevo or Pigeon Point. Laet, Novus Orbis, 306-7, makes C. Fortunas the
northern limit of the voyage; and Burney, Chron. Hist., i. 220-5, identifies
Fortunas with Mendocino, and is followed by Greenhow, Or. and Cat., 62-3.
very absurd theory has been more or less current that Ferrelo gave his
name to the Faralloues of San Francisco.
the
Torquemada,
first
81
They arrive
prayers and promises they are saved.
Navidad April 14th, and the first voyage to Alta
at
California
is
at an end. 36
of
Pacific
latitude
Hind
refit,
for a
cerned. 37
36
On Cabrillo's voyage, in. addition to the works to which I have had occasion to refer, see the following, none of which, however, throws any additional light on the subject, many being but brief allusions to the voyage:
Forster's Hist. Voy. 443-9; Fleurieu, in Marchand, Voy. i. viii.-ix. ; Montanus,
Nieuwe Viecre'd, 210-11, 101; Id., Ncue Welt, 237-8; Clavifjero, Stor. CaL*
154-5; Hist. Magazine, ix. 148; Hutching May., i. Ill; iii. 146; iv. 116, 547;
,
CaL Farmer, May 4, 1860, April 18, 1862, Aug. 14, 21, 1863; Overland Monthly April 1871, 297; Forbes' Hist. CaL, 9; Findlay's Directory,
i.
314; Browne's L. CaL, 18-19; Capron's Hist. CaL, 121-2; Domenech'a
Deserts, i. 220; Frir/net, L. Cat., 9, 26; Gleeson's Hist. Cath. Ch., i. 70-2;
Iiincs' Voy., 352; Muhlenpfordt, Versuch; Murray'.* N. Amer., ii. 79-80;
Rouhaud, Key., nourel'es, 26; St Amant, Voy., 393; Fcdix, I'Oregon, 55;
Tytlrr'8 Hist. View, 78-9; Twiss' Oregon Quest., 22; Cronise's Nat. Wealth, 5;
Marina 'Espanola, ii. 274-7; Barber's Hist., 459; Mofras, Explor., i. 96-7,
328; Pat/no, in Soc. Hex. Geog., BoletinSdEp., ii. 199; Kerr's Col. Voy., ii.
112; and a large number of modern mentions in books and newspapers.
37
See Hist. North Mex. States, and Hist. Northwest Coast, i., this series,
not only for details of Drake's performances, but for bibliographical information touching the original authorities. Of the latter there are only three that
narrate the doings in California; Drake's Famous Voyaye, in Hakluyt's Voy.,
iii. 440-2; Drake's World
Encompassed, London, 1628; and Discourse of frir
Francis Drake's lorney and Exploijtes, MS. These are all republished in the
Hakluyt Society edition of the World Encompassed, which is the edition
referred to in my notes. Hardly a collection of voyages or any kind of work
v. 2G5, '277;
I.
82
and other causes would require much space and serve no good purpose. I
shall have occasion to name a few woi^ks in later notes of this chapter; I refer
the reader to the list of authorities on Cabrillo's voyage given in note 36, which
with few exceptions also describe Drake's visit; and I also name the following
in addition! Aa, xviii. 11; Berenger, Col. Voy., i. 63, 117; Harris, Nav., i.
19; Circumnavigations of Globe, 85; Kerr's Col. Voy., x. 27; Laharpe, Altrege,
xv. 15; P'mkerton's Voy., xii. 1G9; Sammlung, xii. 5; Voyages, Col. Voy. and
Trail.; Voyages, Col. (Churchill's), viii. 459; Voyages, ^Curious Col., v. 153;
Voyages, Harlejan Col., ii. 434; Voyages, New Col. iii. 15; Voyages, New
Mlscel. Col., i. 3/; Voyages, New Univ. CoL, i. 28; Voyages, Hist. Voy. round
World, i. 1, 4"5; Voyages, World Displayed, v. 150; Harrow's Life. Drake,
75; Clarke's Life Drake, 30; Purchas his Pllgrlmes, ii. 52; Gotffriedt, Neice
WeU.34; Boss, Leben,3&l; Ens, West and Oxt. Ind. Lustgart, 113; Humboldt,
Essai Pol., 317, 330; Low, Meer oder Seehanen Buch, 44; AloreUi, Fasti N^ov.
,
Orb., 27; Laet, Nov. Orbis, 307: Navarrete, Introd., xcviii. Id., ViagesApdc.,
38; Barney's Citron.' Hi^t., i. 350; Le Maire, Spleghel, 77; Pauw, Recherches,
i. 172; Edin. Review, No. clxii. 1879; Nile*' Register, Ixv. 174; Jlunt's Merch.
Mag., xii. 523; Hayes' Scraps, Cat. Notes, iii. 10; Quigley'a Irish Race,
146; N. Amer. Review, June 1839, 132; Greenhow's Or. and CaL, 70; Id.
Memoir, 36; Nicola//'s Or. Ter., 24; Cavo, Tres Siglos, i. 214; Gleeson's Hist.
Oath. Ch., i. 73, ii. 35; Belcher's Voy., i. 316; Jladltt's Great Gold Fields, 4;
California, Past, Present, 53; Frost's Ha'f hours, 161; McCle.Han's Gulden Slate,
43; TuthiU's Hist. CaL. 17; Holmes' An. Amer., i. 90; Mayer's Mex. Aztec,
168; Meyer, Nach dem Sac., 197; Norman's Youth's Hist., 29; Page's Nouv.
Voy., ii/410; Poutsin, Quest, de VOreg., 23; Id. U. .V., 237; Taylor, in CaL
Farmer, March 29, 1861; April 25, Aug. 15, 22, 29, 1862; W'dlard's Ln*t
Leaves, 113; Douglass' Summary, i. 35; Urlng's llist., 376; Farnham's Hist.
Oregon, 11, 21; Goodrich's
iipon the Sea, 241; Delaporte, Reisen, 457;
Evans' Puget Sd., 3;- Falconer's Oreg. Quest., 12, 39; Forbes' Hist. CaL 10, 79;
Gazlay's Pac. Monthly, 227; Soule's An. S. F., 32; also most of the recently
published county histories of California.
38
}Yorld Encompassed, 115. 'A faire and good bay 'in 38. Famous Voy.
'A harborow for his ship' in 44. Discourse, 184.
39
The excessive cold here is mentioned only in the World Encompassed.
The author's absurd statements and explanations are not worth reproducing
in detail.
;
Man
DRAKE ON THE
COAST.
83
Of
for the men, with, a kind of fort for protection.
the repairs the two chief authorities say nothing; but
"
the third tells us that Drake's men grounded hisship to trim her," and that they set sail after having
"
40
graved and watred theire ship."
When the ship first anchored a native ambassador
Drake
as
most part
a
loose
naked, the women wearing
garment of bulTheir
rushes with a deerskin over the shoulders.
houses, some of them close to the water, were partly
subterranean, the upper parts being conical, of wood,
and covered with earth. In details respecting the
people and their habits and ceremonies there is much
exaggeration and inaccuracy; but the descriptions in
a general way are applicable enough to the Central
42
Californians.
Before his departure Drake made a journey up into
the land, "to be the better acquainted with the nature
and commodities of the country," visiting several vil"
we found to be farre different
lages.
The
inland
in a
heard
Conies,
by
in
40
Discourse, 184.
Or t<Mh, called by the Famous Voyarfe, tabacco.
called petdh of which they made meal and bread.
42
See Native Races, i. 361 et seq.
41
They had
also a root
84
are but small; his tayle, like the tayle of a Rat, exceeding long; and his feet like the pawes of a Want
or moale; under his chinne, on either side, he hath a
bagge, into which he gathereth his meate, when he
hath filled his belly abroade. .the people eate their
bodies, and make great account of their skinnes, for
43
their kings holidaies coate was made of them."
" This
country our Generall named Albion" or Nona
Albion according to the Famous Voyage, "and that for
two causes the one in respect of the white bancks and
cliifes, which lie toward the sea; the other, that it
.
by a hole
made
45
famous Voyage.
44
Famous Voyage, the rest being from World Encompassed.
45
In this place Drake set up a greate post and nayled thereon a vj d ,w ch
the countrey people woorshipped as if it had bin God; also hee nayled vppon
this post a plate of lead, and scratched therein the Queenes name. Discourse.
'
'
4<r
85
ing to the Discourse, and "not farre without this harborough did lye certain Hands (we called them the
Hands of Saint James] hauing on them plentifull and
great store of Seales and birds, with one of which we
fell July 24, whereon we found such
prouision as might
competently serue our turne for a while.
departed
againe the day next following, viz., July 25." No
more land was seen till they had crossed the Pacific.
It should be noted that no regular diary or log of
this voyage is extant or is known to have ever been
extant. Of the three narratives which I have cited
one was perhaps written from memory by a companion
of Drake. The others are compilations from notes of
the chaplain, Fletcher, written under circumstances
of which we know but little, by a man not noted for
his veracity, arid from the reminiscences probably of
We
others.
Naturally they abound in discrepancies and
inaccuracies, as is shown still more clearly in parts not
relating to California.
They are sufficiently accurate
to leave no
room
really anchored
for reasonable
on the coast
touching at one
but in respect of further details they inspire no confidence.
Yet the
86
lowest latitude mentioned, is a very much more 'conuenient harborough' than either of the others.
For nearly two centuries after the voyage there
was but slight occasion to identify Drake's anchorage
yet there can be no doubt that it was to a certain
extent confounded with the old San Francisco men;
WHERE
DID
DRAKE LAND?
47
Cabrera Bueno, Navegacion Especulativa, Manila, 1734, makes the distinction perfectly clear; but of this work nothing was known to the world
beyond its mei-e existence till 1874, when one of my assistants in the Overland Monthly gave a translation of its contents so far as relating to this subject.
Doyle in his reprint of Ptdou, Noticias, i. ix.-x., gave the same iu
substance later, after consulting
copy.
my
87
new
harbor,
1647.
*8
.this
latter.
Padre Niel, Apuntaciones, 78,
writing in about 1718 declared his opinion that Drake's bay was at the mouth
of Carmelo River!
88
has been that the great freebooter did not enter San
Francisco Bay, and that he probably did anchor at
Drake Bay.
Early maps, it would seem, should throw some light
on this question, but they fail to do so. With the
exception of Vizcaino's map, to be reproduced presently
and having no bearing on Drake's voyage, I have not
found a single map of the California coast of earlier
date than 1769 bearing the slightest indication of
having been founded on anything but the narratives
still extant and the imagination of the
map-maker. I
reproduce two sections of maps from the Arcano del
Mare to which Hale attaches some importance in
this connection, with another by Hondius and sup60
posed to represent Drake's port in New Albion.
Po.di
Don Gosper
2i,Salaio
\\Po.dellnuovo
^Albion scoperto
HONDIUS' MAP.
Arcano
'
now
it is
is said,
'
'
'
'
89
With due
from no
'
less
whose argument
is
Drake's ship
as lying, the island appears to lie outside of the peninsula.
passed this island only twice, namely, when he sailed in and when he sailed
But it was in sight every day from the place where his ship lay during
out.
the five weeks that he was there, and from that point, we repeat, this island
appears to be outside. The bay itself, there at its head, appears to be twice
as wide as it is at its mouth some miles below, although the reverse is the
fact. But it is just such a map as a good penman ignorant of linear and aerial
perspective would have made on the spot, if he had a taste for pen and ink
have
maps, such as Fletcher, Drake's chaplain, is known to have had.
visited Bodega Bay with a photographic copy of Hondius' map of Drake's
Bay, taken from that in the British museum, but enlarged to the dimension of
5 by G inches. All the indications called for by Drake's narrative exist there.
Those wo have mentioned; also the Indian villages; the shell-fish; the seals;
the deciduous trees, the "conies" which honey-combed the soil; the eleva'tion of the coast, which commenced at about that latitude; the white sandAlso another indication which
hills, which suggested the name of Albion.
the map as copied in the history, a line of rocks below the
does not appear
beach at the lower right-hand water-line, thus forming a double coast line.
We
\Vc have no doubt that Bodega Bay is Drake's Bay, and that Hondius' map
was furnished to him by Fletcher, who made it on the spot. Drake's ship
could go in there now and anchor at its head in 15 feet water* 100 feet from
the shore, where there is a good sandy beach on which to careen and repair
90
The main question is, did Drake enter San FranBay? It would serve no good purpose to catalogue the modern writers who have espoused one
cisco
theory or the other. Able men like Burney, Davidson, Tuthill, and Stillman have maintained that Drake
anchored within the Golden Gate, against the contrary opinions of other able men like Humboldt,
Soule, Doyle, Dwinelle, and Hittell. Some have been
very positive, others cautious and doubtful.
Most
and where there was an Indian village "on the hill above,"
demanded by Drake's narrative. The map from Arcano del Mar, edition
as
of
1647, given at page 571 in the history, in our opinion greatly strengthens this
view. Directly opposite the mouth of Bodega Bay to the south is the mouth
Between the two the Rio Estero Americano of the Spanish
of Tomales Bay.
Californians debouches into the ocean ; a stream whose bed is almost bare in
the dry season, but which, during the rainy season and for some time afterwards, poured into the sea a shallow volume of turbulent waters, several
hundred feet in width. When Drake was on this coast, the winter or rainy
season was unusually protracted, so far that the deciduous trees, which usually
resume their foliage in March and April, had not done so as late as July, and
Snow on the coast means rain in the interior at
it still snowed on the coast.
a short distance from the sea. It may be safely assumed that the Rio Estero
Americano was swelling full to its margin probably unusually full. The
"bottle- shaped" bay on the reduced scale of the map from Arcauo del Mar
might well represent the two bays, the neck standing for the river. The
latitude is precisely that required for Bodega Bay. Following down the map,
vessels,
91
concluded
92
North
was to find an interoceanic passage; if he abandoned the hope in the far north, one
glance at the Golden Gate would have rekindled it;
a sight of the far-reaching arms within would have convinced him that the strait was found San Pablo Bay
would have removed the last doubt from the mind of
every incredulous companion in Suisun Bay the Golden
Hind would have been well on her way through the
continent; and a little farther the only question wpuld
have been whether to proceed directly to Newfoundland by the Sacramento or to Florida by the San
Joaquin. That a man like Fletcher, who found sceptres
and crowns and kings among the Central Californians,
who found a special likelihood of gold and silver where
nothing of the kind ever existed, who was so nearly
in the
Pacific
frozen
Californian hills in
STILLMAN'S THEORIES.
93
have graved his vessel in the bay that bears his name
without the certainty of destruction. Navigators with
whom I have conversde are somewhat less positive
on the subject, simply stating that the beaching of
a vessel there would be venturesome, and. a wise
It is not at all
captain would if possible avoid it.
uncommon at many places on the coast for vessels to
be beached in a storm, and safely released by the high
tide.
Stillman and his witnesses imply that Drake's
was
ship
grounded to be repaired and graved, but
one
of
the narratives, and that the least reliable,
only
contains such a statement; the others simply mention
a leak to be stopped, perhaps not far below the waterline, and I am sure that small vessels upon this coast
have been often careened and graved without being
beached at all. The coast survey charts declare the
harbor to be a secure one except in south-east gales.
There is an interior bay, communicating with the
outer by a passage now somewhat obstructed by a
bar, which possibly now, and very probably in 1579,
would afford Drake's small ship a safe anchorage.
And
plied to
in this
Bodega
instead of
would
Drake Bay.
it valid.
is
94
55
The Philippine
reproduce
95
coast of
New
57
seems to be the first mention of 'Cape Mendocino, though it is not implied that the name was
given by him, as nevertheless it may have been. We
have seen that the name was not, as has been generally
believed, applied by Cabrillo or Ferrelo in 1542-3;
and Torque mada's statement has b^en noted to the
effect that the cape was discovered by the Manila
ships. It is possible that it had been thus discovered
in an unrecorded
voyage preceding that of Gali; but
it is
as
quite
likely that the name was given in Mexico,
Gali's
57
This narrative was translated into Dutch and published by Linschoten in
his famous and oft-reprinted Itinerario of 1596. From this source an
English
translation is given in Ilakluyfs Voy., iii. 442-7.
blunder in a French trans"
lation by which 57 30' was substituted for 37 30' has caused a fictitious im-
many
of the
of Cabrillo, Drake",
and Vizcaino.
96
'
58 *
Se perdi6, y dio a la costa con vn viento travesia.
Que en aquel puerto
avia dado a la Costa el ano de 1595.'
59
Torquemada, Monnrq. Incl., i. 717-18. 'En la costa reconocimos el puerto
de San Francisco, adonde en tienipos pasados se perdi6 ima nao de China quo
venia con orden de descubrir esta costa, y creo que hoy dia hay mucha cera y
'
losaza [loza?] qne el navio traia.' Ascension, Relation, 558. 'Here was where
the ship S. Agustin was lost in the year 1595, coining to make discoveries,
and the cause of her being lost was rather the fault of him who steered than
stress of weather.' Cabrera JBneno, Navigation, 303.
Venegas, Noticia, i.
183, says 'the viceroy Velasco, desirous of making a station for the Philippine
on
the
outer
a
sent
called
San
ships
coast,
Ayusiin, which soon returned
ship
without any resiilts. ' And Lorenzana, in Cortes, Hist. N. Esp. 326. Also, i'rom
,
Torquemada, Salmeron, Relac., 20; Niel, Apunt, 74; and Navarrete, It/trod.,
It "does not clearly appear that any of these writers saw anything in
addition to the statement in Torquemada. In Bodega y Cuadra, Vittye de
1775, MS., it is said that Cermefion was wrecked in a south-east wind, as he
could not have been at Bodega or the new San Francisco. Where this information was obtained does not appear.
Ivi.-vii.
CERMEftON'S SHIPWRECK.
97
His
special mission, in addition to that of general exploration and the ever potent purpose of finding an
interoceanic strait, was to find a suitable port for the
I.
98
the coast of
Upper
California that
we
are
now
con-
60
cerned.
It had been sixty years since Cabrillo
had visited
named
it San
and
but
here
as elseMiguel;
bay
where on the Californian coast Vizcaino pays no heed
to the discoveries of his predecessor; giving indeed no
The name
indication that they were known to him.
was now given doubtless with reference to that of the
flag-ship, and also to the day of San Diego de Alcala
occurring on the 1 2th of November.
party landed
to explore, climbed to the summit of the hills on the
northern peninsula, had a view of the grand harbor
and a glimpse of the False Bay, found plenty of wood,
and came back to report. The general decided to clean
and pay his ship, and to obtain a supply of wood and
tent church for the friars was pitched
water.
somewhere on the western shore between what are
now La Playa and Point Loma. Wells were dug on
the opposite sand island, or peninsula, and the work of
m Hist. North Hex. States, this series. The vessels were the flag- ship, or
this
nimo Martin
VIZCAINO'S EXPEDITION.
99
61
The
no space.
'
silver.
The fertility of the soil, abundance of game and fish, and indeed all
the natural qualities of the place are highly praised. San Diego was deemed
a Spanish settlement.
Cabrera Bueno, Naregacion, 305.
63
Name only in Cabrera Bueno, Nav., 305. The island is not on the map.
61
On the map it is Ensenada de S. Andres. Cabrera Bueno names San
Pedro in 34 30', and mentions the little island there. Nov. 26th is the day
of St Peter, bishop of Alexandria.
It will be remembered that Cabrillo had
called this bay Bahia de los Humos.
fine site for
62
100
fear
and were
friendly,
though
skillful thieves.
One
VIZCAINO'S MAP.
65
Torquemada, i. 713, says they departed on December 25th, but this must
be an error.
66
The day of Santa Barbara is December 4th.
VIZCAINO AT MONTEREY.
101
Then
Monterey.
Next day the church tent was pitched under the
shade of an oak whose branches touched the tidewater, twenty paces from springs of good water in a
ravine, which barranca, with similar trees not quite
so near the shore, is still a prominent landmark at
Monterey. There were now but few men on the ships
.
67
Map from Svtil y Mexicana, Viage, Atlas No. 4. Torquemada gives
no names except Santa Catalina Island and Santa Barbara Canal. Cabrera
Bueno, 304, gives a page of not very clear description. He names Punta de
Concepcion in 35 30', Farallon de Lobos, Canal de Sta Barbara, Punta de la
Conversion (perhaps identical with the Punta de Rio Dulce of the map, and
with the modern Pt Hueneme) Isla de Sta Barbara, Isla de Sta Catalina in
34 30', Isla de San Clemente in 43 (a little less).
68
On the map is named Ensenada de Roque, which is either San Luis
Obispo or Estero Bay; and 'point which looks like a,n island,' evidently Pt
Sur.
Cabrera gives no names except Tierra de Santa Lucia, mentioning however the morro corresponding to Pt Sur.
69
Not shown on the map. Called by Cabrera Bueno a 'famoso puerto que
tiene abrigo de todos vientos, y tiene un rio de muy buena
agua, y de poco
fondo, el qual por las orillas esta muy poblado de muchos Alamos negros;' also
'
'
'
102
of
its
surroundings,
mals and
its
water.
friendly.
anchorage
is
103
it is
decided to return to
La Paz
Cta.
Aspera
<tt
/^
I
esto rio
><
<)><*
slt
nacimto al
la
bahiagrande
del Ce.
S.
Sebastian
Mendocino
'Ko. Salado
Pto. de los
_
Reyes
\Ens. Grande
^i
Costa segura
Costa de barrancas
^P.
P. de
arbota.
Ano Nuevo
VIZCAINO'S MAP.
On the 14th
gale causes them to drift northward.
but
on the 1.9th
close
to
are
Mendocino,
Cape
they
the weather clears and they find themselves in latitude
42, in sight of a white point near high snowy mountains.
They name the point Cabo Blanco de San
104
Sebastian, and, with a favorable wind, turn southThey keep near the
discoveries
that have left any
but
without
shore,
traces in the narrative, and without anchoring until
they come to Cedros Island on the 7th of January.
The suffering and loss of life from scurvy have been
terrible, but relief is found at Mazatlan.
Meanwhile Aguilar in the Tres Reyes advances to
latitude 41 and is then driven by the gale to an
anchorage behind a great cliff near Cape Mendocino.
Continuing his voyage after the storm, he finds his
latitude on the 19th to be 43, near a point named
Cape Blanco, beyond which the coast turns to the
72
north-west, and also near a large river. On account
of sickness and because he has already reached the
limit of the viceroy's instructions, Aguilar resolves to
return.
Both he and Flores die on the voyage, only
five men surviving.
I give a copy of the map reprediscoveries
above
senting
Monterey, not agreeing in
all respects with the narrative, and
showing nothing
'
105
fornia, Estab. y Proy., 9, 10; Doc. Hist. Hex., ser. ii. torn. iii. 443; Cardona,
Memorial, 46; Vizcaino, Relation, 1611-13, p. 199; see Hist. North Hex. St.,
i.
chap. viii. this series.
106
Ano Nuevo
i.de Piiias
Pta.de Sn.Diego
Ensenada de
ILA
los "Vlrgines
DE,SN.MARTIN
instru-
mas
my
107
was derived. 77
The
that
is
Northern Mystery
what was thought and written and pictured in
main; but was pushed constantly northward by exploration, and was to be found always just beyond the
Each inlet was the entrance
highest latitude visited.
iii.
235-6.
'23 years before, in 1753, twelve white men dressed like the
Spaniards
landed from a boat and were subsequently cast away on the coast and perished.
78
See Hist. North Mexican States, i., this series.
79
See Hist. Northwest Coast, i, chap, ii.-iv., this series.
that
108
At
ANCIENT MAPS.
109
Of
the
many maps
On them
its
the reader
trend from north
marked with
to west,
It is
study, but have no bearing on real discovery.
not unlikely, however, that useful original maps of
Cabrillo's, Cermenon's, or Vizcaino's explorations may
yet come to light, or that in the mean time men will
continue to build grave theories of local discovery on
the vagaries of the old cosmographers.
CHAPTEE
IV.
IN
coffers.
Missionary zeal had not perhaps materially
abated but one of the great religious orders had been
driven from the country.
The friars were impeded
in their efforts by discouraging difficulties and the
mission establishments, reduced in number by secularization in the south, by destruction and consolidation
;
(110)
Ill
We
112
northern gentiles.
Many
113
sary for
its safety.
I.
114
treasury officials
questioned about ways and means; preliminary explorall these
ations, conflicting reports, petty quarrels
with the interminable complication of red-tape communications therewith connected, resulting in vexatious delay, if not in absolute failure, may be readily
pictured by the reader of preceding volumes, familiar
with the ways of the period.
Fortunately none of these obstacles was in this case
interposed. The royal order was clear that San Diego
and Monterey should be occupied the movement was
not a complicated or apparently difficult one; it was
promptly and effectually executed. The cause of this
unusual promptness was in the man who undertook to
carry out the order. The whole matter was by the
viceroy turned over to Jose de Galvez, who was, as we
have seen, on his way to the Jalisco coast to embark
for the peninsula. Galvez had come to Mexico in 1765
as visitador general of New Spain. 'He was a member
of the Council of the Indies, and subsequently minister of state, holding the latter position at the time
of his death in 1789. He was invested by Carlos III.
with well nigh absolute powers to investigate and
reform the administration of the government in its
different branches, particularly in matters pertaining
to the royal finances. Independent of the viceroy in
many respects by virtue of his position, only nominally
subordinate in others, assuming probably some prerogatives that did not belong to him, he was to all intents
the highest authority in New Spain.
The viceroy
Cruillas was removed from office largely because of
his opposition to the visitador, and was replaced by
the more complaisant Marques de Croix. If there
were any viceregal attributes not originally possessed
by Galvez, or arbitrarily assumed by him, they were
;
especially delegated to
started
115
was
also
time Captain Gaspar de PortoM, an easy-going, popular man, but brave and honest withal, was ruling the
country as civil and military governor, while Captain
Fernando Javier Rivera y Moncada commanded the
PortoM
garrison of about forty soldiers at Loreto.
was a new-comer of the preceding year; Rivera had
been long in the country. 2 The missions were in the
1
Galvez was 'alcalde de casa y corte, ministro del consejo de Indias, marde Sonora, ministro de estado y del despacho universal de Indias.' Rivera,
Gobernantes de ]\fcx., 402-10. This is the only authority I have seen for the
exact date of the departure from Mexico. In an edict dated Nov. 2, 17G8,
in Lower California, Galvez signs himself 'del consejo y camara de Su Magestad en cl real y supremo de las Indias, yntendeiite de exe"rcito, visitador general de todos los tribunales de justicia, caxas, y demas ramos de real hacienda
de estos reynos, y comisionado con las amplisimas facultades del Ex. Sr. Marque's de Croix.' Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. C. In his report to the viceroy dated
June 10, 1709, he gives as the chief object of the northern expedition the
establishment of a presidio to protect the peninsula from the danger always
threatened by foreign nations 'y con especialidad las (tentativas) que ultimamente ban hecho los rusos pretendiendo familiarizarso con la navegacion del
mar do Tartaria. Paloil, Not., i. 183. See also for notices concerning Galvez'
coming to lower California. Id., i. 248-50. Fear of the Russians as the leading
motive for the northern establishment is mentioned in Armona, Carta, 1770,
in Doc. Hist. Uex., 4th ser., torn. ii. 15G-7; Revilla-Gigedo, Informe de 1793,
according to Cavo, Tres 81-jlos, iii. 117; by Navarrete, in trod, to Sutll y Mex.
Viagc, xci.-ii. ; and by other writers. Greenhow, Or. and C'aL, 105, tells us
that Galvez was a man of the most violent and tyrannical disposition. If this
be true it is to be regretted that violence and tyranny were not more common
qualities in Spanish officials. Hughes, California, 119, learns from Harper's
Biofj. Cyclopedia, that Galvez visited California in search of gold-mines discovered by the Jesuits ; that his companion, Miguel Jos6 de Arenza, became
discouraged after a few weeks, recommending the abandonment of the search
and accusing Galvez of insanity for continuing it, for which he Was cast
into prison
Galvez was ill in Sonora after leaving California, and is said
to have imprisoned his secretary Azanza, afterward viceroy, for saying
que's
'
that his malady was mental. Such was the origin doubtless of the story.
Venegas, Not. Col., ii. 200, 543-4, iii. 4-14, has something to say on the
proposals to settle Alta California and how the matter stood in the middle
of the century.
2
Biographical sketches of these officers will be given later. As authority
for the fonn of Portola's name I cite his signature in an
original letter of 1779
116
and
-he
among- the MSS. of Molera; Portold, Dlario del Viacje, 17C9, MS., a contemporary copy; Ortega in Santa Clara, Arch. Parr., MS., 48; Palou, Vida; and
Monterey, Estracto de Noticias; though Serra wrote it Portala in San Dieijo,
Lib. Mision, MS., 63; and in Palou, Noticias, it is printed Portola.
3
Father Serra was a native of Mallorca, 55 years of age, who had come
to America in 1749, had served as a missionary in the Sierra Gorda district
for nine years, and about the same time in the college, or travelling as comiSee preceding note.
sario of the inquisition. Palou, Vida, 1-13, 43-G.
4
See Hist. North Mexican States, vol. i., this series.
117
and the comandante at San Bias had orders to fit them out and
send them over to La Paz with the least possible delay.
The land expeditions under Portola and Rivera were to
march from Santa Maria on the northern frontier. An
additional military force would be required, to supply
which Colonel Elizondo was instructed to send over
5
twenty -five Catalan volunteers under Lieutenant
Pedro Fages. The peninsular missions must assist at
the birth of the new ones, by furnishing church ornaments, live-stock, and other supplies to the full extent
for the transportation of troops to Sonora,
of their ability.
From his head-quarters at Santa Ana Galvez superintended the collection at La Paz and Cape San Lucas
of everything that was to be forwarded by sea. He
sent north supplies for the land expedition, and appointed Captain Rivera, a man practically acquainted
with the country, as comisario with instructions to
proceed northward from mission to mission, and take
from each all the live-stock, provisions, and implements that could be spared. Likewise he was to recruit some people for the new settlements, and bring
everything to Santa Maria with all possible despatch.
Rivera set out upon this work in August or September 1768. 6
The proposed occupation of the northern country,
however, was to be spiritual as well as military. The
natives were to be converted after their subjection,
and not only presidios but missions were to be
founded. Preparations having been effectually set on
foot en lo secular, it was now time for the spiritual
Accordaspect of the scheme to receive attention.
invited
come
was
to
down
the
ingly
padre president
to Santa Ana for a personal interview with the visitaSerra
dor, as he did, arriving at the end of October.
doubtless had before this time made himself pretty
well acquainted with what Galvez was doing and pro5
left
Cadiz
6
May
had
118
posed to do; but he listened patiently to the visitador's explanations, and then not only expressed his
approval of the scheme, but announced his intention
It was thought
to join the land expedition in person.
best to found, besides the missions at San Diego and
7
Monterey, another at some intermediate point, and
still another on the frontier of Lower California in
order to facilitate communication between the old
establishments and the new. Three priests were to go
north by sea and three by land; and in order that so
many might be spared three were drawn from the
Serra agreed with Galvez
college of San Fernando.
San Buenaventura.
8
A PATRON
SAINT.
110
made a tour
Palou gives long lists of all the church property taken from each mission,
I have thought it worth while to combine into the following, which is
as nearly accurate as the author's occasional use of the terms several and a
fe\v' will permit: 7 church bells, 11 small altar bells, 23 altar cloths, 5 choir
copes, 3 surplices, 4 carpets, 2 coverlets, 3 roquetes, 3 veils, 19 full sets sacred
raiments, different colors, 6 old single vestments, 17 albas, albs, or white
which
'
'
'
120
La Paz
like all
themselves.
Finally Junipero Serra pronounced a
formal blessing on the pilgrims, their vessel, the flag,
the crew, and on Father Parron, to whom was inThe ceretrusted the spiritual care of the company.
to
the
Carlos
sea.
in the
San
Galvez
put
mony over,
Paz
her
clown
the
from
La
Conception accompanied
gulf
to Cape San Lucas, watching her until she doubled the
12
point and struck bravely northward before a fair wind.
While the president returned to Loreto Galvez
gave his attention to the San Antonio, which was to
follow the San Carlos. Touching at La Paz the 15th
13
of January, she arrived at Cape San Lucas the 25th.
11
Palou, Vida, 60, notes that Galvez was particularly zealous in packing
San Buenaventura which he called his mission, and was delighted at having
done his work quicker than Padre Junipero who packed for his mission of
San Carlos.
1
-Crespi, in Palou, Not., ii. 149, says the San Cdrlos sailed January 10th.
Leaving La Paz on the 9th, she may have been last seen by Galvez on the 10th,
though Palou, Not., i. 216, says it was the llth. For further details respecting
the officers, men, cargo, instructions, and plans, see description of the voyage
.for
Her
condition being no
capitana, or flag-ship, she
and so
better than
121
that of the
ruary.
usual religious ceremonies, Perez shook out his sails
and with a fair wind struck northward from San
Jose del Cabo. ."God seems to reward my only
virtue,
my
faith," writes
14
goes well."
Meanwhile
all
camp
ready
March. The president had
returned to Loreto at the end of January, and had
since been busily engaged in his preparations, forwarding such articles as he could get to La Paz or to Santa
Maria according as they were to go by water or by
land. On receipt of Rivera's message he at once notified Fray Juan Crespi, who was to accompany the first
land expedition, to join the force at Velicata without
delay.
Crespi, an intimate personal friend as well as
start for
San Diego
in
14
Prov.
lu
St.
Pap.,
MS.M.
46.
122
ALL EN EOUTE.
123
21
Port old, Diario, MS., 1, 2. The leader and friars went in advance and
reached Velicata on the 13th.
22
Galvez, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 45.
23
Palou, Fir/a, 03, says the vessel was never heard of again, and it is only
in his other work, Noticias, i. 54, 276-9, in which, however, he
says nothing
of her trip to Sonora, that he describes her
subsequent movements.
124
The captain's
subsequently of either vessel or crew.
name was Callegan.
The proceedings of Galvez and other events in the
peninsula after the departure of the northern expedihave been fully narrated elsewhere; 24 and there
is but little in connection with those annals for several
years that has any bearing on the new establishments
of San Diego and Monterey. As early as July 1769,
the San Antonio returned to San Bias, and on the 7th
of September a schooner brought up to Loreto news
that all the expeditions had reached San Diego. 25 The
25th of February 1770 Rivera returned to Velicatd,
for cattle and other supplies left there, with San Diego
news to the llth of February, and with reports for
Galvez and the viceroy on the failure of the first
month later two natives
attempt to find Monterey.
arrived from San Diego with April letters to Palou
and the viceroy which reached Loreto late in May. 26
The 2d of August messengers arrived from Monterey
tions
San Jose
24
in
May
1770.
i.,
25
this series.
Aug. 20, 1769, Juan B. Anza writes from Tubac, Sonora, toGov. Pineda
that an Indian from the Gila has reported that a nation beyond the Cocomaricopas met four Spaniards with guns, whom the writer thinks may be part of
the Monterey expedition. Doc. Hist. Mex. ser. iv. torn. ii. 117-18.
2G
Gov. Armona of Baja California writes from Santa Ana July 19, 1770,
that he arrived June 13th, and found good news of the northern expeditions,
including the discovery of the prodigiosisimo puerto' called San Francisco
.and which may be Monterey. Doc. Hist. Mex., ser. iv. torn. ii. 156-7.
27
Dept. St:Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., Ixxxvii. 10.
t
'
125
CHAPTEE
V.
'
WITHOUT CONVERTS.
TURN now
127
in
'
128
Vila, a
smiths
sixty-two persons in
all;
voyage
is
successful.
and crews
Officers
of
commander
Printed Costans6 in Monterey, Estracto de Noticias, and so signed by himautographs now before me. Often printed Costanzo or Constanzo.
The manifest of the San Carlos signed by Vila on Jan. 5th is preserved in
Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 13-21. The list of supplies includes: 4,676 Ibs. meat,
1,783 Ibs. fish, 230 bush, maize, 500 Ibs. lard, 7 jars vinegar, 5 tons wood, l,27e
Ibs. brown sugar, 5 jars brandy, 6 tanatcs
figs, 3 tanates raisins, 2 tanates dates
300 Ibs. red pepper, 125 Ibs. garlic, 6,678 Ibs. bread, common, 690 Ibs. bread,
white, 945 Ibs. rice, 945 Ibs. chickpeas, 17 bushels salt, 3,800 gallons water,
450 Ibs. cheese, 6 jars Cal. wine, 125 Ibs. sugar, 275 Ibs. chocolate, 10 hams,
_
self in several
6
129
been attended to at the start; Junipero Serra, president of the California missions, had invoked the
blessing of heaven upon this first detachment of pacificators; Miguel de Azanza, subsequently viceroy of
New Spain, had acted as shipping-clerk at the embarkation of the supplies; and Jose de Galvez, the
foremost man in America, had not only aided in the
lading and delivered a parting address, but had accompanied the vessel to the cape, seeing her safely
headed for San Diego.
Yet despite such favorable auspices the San Carlos
was unfortunate. The water-casks leaked and nothing but water of a bad quality could be obtained at
Cedros Island. This greatly aggravated the scurvy,
always prevalent on the coast, and soon no sailors
were left with sufficient strength to work the vessel
or to launch the boats for fresh water. Vila, in accordance with his instructions, 7 was obliged to go up the
coast to 34 as had Perez before him, the increased
distance and cold adding greatly to his troubles.
At
25 smoked beef- tongues, 6 live cattle, 575 Ibs. len112 Ibs. candles, 1,300 Ibs. flour, 15 sacks bran, 495 Ibs. beans, 16 sacks
coal, hens for the sick and for breeding, $1,000 in money, etc. The brandy and
cheese were for stormy weather only, the former being considered conducive
to scilrvy if used habitually on this coast. The wine was for cabin use, or for
the missions. Many of the articles named, or specified portions thereof, were
intended for the missions, or for the land expedition; and part of the panocha
was to lie used ia sweetening the temper of the natives.
7
Galvez' instructions to Capt. Vila, dated Jan. 5th, are preserved in Prov.
St. Pap., MS., i. 22-31, under the title, 'Instruction to be observed
by D.
Vicente Vila, first-class master in the royal navy and Captain Comandante
of the paquebot of his majesty called the San Carlos alias Tolson de Oro in
the voyage which by divine aid this vessel is to make to the ports of San
Diego and Monterey, situated on the northern coast of this peninsula of Californias in 33 and 37 of latitude.' The different articles of this document are
in substance as follows: 1st. The
object is to establish the Catholic faith, to
extend Spanish domain, to check the ambitious schemes of a foreign nation,
and to carry out a plan formed by Felipe III. as early as 1606. Therefore no
pains can be spared without offense to God, the king, and the country. 2d.
The vessel being new, strong, and well supplied for over a year, to be followed
by the San A ntonio with additional supplies, having only 300 leagues to make,
having a strong military force, and going to a land whose natives are docile,
have no arms but bows and arrows, and are without boats, there can be no
excuse en lo huma/io for failure. 3d. Vila is to sail Jan. 7th, weather permitting, keep out to sea according to his judgment in search of favorable
winds, to take careful observations, and to stand in shore at 34, San Diego
ft in 33 according to the cdclula of Felipe III. and being easy to find
by
/izcaino's narrative enclosed with this document in
print in the third volume.
Hisr. CAL., VOL. I. 9
11 bottles oil, 2 Ibs. spice,
tils,
130
A visit
all
Perez*
men
are attacked
by the scourge;
iii.
85-0).
4th. If
Capt. Rivera be found at San Diego, the mission effects are to be landed, and
such other supplies as Rivera may need, the rest to be taken by sea to Mon5th. if Rivera and the land force have not arrived Vila is to wait 15
terey.
or 20 days at most, obtaining wood and water, while Fages and Costans6
explore the country. 6th. After the 20 days, or on Rivera, 's arrival, the tian
Carlos is to sail for Monterey, with the San Antonio if she be there.
7th.
The
'
are to be conciliated with panocha and triUcs, but to be very closely watched,
and to be induced to look on weapons as a kind of adornment. lOLh. Panocha,
cloths, etc., are to be given to Pages and Rivera, on their demand, a receipt
being taken, llth. A report is to be sent to Galvez from San Diego by land,
and from Monterey one of the vessels is to return to San Diego with despatches to go overland, or if only one vessel is there she is to come as soon
as safety will permit and return immediately.
12th. Vila to remain in the
best fitted of the two vessels at Monterey until the San Jose shall arrive.
13th. The other vessel is to remain at San Diego long enough to deliver
despatches, etc., and is then to continue her voyage to C. San Lucas and San
Bias with duplicate despatches. 14th. Coasts about Monterey are to be
explored, especially port and river Carmclo, and if possible the port of San
Francisco said to be in 38 SO'. To this end Vila will give all possible aid to
Costanso and Fagcs. 15th. On the arrival of the Sctn Jose, Vila in his vessel
will return to San Bias, exploring the coast in order to confirm or correct
Cabrera Bueno's derrotero, the best extant. Naveyacion Especulativa y prdctica,
8
Manila, 1734.
.|
131
show. 10
tion of the
to
voyage
Of
is
found in Prov.
132
country.
.well
Velicata" in
fifty-one
days on
Many
localities
Costans6 may, if deemed best, send soldiers with the natives to meet Rivera.
12th. Fages may use force to overcome resistance if necessary.
13th. The
natives are never to be fully trusted, but always watched, for the 'common
work on the
incite
15th.
them
to mischief.
14th.
Both
soldiers
and
sailors to
Constant precautions against clanger, notwithstanding peaceful appearances. 16th. Trade with the natives is allowed, but no
knives or other weapons must be given them.
17th. Fages is to send full reports to Galvez down to the time of Portola's taking the command. Great
reliance is placed in the 'activity, honor, and prudence' of Fages and Costans6.
Galvez adds a note to the effect that the presidio and mission at Monterey are to be called by the glorious name of San Carlos.
12
These soldiers derived their name from the cuera, or cuirass, which in
California was a sleeveless jacket made of 7 or 8 thicknesses of deer or sheep
skin quilted.
From the Latin cor mm. The metallic cuirass was called in
Spanish coraza.
^Apitotin was the master's mate on a vessel. Caiiizares accompanied the
land force to take observations and write a diary.
14
Canizares, Diario ejecutado por Tierra desde el parage de Villacata d f.ste
puerto de San Dieyo, 1769, MS. This diary is dated July 3d, and was probably sent south by the San Antonio a few clays later.
Crespi, Primera Expcd.
de Tierra al Descubrimiento del Puerto de San Diego, in Palou, Not., ij. 93149. This diary extends to July 2d, and
probably was completed like the other
on July 3d. The writer had before him the diaries of the second expedition
under Portola. from which he takes some material respecting changes in names
of places along the route.
fort.
133
fixed,
Santos
was almost a
fight,
but
The
first
Rivera's
men
manent settlement.
15
The
At the outset they followed the route of Link in 1766, but the latter soon
turned to the right to cross the mountains.
16
Nine deSerra, in San Diego, Lib. Mision, MS., 64, says that 5 died.
serted at one time according to Palou.
17
Ortega, in Santa Clara, Arch. Parroquia, MS., 48-54, gives an account
of this expedition in which he represents the sufferings of the soldiers to have
been very great, three tortillas per day being the rations. Vallejo, Hist. Ca'.,
MS., i. 83, obtained the same idea from his father's narrative, stating that
the soldiers were glad to barter their jewelry and clothing for the rations of
their Indian companions, while the latter lived on roots, wild fruits, etc.
134
18
n
Portola, Diario del Viage que. haze por tierra
Gaspar de Portold, Capitan de Dragones del refjimiento de Espana, Governador de Californias, d los
puertos de
135
litter
was much
my foot
and
leg?'
apply to a beast/
" 19
sional itching.
In fact
it is
nothing serious.'
136
Thus
are the four branches of the visitador gengrand expedition finally reunited at San Diego,
one year after Galvez had begun his preparations on
the peninsula. Next day is Sunday, fiesta de la visitation, and the California pilgrims, one hundred and
twenty-six in number out of two hundred and nine20
teen who had started;
or, omitting natives and
of
sailors, seventy-eight
Spanish blood out of ninety
who had come to remain celebrate their safe reunion
by a solemn thanksgiving mass to the patron San
Jose chanted with "la solernnidad posible," and to the
accompaniment of exploding gunpowder. The cereeral's
and Puig.
21
days.
A MISSION FOUNDED.
137
The new
Parron
is
associate minister,
22
It is noticeable that in all the general reports after 1823 this date is given
June 16th; but there is no doubt that it is an error. Arch. Santa Bdrbara,
MS., xii. 125. Serra thinks, Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 125, that April llth has
some claim to be considered the beginning of the mission, since on that
day when the San Antonio arrived began the spiritual manifestations to the
natives, causing them to see an eclipse and feel an earthquake, not perceptible
as
to the Christians.
23
San Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS. St James of Alcala was an Andalucian
Franciscan who lived from 1400 to 1463, and was canonized in 1588 rather for
his pious life and the miracles wrought through him before and after death
than for any high position held by him. Alcala was rarely attached to the
nanie of the mission in popular usage.
138
attempt
Thus
shot.
safety
is
24
work
For a long time at San Diego and Monterey the peninsula only was
spoken of as California. Either local names or Nuevos Establecimientos were
applied to the north, although Serra in his first letter from San Diego used
the term California Septentrional.
25
In his Vlda de Junip. Serra, 84, Falou speaks of previous assaults with
intent to kill the Spaniards on Aug. 12th to 13th, which were repulsed. TutHist.
hill,
CnL, 79, erroneously states that a priest was killed. Serra,- San
Dieyo, Lib. J/z's., MS., Co, says the man killed was a Spanish arriero 20 years
old named Jose" Maria Vegerano.
'
'
'
'
NO PROGRESS IN CONVERSION.
139
Little wonder
leaving but about twenty persons.
that small progress is made in missionary work/20
26
On
the general subject of this chapter, in addition to the special docui. 254-84,
427-32; ii. 93-153; Id., Vida, GO-86. The notes of Serra in San, Diego, Lib.
are
a
also
valuable
source of information.
These notes were
AJision, MS.,
\vritten to supply as far as possible from memory the loss of the original misSion books destroyed with the mission in 1775.
are
also found in
Copies
Hayes* Miss. Book, MS., i. 99-106, and in Bandini, Doc. Hist. Col., MS.
Miguel Costanso published in Mexico, 1770, an account of these expeditions as
Dlario Historico de losviagesde mar y tierra, hechos alNorte de la California, fol.
G.
It was translated by Wm. Revely and published in 1700 by A. Dalrymple as An Historical Journal, etc., 2 maps, 4to, 70 p.
ments already referred to, see for a connected narrative Palou, Not.,
CHAPTER
FIRST EXPEDITION
VI.
y Moncada in command of twentyseven cuera soldiers, including Sergeant Joseph Francisco Ortega, Lieutenant Pedro Fages, with six or
seven of his twenty-five Catalan volunteers, all that
the scurvy had left alive and strong enough to undertake the march, Engineer Miguel Costanso, 2 fathers
Juan Crespi and Francisco Gomez, seven muleteers,
himself, Rivera
1
2
Mofras, ExpJor., i. 106, says the expedition had come across Sonora.
Costans6, Fages, and others, according to the Porlold, Diario, MS., 10,
ill, but advised by Prat to undertake the journey as a remedy.
were
(HO)
CRESPI'S DIARY.
fifteen christianized
Lower
Californians,
141
and two
ser-
3
Crespi, Viage de la Espedicion de tierra de San Dierjo d Monterey, Copia del
diario }) camiitata que h'zo la espediclon desde elpuerto de San Diego de Alcald
hasta cl de Monterey, saHendo el 14 de Julio de 1760, in Palou, Not., i. 285-4'23.
Portola, Diario del Viage, MS., 11, cb seq., covers the same ground but muck
more briefly, adding nothing to Crespfs narrative except on a few points to
be noticed in thefr place.
'El 27 lianduvimos tres horas, bucn camino,
macho pasto y agua is a fair sample of most entries. Very few names of
localities are given.
In his Vida de Junipe.ro Serra, 80-2, 88-9, Palou gives
but a brief account, referring for particulars to Crespi's diary. Lieut. Pages,
a member of the expedition, in his Voyage en Cal. , inNouv. Amialesdes Voy.,
ei. 147-9, 155-9, 1G5-71,
170-82,321-4/328, gives a very full narrative of it,
except from Monterey to San Francisco, including names of places, distances,
bearings, latitudes, and description of the country, but omitting names of
persons and dates. I shall note variations from Crespi's diary, with whicli
Pages' narrative for the most part agrees. Costanso, in his Diario Histdrico de
los viage$ de mar y tierra,
gives an abridged version differing in no essential
respect from Crespi. Costans6's narrative is abridged and quoted in an article
signed <M. P.,' in Album Hex., ii. 37-40. Ortega, Fraymento, in Santa Clara,
Arch. Parroqitia, MS.,. 4854, gives an original but not very complete or accu- i
rate narrative. Capt. Rivera also in a certificate relating the services of Pedro
Amador, gives some information respecting this entrada. St. Pap. Miss, and
Colon., MS., i. 52-3. John T. Doyle in his pamphlets entitled Address and
Memorandum in 1S70 and 1873 gave brief resumes of parts from Crespi; and
the newspapers since the reprint of Palou's work have had
something to say
more or less superficially on the subject of the discovery of San Francisco Bay.
'
142
worse than
July
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
20.
21,
22,
23,
Course.
2.5 (3)
N.W.
3.5 (4)
N.N.W.
N.
1,5
10'
N.
N.E.
24,
Leagues.
N.W.
(3)
N.N.W.
[2]
N.W.
2.5 [3]
N.W.
14'
mesa at
S. Francisco Solano, 33 18'.
foot of sierra with fine stream, oppoSta Catalina Island, said by the
explorers to be 5 1. from S. Pedro Bay.
At or near 8. Juan Capistrano
Pantaleon (Aguada del P. Gomez), on
site
26. S.
S.
[9
gion
lat.
lat.
33 34'
34 10'.
N.E.
1.5 [1]
N.W.
2
6
N.W.
N.W.
1.
Mi-
guel)
(No name),
(No name),
Los Angeles
re-
N.W.
GEOGRAPHICAL TABLE.
143
Four days
2,
3.
phaltum marsh
4,
5.
Leagues.
3(2)
W.
N.W.
called Eiiclno
N.N.W.
N.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
by
1 1.,
much
S.W.
E.N.E.
W.( W.N.W.)
W.( W.N.W.)
asphal-
tow
20.
N.
W.N.W,
S.
in a plain, 4
18.
N.W.
S.
(No name.
Sta Rosa de Viterbo, or Corral rancheria,
3 1. across the plain, and 4 1. over mts.,
12.
Course.
w. (W.N.W.)
[(3)]
W.( W.N.W.)
3.5 [2.5]
W.( W.N.W.)
144
Aug.
21.
S.
23.
S.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
Sept.
1.
[2.5]
islands in sight
S. Luis Rey, or La Gaviota, along shore,
on a slough, 34 47'. Perhaps origin of
Gaviota Pass. Three islands in sight:
S. Bernardo, S. Miguel, farthest west;
W.
w.
Course.
W.
w.
2.5
w.
w.
/1. 5 or
N.W.
1.5(1)
N.W.
2.5
(2)
N.W.
.5(1)
N.W.
2.5 (2)
K.
L5(3)
N.
2.
4.
N.W. (N.N.W.)
S.
N.W.
3(4)
145
8,
S.
Rock
of
Leagues.
modern maps
W.
Course.
N.W.
N.N.W.
beach
Vicente arroyo (Arroyada Honda), 36
(1)
N.W.
N.W. and N. N.E.
10'
de
N.W.
20.
21.
26.
28.
29.
Oct.
1.
4
4
4
3.5 (3)
5.25
30'
N.E.
N.W.
N.W.
7.
S.
N.
N.W.
N.W.
N.W.
Sequel
17.
N.N.W.
I.
10
W.N.W,
146
stands.
From
24.
27.
28.
30.
4 or 2
2
Course.
W.N.W.
N.W.
N.W.
N.N.W.
S.
N.
N.W.
31']
To 2wints subsequently
were applied.
visited,
no names
147
Passing
large towns and uniformly hospitable.
Point Concepcion, they turned northward to the site
on which San Luis Obispo now stands.
On the 18th
of August they passed a village called
Laguria de la
in
the
of
what
is
now
Santa Ba/rConcepcion
vicinity
many
148
was
San
6
Joaquin de la Laguna by these first explorers.
few leagues farther, and in several other places, there
were noticed large cemeteries, those of the men and
women being distinct as the gentle savages explained.
Over each grave a painted pole was set up bearing
the hair of the men, and those of the women being
adorned with coras, or grass baskets. Large whalebones were also a distinguishing feature of the burialgrounds.
Many of these graves have been opened
within the past few years, and the relics thus brought
to light have created in local circles quite a flutter of
and to races long since extinct. On the 24th a seagull was killed and the place called San Luis by the
padres was christened La Gaviota by the soldiers
very many localities along the route being thus doubly
named, whence perhaps the name Gaviota Pass of
modern maps. Near Point Concepcion the natives
displayed beads of European make, said to have been
Here a lean and wornobtained from the north.
out mule was left to recuperate under Indian care.
Crespi's latitudes for the channel coasts were too high,
Costanso's observavarying from 34 30' to 34 51'.
tions placed Point Concepcion in 34 30', about 5' too
After turning the point the natives were
far north.
and
less numerous, but were still friendly.
poorer
On the 30th a large stream was crossed on a sand-bar
This was
at its mouth which "served as a bridge."
the Rio Santa Ines, 7 called at its discovery Santa Rosa,
and on September 1st the camp was pitched at the
Laguna de San Daniel, probably at the mouth of the
Rio Santa Maria. Next day Sergeant Ortega was
6
149
ill,
still
applied at this
From San
150
to be identified. It is
therefore determined to stop here for exploration.
October 1st the governor, engineer, and Crespi, with
five soldiers climb a hill, "from the
top of which,"
writes the friar, "we saw the great entrance, and conjectured that it was the one which Cabrera Bueno
That
is
wondering where
is
8
Cypress Point is not noticed in this exploration; but it is certain that if
tho bighiTnow visited, were not Carmelo
Bay, that bay would have been found
raid mentioned later when the
attempt was made again to find a shore route
southward.
151
wood
tent at the mouth of the Salinas River, a meetall the officers and friars is held to deliberate
on what shall be done. At this meeting the commandant briefly calls attention to the scarcity of provisions, to the seventeen men on the sick-list unfit for
duty, to the excessive burden of labor imposed on
those who are well in sentinel duty and continual
reconnoissances, and to the lateness of the season. In
view of these circumstances and of the fact that the
port of Monterey could not be found where it had
been supposed to lie, 9 each person present is called
upon to express freely his opinion. The decision of
ing of
Monterey we
all
perish,
we
shall still
have
fulfilled
'
arroyo; what should be a port is only a little ensc-nada; what were great lakes
are lagumllas; and yet to go on and find another Sierra de Sta Lucia would
take time; 11 men were sick, and only 50 costalcs of flour remained. Costanso gave his opinion first: that they were in only 30 42', while Monterey
was in 37 or perhaps more; they should not fail to explore up to 37 30' so as
either to find the port or to be sure of its non-existence. Fages followed and
also favored going on to 37 or a little more, as the port had certainly not
'
been passed, and they had not yet reached its latitude. Then Rivera, who
did not seem to think Monterey would be found, since it was not where it
ought to be, but thought they should establish themselves somewhere, but
not where they then were. Then Portold decided to rest 6 days, go on as
far as possible, and then select the most eligible place for a. settlement if
Monterey did not appear. All agreed in writing to this plan, including,
padres Gomez and Crespi.
152
It is and must ever remain more or less inexplicable that the Spaniards should have failed at this
time to identify Monterey. All that was known of
that port had resulted from Vizcaino's visit, and
this knowledge was in the hands of the explorers in
The dethe works of Venegas and Cabrera Bueno.
10
and in
scription of landmarks was tolerably clear,
fact these landmarks had been readily recognized by
Portola's party at their first arrival on the bay shore.
Moreover, the advantages of the harbor had not been
very greatly exaggerated, both Torquemada, as quoted
by Venegas, and Cabrera Bueno having called Monte-
'
'
OCCURRED.
153
remove the
far as
difficulty altogether, especially so
First, the
importance.
it
Serra mentioned in one of his letters the same opinion founded on the great
sand dunes foimd where the port ought to be. Id., 92. Fages says: 'We
knewiiou if the place where we were was that of our destination; still after
having carefully examined it and compared it with the relations of the ancient
voyagers, wo resolved to continue our march ; for after having taken the latitude, we found that we were only in 3G 44', while, according to the reports
of the pilot, Cabrera Bueno, Monterey should be in 37, and so serious an
The conerror was not supposable on the part of a man of well known skill.
figuration of the coast did not agree either with the relations which served us
as a guide.' Voy. en CaL, 328-9.
Rivera simply says: 'We went in the expedition by land to San Diego and Monterey, and having failed to recognize
the latter we proceeded in search of it till we came to San Francisco, whence
for want of provisions we returned and the whole expedition slept two nights
'
in Monterey itself and encamped several days on the Rio Carmelo. St. Pap. ,
Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 52-3.
According to Ortega, 'On October 5th or
Gth \ve reached Pt Pinos, and according to the indications of Capt, Vizcaino
and the piloto Cabrera Bueno and our latitude as well-^we should have
thought ourselves already at Monterey; but not finding the shelter and protection ascribed by them to the port caused us to doubt, since we saw a bight
over twelve leagues across with no shelter except for small craft at the point,
although the said bight is large enough to hold thousands of vessels, but with
little projection from some winds.' Fragmento, MS., 52.
154
'
Luego que
lei
;i
de Monterey en el parade
hasta Ik-gar ;;1 Puerto dc N.
la expedition el puerto
fit,
it
was a
88,
miracle.
Gleeson,
JJixt.
< '<{?//.
Ch.,
ii.
155
among
13
Vail fjo, IIht. Cat, MS., i. 39-42; Alvarado, Hist. CaL, MS., i. 19-20;
All have heard from Ignacio Vallejo and
(J. /".), liemin., MS., 66-7.
others of his time that Portola was supposed to have passed Monterey intenVril.'"jrj
tionally.
14
He
men more
fully than
says 10 lost the use of their limbs. Each night they were
rubbed with oil and each morning were fastened to the tijeras, a kind of
wooden frame, and raised to the 1 jacks of the mules. The rain however
others.
brought some
relief.
Fragmento, MS.
150
where the
hills
It
i&
It
16
15
Mr Doyle, Address 7, makes it Corral de Tierra, or Pillar Point, at the
northern extremity of Half Moon Bay. I do not know if this was a deliberately formed opinion; but my reasons for identifying Mussel Point with San
Pedro are: 1st, the detached rocks or farallones not found in connection with
the other points, see Gal. State GeoL frurv. Map of region adjacent to 8. F. 1367;
2d, the hills cutting off the shore passage as they do not at Pillar Point, see Id. ;
3d, the clear view of Drake Bay and the Farallones, etc.; and 4th, the fact
that in order to put in the number of leagues they did going south along the
Canada they must have crossed at San Pedro rather than at Pillar, especially,
if as Doyle
suggests, their last camp was no farther south- than Searsville.
There are, however, some clifficiilties.
10
For this author's full description of this region see chap. iii. this volume.
,
157
in the
minds of
port
if
he wants a mission." 18
17
158
cisQO in 1709, also tell us that he named it. See Gleeson's Hist. Cath. Ch., ii.
38; Capron's Hist. Cal., 122; Soule's Annals of S. F., 40, etc.; but the inner
bay was not named for some years, and the outer bay had been named long
before. That confusion still reigns in the minds of the best writers is shown
by the following from HittelCs Hist. S. Francisco, 41: 'The Spanish explorers,
Portold and Crespi, did not imagine that they had made a discovery. T':; y
saw that the harbor was different from that of Monterey, described by Viz-
harbor of San Francisco, and he gave to them the name which they
now
bear.
'
159
A few of
country
is
beautiful.
It
160
first explored the peninsula on which stands the commercial metropolis of the west coast of North America; probably also that of having discovered what is
now known as the Golden Gate, and possibly that of
being the discoverer of the bay, for he .may have
climbed the hills on his way north and have looked
down on the 'brazo de mar/ before the deer-hunters
saw it. 20 Yet we have no details of Ortega's exploration, because he comes back with one idea
which has driven all others from his mind, and which
indeed turns the thoughts of the whole company into
He has understood the natives, of
a new channel.
whom he found some on the peninsula, to say that
at the head of the 'brazo de mar' is a harbor, and in
it a vessel at anchor.
Visions of the San Jose and of the food and other
necessaries they can now obtain float before them
Some think that after all they
sleeping and waking.
are indeed at Monterey.
Obviously the next thing
Henc
to be done is to seek that harbor and vessel.
on the 4th of November they break camp and set
out, at first keeping along the shore, but soon turning
inland and crossing the hills north-eastward, the
whole company looking down from the summit upon
the inland sea, and then descending into a Canada,
down which they follow southward for a time and
then encamp; the day's march being only about five
or six miles in all. They have crossed the San Bruno
hills from just above Point San Pedro to the head
of the Canada in a course due west from Milbrae.
Next day they march down the same Canada, called
20
It must also be noted that among Fages' volunteers there was a Sergeant
Puig who may possibly be entitled to all this honor, but probably not.
ON THE PENINSULA.
161
selves
in sight,
but no
I.
11
162
this reconnoissance
decision are in favor of immediate return, since supplies are reduced to fourteen small sacks of flour, while
the cold is excessive and snow begins to cover the
hills.
Meanwhile two mulatto arrieros desert, and on
21
The record of this junta and of the former one of Nov. llth were
cluded in the original Porlold, Diario, MS., but are not in the copy.
in-
163
commander
of any ves-
conquest of California.
22
cubs killed furnishing material for a feast. January 3d, passed Point Concepcion. 4th, another fat mule restored by the natives. Food now abundant,
llth, at Asmnpta, or Santa Barbara.
January 12th to loth, instead of going
up the Santa Clara River, they took a more southern route. They could not
get through by the first route tried, on which they named the Triunfo rancheria, a name that seems to have survived; but they finally crossed by the
modern stage route via Simi. January 16th to 18th, their route through the
Los Angeles region was also different but not very clear. On the 17th they
crossed the Rio Porciuncula and went to a valley which they called Sau
Miguel, where San Gabriel mission afterwards stood; and next day they
crossed the Rio Santa Ana 6 long leagues distant.
CHAPTER
VII.
make a
for the
little
105
20th being
The friars,
was
really
Monterey.
Furthermore
it
is
said
plies, in
2
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
166
Meanwhile
at
officers
were
COMING OF RELIEF.
thereafter the
167
He made
haste
Monterey with
Serra and Crespi, setting out overland April 17th,
after despatching the San Antonio northward the day
before.
168
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
Let us turn again toward the north with the expeditions sent out by land and sea to renew the search
for Monterey. The San Antonio sailed from San Diego
April 16th, having on board besides Perez and crewMiguel del Pino being second officer Junipero Serra,
5
Miguel Costanso, Pedro Prat, and a cargo of stores
for a new mission. Next day Portola set out by land,
his company consisting of Fages with twelve Catalan volunteers and seven soldados de cuera, Padre
Crespi, two muleteers, and five natives. They followed
the same route as before, recovered in the Sierra de
Santa Lucia an Indian who had deserted on the former
trip, and finally encamped on the 24th of May near
the spot where they had left the second cross the
winter before on the bay shore. They found the cross
still
standing, but curiously surrounded and adorned
with arrows, sticks, feathers, fish, meat, and clams
evidently deposited there by the savages as offerings
to the strangers' fetich. And later when the natives
3
169
170
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
171
with Serra.
few humble huts were at once
erected on a site surveyed by Costanso, a gunshot
from the beach and three times as far from the port,
on an inlet which communicated with the bay at high
water. These buildings constituted both presidio and
ister
it is
said
A soldier
Armona
main.
anc
id that other
172
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
commandant
is
that of
used with more propriety
Portold came to Lower California in 1768 as governor, the first the peninhad ever had; but when he volunteered to take command in person of
the northern expedition, it seems that Armona was appointed to succeed him
in the governorship. I do not know the exact date of Armona's appointment,
but he arrived at Loreto in June 1769, and went back to the mainland tv/o
weeks later without having taken possession of his office. In the mean time
Gonzalez ruled as a kind of lieutenant-governor or military commandant until
relieved in October 1769 by Toledo, who governed in the same capacity until
Armona, who had failed to get his resignation accepted, returned in June
1770 to rule until November, Moreno ruling, in much the same capacity
apparently as Gonzalez and Toledo, until the arrival of Gov. Barri in March
Now while Gonzalez, Toledo, and Moreno cannot be properly credited
1771.
with any authority in Upper California, their terms as interinos render it
difficult to define those of the proprietary governors.
Thus, though Portola
was in a sense governor of the Californias down to June 1770, since no regular successor had taken possession of the office, I have named him in my list
of rulers of Alta California as commandant from the first settlement down
to July 9, 1770.
In Monterey, Estracto de Noticias, he is called comandante
sula
en gefe.
9
Rivera and his men were expected to march to Monterey on their return
from the peninsula, but for some unexplained reason, possibly dissatisfaction
at Fages' appointment to the chief command. Rivera remained at San Diego.
According to Monterey, Estracto de Notlcias, Fages had a force of over 30
men besides Rivera's force, which is an error.
173
We
name
Immediate and
liberal pro-
were furnished. 10
These arrangements were all made within six days
after the news arrived, and under the date of August
16th the viceroy caused to be printed in the government printing-office for general circulation a re'sume
in pamphlet form of all that had been accomplished
by the northern expeditions, the present condition
of the new presidios and missions, and of what had
10
The 10 were Antonio Paterna, president en route, Antonio Cruzado,
Buenaventura Sitjar, Domingo Juncosa, Francisco Dumetz, Jose" Caballer,
Angel Somera, Luis Jaume, Miguel Pieras, and Pedro Benito Cambon. They
were to receive each a stipend of $275 a year, and $400 travelling expenses.
Each new mission received 1.000 and the necessary vestments, including a
174
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
At Monterey
was
For want of
11
Monterey, Estracto de Notldas del Puerto de Monterey, de la Mision, y
Presido que se han establecldo en el con la denomination de San Cdrfos, y del
sucesso de las dos Expedldones de Mar, y Tlerra que a, este Jin se despachar^n
en el ano proximo anterior de 1769.
Mexico 16 de Agosto de 1770. Con
licencia y orden. del Ex m Senor Virrey.
En la Iinprenta del Superior Govierno. Fol., 3 unnumbered leaves. This rare tract is in my collection, and it
is reprinted also in Palou's Noticias.
When this notice was printed the
despatches from Loreto had not yet arrived.
12
Palou, Vida, 113-10, says she sailed Jan. 2d.
13
Letter dated Nov. 12th, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 69-71.
14
1st. That the commandants at San Diego and Monterey be made to obey
more closely the instructions of Galvez. (There had been some disagreement
with the friars in connection with the desertion of an arriero. ) 2d. That some
families of Christian natives be sent up from Baja California to serve as
laborers.
3d. That a guard or presidio be established at San Buenaventura.
4th. That these natives be kindly treated.
5th. That the train of mules be
increased for service from Sonora and the peninsula. 6th. That presidios and
missions be supplied for 18 months by the service of two snows. 7th. That
San Francisco be explored, Monterey being as some say no harbor. 9th. That
mission temporalities should be wholly under control of the friars, with the
power of removing servants and officials. 14th. Vessels for Monterey should
sail in February or
15th.
proper llmosna, or allowance, should be
April.
granted to friars going or coming. 16th. San Diego, Monterey, and San
Buenaventura should have the $1,000 allowed to new missions. 18th. Soldiers should be supplied with rations so as to be able to do escort duty. Palou,
Not., L 120-3.
175
Californian
dialect
the native
preaching soon
learned
first
baptism was
administered.
padres available.
1G
Alvarado, Hist. CaL, MS., i. 22, mentions some writings of the soldier
B. Valde"s to the effect that the Baja California-US conversed readily with
the Eslenes, and he is disposed to believe after much inquiry that the language
was to some extent understood. Vallejo, Ilirt. Cat., MS., i. 55-6, names the
interpreter Maximiano, and states that the Eslen chief lived near the spring
called Agua Zarca on what was later the rancho of Guadalupe Avila.
Unfortunately the first book of baptisms for San Carlos has been lost, and the
The first burial
exact number of converts for the early years is not known.
was on the day of founding June 3d, when AlejoNino one of the San Antonio's
crew was buried at the foot of the cross. According to Palou, Not., i. 451,
he was a calker; the mission record makes himacadete. The first interment
in the cemetery was that of Ignacio Ramirez, a mulatto slave from the San
There were four
Antonio, who had money ready to purchase his freedom.
more deaths during the year, three of sailors and one of a Baja Californian.
The first marriage did not take place till Nov. 16, 1772. San Cdrlos, Lib. de
writer in the Revista Cientifica,
Mision, MS., 84; Taylor's Odds and Ends, 4.
i.
328, tells us that the mission of Carmen or Monte Carmelo was founded
June 3d on the gulf of Carmelo, but never progressed much.
newspaper
item extensively circulated speaks of an Indian woman still living in 1869
who was the mother of two children when the mission church was built.
Shea, Cath. Mis*., 94, calls the mission Monte Carmel. Tuthill, Hist. CaL,
80-1 says that Portold retired by water and Rivera by land, leaving Junipero
with 5 friars and Pages with 30 soldiers.
J.
176
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
San Antonio
for
San Diego,
"The distribution was as follows: San Diego, Luis Jaume and Francisco
Dumetz; San Buenaventura, Antonio Paterna and Antonio Cruzado; San Luis
Obispo, Domingo Juncosa and Jos< Cavalier; San Gabriel, Angel Somcrti and
Pedro Benito Cambon; San Antonio, Miguel Pieras and Buenaventura Sitjar;
San Carlos, Junipero Serra and Juan Crespi.
18
The native name of the site was Texhaya according to Dept. St. Pap.
Ben. Mil., MS., Ixxxi. 49, or Sextapay according to Taylor, note on the fly,
'
177
Soon
13th.
21
P. Serra in his Representation, MS., of May 21, 1773, says the work of
building was hurried to get ready for farming, and that it was hindered by
Fages taking away the best soldiers. Eight mules were left at the mission.
22
Nov. 12, 1770, Viceroy Croix writes to Fages that San Carlos mission is
to be established on the Rio Carmelo with a sufficient guard of soldiers. Prov.
St.
Pop., MS.,
i. 70.
HIST. GAL. VOL.
I.
12
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
178
Perez
23
Vallejo and Alvarado, as I have already noted, insist. on regarding this
as the veritable founding of the mission.
Taylor, in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20,
1860, says the transfer was in 1772 and that the mission became known as
San Carlos Borromeo del Carmelo do Monterey.
21
Serra, San Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS., 7, says however that Parron
went, apparently by land, to Baja California; and Palou, Vida, 129, says he
went with a party by land, of which party nothing further is known.
179
after
25
tives.
first
commandant not
MS.,
i.
72.
Palou, Not., i. 477. The same author in his Vida, 129-30, implies that
the site selected was on the Rio de los Temblores.
27
Palou
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
180
ites
The Archangel Gabriel has a place in several religions. To the Israelhe was the angel of death; according to the Talmud he was the prince of
and ruled the thunder. He set fire to the temple of Jerusalem; appeared
announced to Mary the birth of Christ; and dictated
The last-named prophet describes him very fully,
mentioning among other things 500 pairs of wings, the distance from one wing
to another being 500 years' journey.
His day in the church calendar is
March 18th. The mission was often called San Gabriel de los Temblores, the
latter word like Carmelo with San Cdrlos indicating simply locality.
It had
been intended to mean San Gabriel on the River Temblores, but when another
site was selected the name was retained meaning 'San Gabriel iu the region of
Earthquakes, as San Gabi-iel de San Miguel would have been awkward. See
The
Serra, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 118; S. Gabriel Lib. de Mision, MS.
author of Los Anf/eles JJixt., 5, is in error when he says that the San Gabriel
River was called Temblores. The mission was not moved to its present site
until several years later. Arch. Santa Barbara, MS., i. 131; Reid, Lou Angeles
Co., Ind., No. 17. San Gabriel was the only mission at the founding of which
Serra had not assisted, and this was because Fages failed to notify him, as he
had promised. Serra, Rupres., 21 deMayo, MS., 118.
29
According to Hugo Reid, Los Angeles Co. Ind., No. 16, who derived his
information from traditions, the natives were greatly terrified at the first sight
of the Spaniards; women hid; men put out the fires. They thought the strangers gods when they saw them strike fire from a flint, but seeing them kill a
bird, they put them down as human beings 'of a nasty white color with ugly
blue eyes;' and later, as no violence was done, they called them chichinabros,
or 'reasonable beings.' Women used by the soldiers were obliged to undergo
a long purification, and for a long time every child with white blood in its
veins was strangled. Food given by the white men was buried in the woods.
Drown sugar was long regarded as the excrement of the new-comers.
lire
'
'
'
The
181
fugitive assailants
51
who had
OCCUPATION OF MONTEREY.
182
women
interfere.
in his
32
own
favor.
33
82
Representation de 21 de Mayo 1773, MS. Reform seems to have dated
from a change of corporals, which probably took place late in 1772.
33
In May 1771 he was at Santa Gertrudis. St. Pap. Mis. and Col., MS., i.
52.
On the period covered by this chapter see Palou, Not., i. 98-107, 120-3,
CHAPTER
PROGRESS OF THE
NEW
VIII.
ESTABLISHMENTS.
1772-1773.
EVENTS OF 1 772 SEARCH FOR THE PORT OF SAN FRANCISCO CRESPI'S DIARY
FIRST EXPLORATION or SANTA CLARA, ALAMEDA, AND CONTRA COSTA
COUNTIES FAGES DISCOVERS SAN PABLO BAY, CARQUINES STRAIT, AND
SAN JOAQTJIN RIVER RELIEF SENT SOUTH HARD TIMES AT MONTEREY
LIVING ON BEAR-MEAT FACES AND SERRA Go SOUTH FOUNDING OF SAN
Luis OBISPO EVENTS AT SAN DIEGO A QUARREL BETWEEN COMMANDANT
AND PRESIDENT SERRA GOES TO MEXICO CESSION OF LOWER CALIFORNIAN MISSIONS TO DOMINICANS NEW PADRES FOR THE NORTHERN ESTABLISHMENTS PALOU'S JOURNEY TO SAN DIEGO AND MONTEREY IN 1773.
THE year 1772 was marked by an important exploration of new territory in the north. It added a mission to the four already founded, brought three friars
to reenforce Serra's band of workers, and saw .arrangements completed for a larger reinforcement through
the yielding-up of the peninsular missions to the excluYet it was a
sive control of the Dominican order.
and
of
much
of
little
year
hardship it was a
progress
of
of
unfortunate
year
disagreetardy supply-vessels,
ments between the Franciscans and the military chief
disagreements which carried the president in person to
Mexico to plead for reforms before Viceroy Bucareli,
who had succeeded Croix in the preceding autumn.
The San Antonio on her last trip had brought
orders from the viceroy to Fages, requiring him to
explore by sea or land the port of San Francisco, and,
acting in accord with Serra, to establish a mission
there, with a view to secure the harbor from foreign
;
aggression.
1
Dated Nov. 12, 1770, in Prov.
Fages at Monterey in May 1771.
St.
Pap., MS.,
i.
70.
It
was received by
(183)
184
PROGRESS OF THE
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
ration
peninsula to their left having been previously explored, and the object being to pass round the great
inlet and reach San Francisco under Point Reyes,
Fages continues to the right along the foot-hills between the shore and Coast Range.
His camp on Wednesday the 25th is beside a large
stream, called by him San Salvador de Horta, now
2
Palou, Vida, 134-5, says that Serra proposed the exploration and Fages
consented. This is probably accurate enough in a certain sense; but the friars
had a noticeable habit of claiming for themselves all the credit for each movement, and omitting any mention of secular orders ajjcl agencies an omission
that evidently did not always result from forgetfulness.
3
Crespi, Diario que se form6 en el registro que se hizo del puerlo de Ntro.
P. San Francisco, in Palou, Not., i. 481-501.
brief resume of the same
exploration is given in Id., ii. 46. Among modern writers, Ilittell, Jlixt.
San Francisco, has given a brief and inaccurate account from Crespi's diary.
DISCOVERY OF ALAMEDA.
Alameda Creek,
135
Next
day deer and bears are plentiful, and traces are seen
of animals which the friar imagines to be buffaloes,
but which the soldiers pronounce burros, or " jackass
Crossdeer," such as they had seen in New Mexico.
ing five streams, two large ones, now San Lorenzo
and San Leandro creeks, and two small ones, they
reach the Arroyo del Bosque, on a branch of the bay
which with another similar branch forms a peninsula,
bearing a grove of oaks the site of the modern town
of Alameda.
They are near the shore of San Leandro Bay, and probably on Brickyard Slough.
On
Friday's march they have to climb a series of low
hills, Brooklyn, or East Oakland, in order to get
round " an estuary which, skirting the grove, extends
some four or five leagues inland until it heads in the
sierra"- - San Antonio Creek and Merritt Lake.
Thence coming out into a great plain, they halt
about three leagues from the starting-point, opposite
the "mouth by which the two great estuaries communicate with the Ensenada de los Farallones"
that is, they stop at Berkeley and look out through
the Golden Gate, noting three islands in the bay. 4
Continuing a league the Spaniards encamp on what is
now Cerrito Creek, the boundary between Alameda
and Contra Costa counties.
For the next two days they follow the general
course of the bay coast, note "a round bay like a
San Pablo Bay large enough for "all
great lake"
the armadas of Spain," where they see whales spouting.
They are kindly received in what is now Pinole
"
bearded and of
Valley, by a ranch eria of gentiles,
very light complexion." They attempt to pass round
the bahia redonda, but are prevented by a narrow
estuary, the Strait of Carquines.
Journeying along
the treeless hills 'that form its' shores, they are hospitably treated at five large native villages, some even
*
One
of
party saw
it
PROGRESS OF THE
186
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
their junction
all very accurately described in the
diary.
Leaving the hills they pass on four or five
leagues across the plain to a small stream on which
trips.
187
it
father
San Francisco
from Point Almejas to Point Reyes across the Ensenada de los Farallones; or if by land, it was necessary
make a new
to
exploration
expedition
his reverence
letters
June
PROGRESS OF THE
188
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
At
make arrangements
Letter of Serra toPalou from Monterey, Aug. 18th, in Palou, Vida, 13G-9.
Saint Louis, bishop of Toulouse, son of Cbarles II. of Naples, was .born in
1275, became a Franciscan in 1294, died in 1298, and was canonized in 1317.
His day is August 19th. San Luis Obispo, Lib. de Mision, MS. Fages calls
the mission San Luis Obispo de los Tichos. Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 86. According to Arch. Obispado, MS., 83, the mission had at first only 50 Ibs. of
flour and 3 almudes of wheat, so that life had to be sustained by seeds obtained from the natives. Dec. 2, 1772, the viceroy writes to Fages approving
the founding of the mission in a spot where there is much good land and
plenty of game. Prov. St. Pap., MS. i. 76. Serra, in San Diego, Lib. de
Mi*ion, MS., strangely calls the mission which he founded at this time San
Luis Rey. The traditional old Indian woman who aided in building the mission church is not wanting at San Luis. According to newspaper items she
was named Lilila and died Aug. 1, 1874.
10
OBISPO.
189
supply- train.
movements during
Serra
11
now wishes
this trip.
to proceed
13
Serra had great hopes, but says he, let us leave time to tell the story in
the progress which I hope Christianity will make among them in spite of the
Enemy who already began to lash his tail (meter la cola) by means of a bad
soldier, who soon after arrival they caiight in actual sin with an Indian
woman, a thing which greatly grieved the poor padre.' /Serra, Repres. ~1 de
'
PROGRESS OF THE
100
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
and
At any rate a
between the two, respecting the
merits of which few details are known, but in the
course of which the hot-headed Fages, in the right at
first, may very likely have exceeded the bounds of
moderation and good taste; while the president,
14
soldiers should be sent to California.
15
'
n Palon, Vida, 146,
says that Serra consulted with comandante Fages
about an escort and other assistance necessary for the founding, but he found
the door closed, and that he (Fages) went oil giving such directions that if
they should be carried into effect, far from being able to found (the mission)
they threatened the risk of losing what it had cost so much work to accomplish. To prevent such a result, from which serious misfortunes might issue,
the venerable padre used all the means suggested by his great prudence and
well known skill; but in no way was he able to accomplish his purpose. The
same author in Noticias, i. 509-10, says: 'They spoke of the number of soldiers
who were to remain, and of the manner in which the mission was to be managed, because he (Fages) had already meddled in the government of the missions, already pretending that all belonged to him and not to the padres; so
'
if
Palou had alluded, in his Memorial of December 1772, to misunderstandMarch 18, 1772, the
ings between the military and missionary authorities.
viceroy in a letter to Fages, Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 74-5, urges him to maintain harmony, to listen to all complaints, to aid the padres with guards and
supplies, to treat converts well, and to promote the mission work in every
October 2d, Serra says to Fages that the padres arc unwilling
possible way.
to take charge of the troops' provisions, fearing quarrels, but will do it temporarily if military supplies be delivered in separate packages. Arch. ArzoOctober 8th, Fages transcribes to Serra a communication
bispado, MS., i. 3.
from the viceroy, dated November 3, 1771, on the duty of president and
The charges
191
embodied
his
exaggerated.
It was partly on account of this difficulty with
Fages that Serra determined to go in person to Mexico, but there were other motives that made such a
The mission work in California had
trip desirable.
now been fairly begun, and from the actual working
of the system the need of some changes had become
padres to set a good example by obedience to the orders of the commandant.
Id.
October 12th, Serra assures Fages that neither he nor his subordinates
ever have failed or ever will fail in respect to the commandant's orders. Id. 4.
Serra, Representation de 13 de Marzo 1773, in Palou, Not., i. 518-34,
He hints that he could say much worse things about his foe if it
passim.
were necessary. There is also much against Fages in Serra, liepres., de 21
de Mayo 1773, MS.
,
PROGRESS OF THE
192
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
San Buenaventura.
At
He
arrived at San Bias Nov. 4th, was at Tepic Nov. 10th, had very
and dangerous attacks of illness at Guadalajara and Quere^aro, and
fmally arrived in Mexico in February 1773. Serra, in Dandinl, Doc. Hist. Gal.
MS.. 1, says he went to Mexico to plead for the extension of missions, etc.
Fages in letter of Dec. 22, 1772, affirms that the padre left for Mexico on
severe
on Oct. 19th.
19
See Hist. North Mexican
103
left
San Diego.
However
that
I.
13
194
PROGRESS OF THE
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
the peninsula.
Palou was also authorized to take twenty-five nafrom the frontier missions for the northern
establishments, arid during the autumn of 1772 and
the spring of 1773, while occupied with the final details of the transfer, he made a beginning of the work,
meeting many obstacles through the lukewarmness
of the Dominicans and the open hostility of Governor
21
Barri.
In July while at Yelicatd, with six of his
he
received information from Campa that the
friars,
San Carlos had arrived at Loreto laden with supplies
for San Diego, which it was proposed to unload at
Loreto while the vessel returned to 'San Bias for repairs.
Foreseeing that this delay was likely to cause
want
in the new missions, the president resolved
great
to suspend his recruiting and press on to San Diego
immediately with all the maize his mules could carry.
tive families
20
The eight were: Francisco Palou, Pedro Benito Cambon, Gregorio AnrarFermin Francisco Lasuen, Juan Prestamero, Vicente Fuster, Jos6 AntqmoMnrgiiia, Miguel de la Campa y Cos.
21
Yet Barri writes to Fages Jan. 7, 1773, that he has sent up 30 horses and
40 mules, all he could collect in the peninsula. Prov. Stab. Pap., MS., i. 138.
rio,
195
22
The cross bore the inscription, Division de las misiones de Nuestro Padre
Santo Domingo y de Niiestro Padre San Francisco; ano de 1773.
23
The missionary force after this distribution was as follows: San Diego
Luis Jaume, Vicente Fuster, and Gregorio Anmrrio as supernumerary'. San..
PROGRESS OF THE
196
NEW
ESTABLISHMENTS.
own
included.
VISIT TO
THE TULARES.
197
It is recorded that some time during 1773 Comandante Fages, while out in search of deserters,
crossed the sierra eastward and saw an immense plain
covered with tulares and a great lake, whence came as
he supposed the great river that had prevented him
from going to Point Reyes. This may be regarded
Thus close
as the discovery of the Tulare Valley.
the somewhat meagre annals of an uneventful year,
so far as internal affairs in California are concerned,
i.
CHAPTER
FIRST
IX.
PALOU'S REPORT OF DECEMBER, AND SERRA'S IN MAY CONDITION or CALIFORNIA AT CLOSE OF THE FIRST HISTORICAL PERIOD NAMES APPLIED
PRESIDIO AND FIVE MISSIONS BAPTISMS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS
The
second
is
first
document
is
referred to in Id.,
i.
9.
(198)
FIRST
ANNUAL REPORTS.
199
'
'
Exo
Senor
Palou, Informe queporel mes de diciemlre de 1773 se hizo al
Virey del estado de las cinco misiones de Monterey, in Palou, Not., ii. 11-42.
in
the
on
his
to
Nov.
30,
Viceroy
Fages,
Voyage en Cal. a report addressed
1775, used this first report of Palou, to which he, however, gives the date of
Nov. 24th, instead of Dec. 10th.
3
Scrra, Representation del P. Fr. Junipero Serra sobrc las Misiones de la
Nueva California, 21 de Mayo de 1773, MS. This report is in two parts, one
respecting the needs of the country from a military point of view, and the
other on the actual condition of the missions.
4
It is to be noted that Palou in his report does not name San Diego as a
presidio, and there is no evidence that it was in these earliest years considered
as such except in the sense that every post guarded by soldiers, like any of
the missions, is spoken of as a presidio. San Diego had no larger regular force
than some other missions. It became, however, a regular presidio in 1774 when
the new reglamento went into effect.
,
230
Diego de
in 32
Alcald, at
43', built
on a
San Fernando
5
This is the first application of the name Los Angeles to this region, and ia
doubtless the origin of the name as afterward applied to the pueblo and city.
c
See note 23, chap. viii. of this volume.
7
full description of the mission system in all its parts and workings will
be given elsewhere; also of the presidio or military system, and of civil gov-
ernment.
201
men
proper.
The matter
reports of Palou
and
place.
10
So say the general reports; yet the mission baptismal register shows a
34 baptisms in 1772 and 4 in 1773.
total of
202
11
That the irregular conduct of the soldiers was one of the chief obstacles
to missionary success there can be little doubt; yet it is not likely that the
comandante was so much to blame as Serra says. His dislike for Fages colors
his report.
Have misfortunes of any kind occurred at a mission, they were
'
entirely due to the mismanagement of a certain official;' has another mission
been prosperous, it was in spite of that mismanagement.
12
According to Serra nearly all in the rancheria that had formerly attacked
the mission had been converted. The oficial was displeased that so many
had been baptized, and he had wished to remove the natives to a distance on
pretence of danger to the presidio, but Serra had objected strenuously and
every one else ridiculed the proposal
'
'
PRE-PASTORAL ARCHITECTURE.
203
is
13
They had
204
But
PRIMITIVE AGRICULTURE.
205
Next
with every
Though the
first
Palou, Not., i. 240-1. The place must have been near the site of the
Serra says it was the crop of 1772 that was destroyed by flood,
only 8 fanegas being saved.
later mission.
206
San Gabriel
alone.
Some memoranda of
farmers' and
Having thus
American
17
ment.
16
and
new
letter
25, 1774, received July 6th, and answered July 28th; but there is
resume" with extracts of
nothing of importance in this correspondence.
Palou's report was published in the 8. F. Bulletin, Oct. 12, 1865. In San
Gabriel, Lib. cle Mision, MS., 6-8, is a circular letter addressed to the padres
of California by Palou, requiring each of them, or each pair of them, at the
end of every December to send in full reports of their respective missions to
the president, from which he might form his general report to the viceroy,
since it would be impossible for him to visit each mission annually. This letter was dated San Gabriel, Oct. 9, 1773, while the writer was at work on his
of
May
first report.
i;
REGLAMENTO DE
PRESIDIOS.
207
the presidios of California are to continue for the present on their actual footing according to the provisions
made by my viceroy after the conquest and reduction
had been extended to the port of Monterey; and on
the supposition that he has provisionally assigned the
annual sum of thirty-three thousand dollars for the
needs and protection of that peninsula, I order and
command that this sum be still paid at the end of
each year from the royal treasury of Guadalajara, as
has been done of late; and that my viceroy sustain
and aid by all possible means the old and new establishments of said province, and inform me of all that
he may deem conducive and useful to tlleir progress,
and to the extension of the new reductions of gentile
,
Indians." 18
President Serra, having left California in the preceding September, arrived at the city of Mexico in
February 1773. The objects of his visit were to see
to it that California was not neglected through ignorance or indifference on the part of the new viceroy,
to urge certain general measures for the
good of his
his
of
the
province suggested by
experience
past five
to
rid
of
the
his
bitter
years,
commandant, Fages,
get
foe and the cause, from the friar's
of
view, of all
point
that was not pure prosperity in the missions, and to
procure such regulations as would prevent similar
troubles with future commandants by putting all the
power into the friars' hands and reducing the military
element to a minimum. 19 He found Bucareli not
less favorably
disposed than had been his predecessor
and
was
Croix,
by him instructed to prepare a memoin
which
were
to be embodied his views on the
rial,
at
issue.
questions
Being authorized to do so by his
the
superior,
guardian of San Fernando, and having
18
Monwith
padres and that Serra had left on business connected with his work. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., i. 86.
It seems strange that Serra did not get this certificate
at his departure if
necessary, and that Fages should have sent it voluntarily,
for there was no time to send back for it.
208
>
MEASURES ADVOCATED.
209
might be avoided;
The document had, however, previously, March 16th to April 5th, been
hands of the fiscal Areche, whose report was favorable; and had then been
in the
I.
11
210
military commandant should be instructed to preserve perfect harmony with the padres; 24 property
arid letters for the friars or missions were to be forwarded separately instead of being enclosed to the
24
This was hardly what had been asked for by Serra, who wished officers
soldiers notified that the entire management of the Indians belonged
exclusively to the padres, and that the military had no right to interfere in
matters of discipline or punishment except in the case of delltos de sangre.
The junta was very careful not to commit itself very decidedly in the quarrel
between Serra and Pages. The viceroy, however, in subsequent instructions
came nearer to Serra's views.
and
ECHEVESTE'S EEGULATIONS.
211
To meet
this expense
27
25
May 12th, the viceroy decreed the execution of the junta's resolutions,
the issuance of the necessary orders, and the preparation of records in
duplicate.
May 13th, the secretary Gorraez certifies the delivery of a copy
to Serra.
May 14th, a certified copy was made for the king. Copin de lo
dtterminado por la Heal Junta de Guerra y Real Hacienda, in Palou, S~ot. i.,
540-53; also in Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 89.
20
Reglamento e instruction provisional para el auxilio y conservation de Io8
nuevos y antiguas establecimientos de las Californias con el departamento de San
The printed copy is, however,
s, etc., MS. ; also in Palou, Not^i., 556-71.
full of errors in
Also in Arch. Col., St. Pap. Ben., MS., 1-24.
figures.
21
in
Palou's printed copy.
This part of the reglamento is omitted
212
28
office
DISTRIBUTION OF FORCES.
213
was not
friar's
them by the
31
regulation.
On May 2Gth the viceroy addressed to Fages a
series of instructions, provisional in their nature, pend-
These
ing the final approval of the regulations.
instructions covered the same ground as the decision
of the junta on May 6th, but also granted two additional requests of Serra by authorizing Fages to issue
a pardon to all deserters in California; and to replace
with new men such soldiers as had families far away,
from whom they had been long separated/'32
29
It is to be noticed that no mention
these calculations.
30
The idea of moving San Diego mission
though nothing is said of it here.
is
made
of San Francisco in
any
of
Zl
on June 10th.
Serra had asked for
Bucareli, Providendas de 26 de Mayo 1773, MS.
leave of absence in behalf of eight soldiers either on account of long separation from their wives, or unfitness for duty. From several of these he brought
fiscal
214
FIXAL RESULTS.
215
geon.
this
35
216
of August.
These instructions in forty-two articles
are long and complete, 38 and some portions will be
given more fully elsewhere when I come to treat of
The purport of
the institutions to which they refer.
the document is as follows
Copies of the regulations and action of the board
are enclosed.
Great confidence is felt in Rivera's
:
etc.
Dwindles
INSTRUCTIONS TO THE
NEW
RULER.
217
name
218
He
same
is
in
August, Bucareli also authorized Captain Juan Bautista de Anza to attempt the overland route from
Sonora to Monterey, and that officer after some delays
began his march from Tubac in the following January.
Early
in
re-
And now
219
vice-
is still
in
command.
The regular
supplies
San
Antonio, to
sail later.
42
41
The articles officially granted were: 3 cases of vestments for San Gabriel,
San Antonio, and San Luis, 5 nests, or sets, of measures, 6 in each, one forge
with appurtenances, and 5 quintals, 3 arrobas of iron. The limosna to suffice
for 5 years was 5 packages of cloths for Indians as follows: 107 blankets, 29
pieces mania poblana, 488 yds striped sackcloth, 389 yds blue baize, 10 Ibs
blue maguey cloth for little girls; also 4 reams fine paper, 5 bales red pepper,
100 arrobas tasajo, 16 boxes panocha, 4 boxes beads, 10 boxes hams, 6 boxes
chocolate, 3 bbls lard, 9 bales lentils, 1 bale and 9 jugs olive-oil, 4 bbls Caatilian wine, 3 bbls brandy, 9 bales chickpeas, 6 bales rice, 160 bales flour,
900 fanegas maize, 250 fanegas beans. Palou, Not., i. 603-5.
42
Respecting Serra's work in Mexico in addition to the authorities cited,
see Palou, Vida, 150-9.
It is related that when Serra arrived in San Bias
from California and saw the Santiago in the dock-yard, he remarked that ho
would return in her, a remark that excited some ridicule, because everybody
thought the San Bias establishment on the point of being abandoned.
CHAPTEK
X.
RECORD OF EVENTS.
1774.
WANT IN THE
'
1
cruelisima hambre,' Palou calls it, Vida, 153, 159-60, the greatest ever
experienced. No bread, no chocolate, only miHoand herbs salted by tears.'
Milk had to be eaten by all from the commandant down. They had some
very strange ideas of what constituted a famine. Soup of peas or beans took
the place of tortillas, and coffee had to do instead of chocolate. The natives
all left the mission to seek for food. Id., JNot. t i. COS.
'
(220)
221
offered to
make the
162-3.
3
According to one of the two chief authorities Sebastian had started from
San Gabriel with his parents and wife, all of whom had perished.
222
chief, entertained
RECORD OF EVENTS.
the Spaniards at his rancheria at
4
One of the channels no longer carries water, and perhaps did so then only
at high water.
In Kino's map of 1701 San Dionisio is not represented as an>
island.
Emory, Notes, 95-6, in 1846 noted that the Gila once flowed to the
south of its present channel, and says: 'During freshets it is probable the
rivers now discharge their surplus waters through these old channels.' Another discovery of Anza is less intelligible. In a letter of Feb. 9th from San
Dionisio to the viceroy, Prov. St. Pap., MS., iii. 190-1, he says he had crossed
the Colorado and Gila, and had found a branch of the former extending north
and west, and entering probably the South Sea perhaps at San Francisco
Bay.
5
Padre Garce~s claimed to have been in this region, the north-east section
Baja California, in 1771; but the narrative of his trip in that year, in
Arridmta, Cron. Serdf., 420 et seq., does not show clearly that he crossed the
Colorado at all.
G
The most complete, and indeed the only, authority in print is Arricivita,
Crdnica Serdfica, 450 et seq. ; but it is very unsatisfactory. The best account
of the expedition seems to be Anza, Descubrimiento de Sonora a Californias
aiio de 1774, MS.
This appears to be an abridged copy of the original diary
made soon after the date of the expedition by some one who did not accompany it. The route was as follows, items from the return march being in
brackets: Feb. 9th. At junction of the Gila and Colorado, near the site ofthe
later Concepcion.
Feb. 10th to 12th. 5 1. W. N. (s.) w. and 4.5 1. s. w. and
s. to
Laguna de Sta Olaya, formed by the Colorado in time of flood. Lat.
32 34'. [According to the return trip Sta Olaya was 4 1. w. of the river and
8 1. w. s. w. of S. Dionisio, or Isla de Trinidad.] Feb. 13th to 19th. Off into
the desert and back to Sta Olaya. March 2d. 41. w. S. w. to
Laguna del
Predicador. Mar. 3d to 5th. 3 1. w. s. w.; 6.5 1. w. N. w.; 61. w. N.W. with
low sierra on left; 3 1. N. w. across the hills; 2 1. w. 1.5 1. N. and N. w. in sight
of an estero, to Pozos de San Eusebio.
Mar. 6th. 4 1. w. to Sto Tomas, in
middle of sierra. Mar. 7th and 8th. 41. N. w. and 1 1. N. E. to Pozos de Sta
Kosa de las Lajas (18 1. in a direct line from Sta OlayaV Mar. 9tk and 10th.
of
223
seem at
first
arrived at
The
San
to
Gabriel.
to report.
all
that
it
had
11
1.
[22
1.
1. N. w. to
Laguna de S. Antonio de Bucareli. Mar. 20th. 5 1. N, w.
w. N. w. to Rio Sta Ana. Mar. 21st. 7 1. w. N. w. to Arroyo de
Osos [or Alisos]. Mar. 22d. To S. Gabriel [10 1. w. and 5 1. w. N. w. from
S. Antonio].
See also, in chap. xii. of this volume, the account of Anza's
second trip.
7
On March 24th Anza was godfather to a child baptized by P. Diaz. S.
19th. 6 [5]
and
2.
1.
7.
RECORD OF EVENTS.
224
the
new
route.
8
Mofras, Explor. i. 282, mentions this expedition, giving the date of
starting incorrectly as Sept. 1773. See also brief account in Velasco, Sonora,
inSoc. Mex. Geog., Boletin, x. 704.
150;
u
She is called both fragata and corveta.
10
According to Perez, lldacion, they reached the Santa Bdrbara Islands on
March Gth. The northern group are named from west to east Santa Rosa
(San Miguel), Santa Margarita (Santa Rosa), Santa Cruz (still so called), and
San.to Tomas ( Anacapa). Thence they sailed southward between the coast and
,
M,
San Clemente, reaching San Diego March 10th (another copy makes -it March
llth), sailing April 5th, and arriving at Monterey May 8th. Palou, Vida, 153G'2,
11
CaL, MS.,
1.
225
new
office in
Diego.
The
means
I.
15
RECORD OF EVENTS.
226
him
all
sail
his
until the
word.
which
is
ground
NORTH-COAST EXPLORATIONS.
227
15
The San
adopted in Rivera's communications.
Antonio sailed from Monterey on July 7th, with
thirteen of the volunteers, and with Rafael Pedro y
Gil the new store-keeper for San Diego.
Fages
started by land with two soldiers on the 19th and
We
sailed on the 4th of August from San Diego.
Fathers
shall hear again from this gallant officer.
Prestarnero and Usson also sailed for San Bias on
the San Antonio, being forced to retire by ill-health.
his friend
the
first in
RECORD OF EVENTS.
228
lands.
18
For a full account of this voyage, with references to the original diaries,
see Hist. Northwest Coast, i. 150-8.
229
Two
approval was
Serra's eyes.
Diurio; Pefta, Diario, MS.; Perez, Relation, MS.; and Perez, Tabla Diario,
MS.
Serra, fiepres. 21 de
RECORD OF EVENTS.
2BO
was always better for a mission to be a little removed from presidio influences; and he had a report
from the natives confirmed by a soldier, of a very
favorable site some six or seven leagues distant across
21
sierra.
Jaume's letter of April 3d (or 30th), in Mayer MSS., No. 18, pp. 4, 5.
Bucareli, Instruction de 17 de Agoxto 1773, MS.
23
San Diego de Nipaguay that is, San Diego at Nipaguay was a common name for the mission afterwards. Serra called it so in his second annual
22
report.
2t
Serra, Informe de 5 Feb. 1775, MS., 124-7. An unfinished church built
four or five feet above the foundations, with adobes all made ready to finish
In a letter of October 3d the commandant of the preit, was also delivered.
sidio says he was uncertain whether to accept the building, for how was it to
be finished? Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 15G-7. Lasuen in his report of 1783
says the new site was but little better than the old so far as fertility was concerned. Lasuen, Informe de 1783, MS.; see also Serra, in San Dieyo, Lib. de
Mision, MS.,
3, 4.
231
27
20
*^r See
Chap.
28
'
St.
Pap.,
M'iss.
and
Colon.,
MS.,
i.
333.
i.
154-G.
RECORD OF EVENTS.
232
Palou, Not.,
and directed
31
ii.
32.
it
May 25,
1774,
to Palou.
Palou, Espediciony Regifstroquese hizodelas cercanias del puerto de Nuestro Scrctfico Padre San Francisco, in Id., Not., ii. 43-92.
32
As distances are not given in this diary it is of little or no help in fixing
exact locations. The party was now about one league from the shore, about a
CLIFF.
233
as
Laguna de
day's journey from the end of the peninsula, and in 37 4G' by their own reckThat they were below Searsville is shown by the fact that on starting
oning.
norl
north-west
they at first crossed a plain.
RECORD OF EVENTS.
234
33
The lack
Pt Angel
good padre
235
in closing his
34
journal.
When
California
Galvez.
The
height.
172.
45
Palou, Not.,
ii.
156-7, 207-8.
RECORD OF EVENTS.
236
country. He labored hard to win over the Dominicans to his side, and was practically successful so far
at least as the president was concerned, and he insisted
The
that the property in question had been stolen.
details and merits of the general controversy need not
It is evident enough that Barri
be repeated here.
allowed his bitterness toward the Franciscans to get
the better of his judgment, and that he neglected no
opportunity to annoy his foes.
From San Diego Palou sent back mules to bring up
supplies and part of the church property, but Barri
sent an order to the officer in command at Velicatl to
load the animals with corn, but by no means to allow
the vestments to be taken, pretending that a new
examination of the boxes was necessary. Governor
and president were now acting in full accord and causing delay by throwing the responsibility of every new
hinderance each upon the other. Mora claimed to have
full faith in Franciscan honor, but had consented to
the proposed search merely to convince Barri of his
error Cambon was instructed to submit to the search
if required, but to insist on exact inventories and cer!
Thus things
O remained until Serra returned
from Mexico with a positive order from the viceroy
for the removal of the goods, an order which was sent
south and reached Yelicata July 16, 1774.
correspondence ensued between Cambon and the
military officer in charge, in which the latter professed
to be utterly ignorant of any embargo on the removal
of the property, and to have received no orders whatever from Barri on the subject, although the contrary
was well enough known to be true. Preparations
were made for Padre Sanchez to take the property
with Ortega's force, but a new difficulty arose; for
Hidalgo, the Dominican in charge of Velicatd, had
positive orders from President Mora to stop the goods.
He was in much perplexity, and begged for delay.
Finally, however, after obtaining a certificate from the
commandant that he would furnish no troops to pretificates.
237
There was now but small opportunity left for quarbetween Barri and the Franciscans, but it seems
there were also dissensions with the Dominicans.
It
was evident to the viceroy, that only harmonious
relations between the political and missionary authorities could ensure the prosperity of the peninsula, and
that under Barri's rule such relations could not be
maintained. Bucareli, therefore, decided, as he had
done before in the case of Fages, without committing
rels
fell
'
Palou, Net.,
ii.
went up to Rivera a
158-205.
letter
'
Patzcuaro the people resisted the draft, liberated several recruits by force,
sergeant, and forced Neve to return. Rivera, Gob. de Alex i
wounded a
407-S.
RECORD OF EVENTS.
238
1774,
39
lJucareli, Instrucciones al
MS.
Pro?;. St.
*Prov.
Pap., MS.,
lice.,
MS.,
i.
1.
i.
STATISTICS.
239
At San Antonio
the most prominent improvement.
an adobe storehouse had been built, a bookcase made
for a library, and an irrigating ditch dug for about a
new houses
San Carlos had seven or ei^ht
league.
c?
o
of adobe and palisades, besides an oven.
Agricultural operations had been successful, and
the grain product had exceeded a thousand fanegas,
the seed having yielded forty fold. San Gabriel took
Sari Luis
the lead, close followed by San Cdrlos.
raised the most wheat, while sterile San Diego showed
a total return of only thirty fanegas of wheat. Nowhere was there a total failure of any crop. In the
matter of live-stock, horned cattle had increased from
205 to 304; horses from G7 to 100; mules from 77
to 85; sheep from 94 to 170; goats from 67 to 95;
swine from 102 to 131; while asses remained only 4.
The mission records showed a total of 833 baptisms,
124 marriages, 74 deaths, and an existing neophyte
population of 79; or for the year a gain of 342 baptisms, G2 marriages, 45 deaths, and 297 in population.
San Carlos was yet at the head with 244 neophytes,
last
41
with 97.
Serra, Informs de los Auymcntos qua han tenido con tcdo el ano de 1774 fas
del Coler/lo A/;ostdlico de Propaganda Fide de San Fernando de
Mexico de dfdcn de N. P. S. Francisco y del estado actual en que se liaUan
a ultimo* de Diciembre del ano de 1774, MS. The report was dated San
41
cine?) mixtoiics
CHAPTER XL
NORTHERN EXPLORATION AND SOUTHERN DISASTER.
1775.
Bias
in
and, no clergycalled
upon the
some
'
ii.
21G-17, 257-8.
(240)
A NORTHERN
FLEET.
241
All sailed from San Bias on the same day, the 1 6th
2
The San Antonio was under Lieutenant
of March.
Fernando Quiros, and her chaplain was Ramon Usson.
She was laden with supplies for San Diego and San
Gabriel.
Quiros' voyage was a prosperous one, and
landed
the cargo at San Diego he was back at
having
middle of June. The other transthe
Bias
San
by
the
San Carlos, bearing the supplies for Monteport,
and
the northern missions, set sail under the
rey
command of Miguel Manrique, but was hardly out of
sight of land when he went mad and Lieutenant Juan
Bautista de Ayala took his place, Vicente Santa Maria
Some
it
the 2Gth.
Ortega writes from San "Diego to Rivera that the San Cdrlos
San Bias, and that the cargo will probably be transferred to the tiantiayo.
This idea probably came from some rumor brought
by the San Antonio} respecting the delay occasioned by Manrique's madness.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 162.
4
Heceta, Quir6s, and Manrique were tenientes de navio, or lieutenants in
the royal navy, the former being acting captain and comandante of the
expedition.
Ayala and Bodega were tenientes defrayata, a rank lower than
the preceding and obsolete in modern times save as an honorary title in the
merchant marine. Perez and Maurelle held the rank of alfcrcz de fragata,
still lower than the
preceding, besides being, as was Revilla, pilotoa, or sail3
I\Iay 5th,
was stranded
in leaving
ing-masters.
242
DISASTER.
a year's cruise.
Sailing from San Bias
the
schooner
16th,
being towed by the ship,
of
in a week, and were
the
San
Carlos
lost
sight
they
winds
at
back
first, only beginning
by contrary
kept
cient
for
March
43.
On the 7th of June, in latitude 42 as their observations made it, the vessels drew near the shore,
which they followed southward to 41 6', 5 and found
on the 9th a good anchorage protected by a lofty
headland from the prevalent north-west winds. Two
days later they landed and took formal possession of
the country with all the prescribed ceremonial, including the unfurling of the Spanish flag, a military salute,
and a mass by Father Campa.
of Trinidad was given to the
which
still
retains
it, and the stream since known
port,
The natives
as Little River was named Principio.
were numerc us and friendly, and by no means timid.
They were ruite ready to embrace the padres; they
did not hesitate to put their hands in the dishes; and
they were e\ irious to know if the strangers were men
like themselves, having noted an apparent indifference
More than a
to the charms of the native women.
week was spent here, during which some explorations
were made, water and wood were obtained, and the
One
disposition and habits of the natives studied.
sailor was lost by desertion, and a new top-mast was
'
From
made
for
name
the Santiago.
6
41 8', 41 18', 41 7', and 41
true latitude is about 41 4'.
9'
are given
by
different authorities.
The
243
The
in tow,
kept together
coast.
unsafe to
Now
seemed
suppose the name to have come from the fact that the Russians in
had their cellars in Spanish, bodegas here. Strangely enough
ex-governor Alvarado, Hist. CaL, MS., ii. 8, 10, takes this view of it, and also
Many
later times
derives the
name
244
7
The authorities for these voyages, for particulars of which in the north
see Hist. Northwest Coast, i. 158 et seq., are Heceta, Viaje de 1775 ; Diario de la
Santiago, MS. ; Bodega y Cuadra, Viage de 1775; Diario de la Sonora, MS. ;
Maurelle, Diario del Viage de la Sonora 1775, MS. (with Keftexiones, tablas,
etc.);
245
8
Letters dated December 15, 1774. Of that to Serra I have the original,
partly in the handwriting of Bucareli himself. Arch. Misiones, MS., i. 49-56;
i.
ii.
20-5.
9
Hist.
246
DISASTER.
Velicata"
2h
11
Angel
Island.
'
Palou, Not., ii. 218, 248-9; Vida, 201-3, the only authority extant, says
July 27th, but this I think is a misprint, since it would not allow the anchorage at Angel Island August 2d.
11
The fact that it is called 'la isla que estd, en frente de la boca' would,
agree better with Alcatraz, but Font, Journal, MS., a little later mentions
another island agreeing with Alcatraz, removing all doubt.
12
As nothing is said of the bodies of water corresponding to Suisun Bay and
Carq nines S trait, it would seem likely that the rivers were Petaluma, Sonoma,
or Napa creeks, and not the San Joaquin and Sacramento; but in his Vida,
203, Palou says they noted the mouth of the great river San Francisco formed
by
five
247
iv. 153.
248
ments
The
15
two
clays later it
Mon-
At
a consultation held
was resolved to establish at once a
u Palou,
15
Not.,
ii.
243-8.
Pa/ow, Not.,
i.
ii.
249
Of
13
called the
17
So says Palou but Ortega, in a letter to Anza dated Nov. 30th, says it
was Oct. 19th. Arch. Gal Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., i. 2, 3.
18
Thus Anza on his arrival Jan. 8, 1776, found the site and unfinished
buildings unoccupied. Anza, Diario, MS., 90.
19
Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 142-7, 163-G; Prov. Rec., MS., i. 144-5. In one
;
of his letters Ortega speaks of the landing-place of goods for the presidio as
being at least two leagues distant. It would be interesting to know just
where this landing was and what was the necessity of landing goods so far
off.
In fact without crossing to the peninsula it would seem impossible to
find a spot so far away.
250
little after
blood, retire to rest in fancied security.
the
to
find
awake
buildings in flames
midnight they
fatal.
consisting
of three
soldiers,
the guard with many other interesting particulars are given in Ortega, Ivfcrme
da Nov. 30, 1775, MS. this document being a communication addressed to
'Lieut. -Col. Anza, and one of the most valuable sources of original information
respecting the disaster, embodying as it does all the results of Lieut. Ortega's
,
investigations
down
to date.
A NIGHT OF TERROR.
251
23
other shelter.
They
first
repair to a
room
of the
dwelling, where Father Fuster makes a hazardous but ineffectual attempt to find Jaume.
The fire soon renders the house untenable. In
friars'
23
It may be noted that according to the last annual report Serra, Informs
de 1774, MS. the mission buildings on the new site had not been enclosed
in the usual stockade defences. The barracks are not described in that report,
but were of wood; the church was not of adobe; and all the adobe buildings
except the granary had tule roofs. The padres' house, or the smithy, or the
granary with their adobe walls would seem to have afforded better protection
than the building chosen; but the progress of the flames or some other unrecorded circumstance doubtless determined their action.
24
For this night's struggle I have followed for the most part Fuster, Recjistro de Defunciones, MS., in San Diego, Lib. de Mision, 67-74, an original record
a
by survivor of the fiery ordeal left by Fuster in the mission register of deaths.
This author calls the structure which afforded shelter a cercadito de adobes,
como de tres varas,' and does not imply that it had a roof. Palou says it was
a kind of kitchen with walls but little over three feet high and roofed with
branches and leaves, the burning of which added to the peril. This author
also gives some indications of the padre's bravery which modesty
prompted
the other to conceal.
'
252
DISASTER.
The
25
less
Palou says his consecrated hands alone were uninjured, preserved doubthis innocence; but Fuster says nothing of this.
by God to show
253
On
San Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS. , 74-5. Arroyo's widowed mother had
been buried here before. Her name was Petrona Garcia.
27
So Palou calls them, but I think thero may bo some doubt about this.
28
Ortega in his Informe,, MS., 5, names the Christian rancherias of San
Luis, Matamo, Xamacha, Meti, Xana or Xanat, Abascal, Abuscal or Aguscal,
and Magtate or San Miguel; and the gentile rancherias of La Punta, Melejo,
254
whole
affair.
30
Otai, Pocol, Cojuat, and El Corral, as among those involved in the movement.
Chilcacop, or Chocalcop, of the Xamacha rancheria, a Christian, is said to
have aided in the killing of Jaume, in connection with the pagans, Tuerto and
the chief of the Maramoydos, both of Tapanque rancheria. St. Pap. Sac.,
MS., ix. 72. Those who led the attack were Oroche, chief of Magtate or
Mactati, Miguel, Bernardino of Matam6, and two others. Zegotay, chief of
Matamo, testified that 9 rancherias were invited, and that among the leaders
were Francisco of Cuyamac, himself, and another. The southern rancherias
assembled at La Punta, the mountaineers at Meti. Chief Francisco plotted
the revolt, and he, Zegotay, had invited 10 rancherias. Arch. CaL, Prov. St.
Pap., MS., i. 228-32. Very little satisfactory information can be gathered
from the reports of these investigations. Rafael of Xanat and the chief of
DEFENSIVE MEASURES.
255
To
guards.
heard of the disaster, and from his intimate acquaintance with the tribes of
that region he believes that they would have joined the San Diego rancherias
in a war against the Spaniards later, had it not been for the favorable impression left by Anza. Garces, Diario, 264-285.
31
See also on the San Diego revolt Serra, Notas, in San Diego, Lib. de
Mision, MS., 4; Lasuen, Informe de 1783, MS.; Id., in Arch. Santa Barbara,
MS., ii. 197; St. Pap., Miss* and Colon., MS., i. 16, 127; and investigations
of Ortega and Rivera in April to June 1776, in Prov. St. Pap. Ben. Mil. MS. i.
22-3.
Ortega credits privates Ignacio Vallejo, Anastasio Camacho, and Juan
de Ortega with great gallantry in these trying times, Informe, MS., 3; and
Alvarado, Uit. Cat., MS., i. 83, goes so far as to say that Vallejo was the
chief cause of the Spanish triumph, thus becoming a great favorite among the
Gleeson, Hist. Cath. Ch., ii. 68-76, is somewhat confused in his
padres.
account of this affair, making the natives destroy San Carlos and attack the
,
presidio in 1779.
**Palou, Not.,
ii.
Antonio and Cambon and Pieras returned to San Carlos Dec. 23d.
to
San
256
Rivera set out for the south on the 16th of December, with thirteen men, one of whom was to be left at
San Antonio while two were to remain at San Luis.
In August there had been an alarm at San Antonio.
messenger came to the presidio on the 29th with
the news that the natives had attacked the mission,
and shot a catechumen about to be baptized. Rivera
sent a squad of men who found the wounded native
out of danger.
They captured the culprits and held
Not.,
ii.
244-5.
CHAPTER
XII.
AND GAUGES.
1775-1776.
ANZA AND HIS COLONY PREPARATIONS IN MEXICO AND ,SONORA Two HUNDRED IMMIGRANTS ORIGINAL AUTHORITIES MARCH TO THE Rio COLORADO MISSIONARIES LEFT ITINERARY MAP A TEDIOUS MARCH TO
SAN GABRIEL ANZA GOES TO THE RELIEF OF SAN DIEGO RIVERA EXCOMMUNICATED ANZA BRINGS HIS FORCE TO MONTEREY His ILLNESS
RIVERA COMES NORTH AND ANZA GOES SOUTH A QUARREL RIVERA
VERSUS ANZA AND THE FRIARS STRANGE ACTIONS OF THE COMMANDANT
His MARCH SOUTHWARD INSANITY OR JEALOUSY ANZA'S RETURN TO
THE COLORADO AND TO SONORA EXPLORATIONS BY GAUGES UP THE
COLORADO ACROSS THE MOJAVE DESERT INTO TULARE VALLEY A
REMARKABLE JOURNEY DOMINGUEZ AND ESCALANTE.
I.
17
(257)
258
were
be transported at government expense, receiving pay for two years and rations for
The expense of each family was about eight
five.
hundred dollars. Anza took with him from Mexico
animals, arms, and clothing, and began his work imHe clothed his
mediately by recruiting on the way.
from
and
head to foot,
children,
recruits, men, women,
and allowed their pay and rations to begin with the
date of enlistment. At San Felipe de Sinaloa a regular recruiting- office was opened, Anza's popularity,
with his liberal display of food and clothing, insuring
success both here and in the north, until in September 1775 most of the company were assembled at the
appointed rendezvous, San Miguel de Horcasitas.
They were ready the 29th of September, all being
united in time to start from the presidio of Tubac the
23d of October. 2
The force that set out from Tubac consisted, first,
of Anza, commander, Pedro Font of the Queretaro
Franciscans as chaplain, ten soldiers of the Horcasitas presidio, eight muleteers, four servants, and Masoldiers,
fco
259
California
5
of
history
tion.
el
M.
is
concerned.
Still
It.
'260
rado junction.
Crossing the Gila to the northern bank near
mouth November
Anza and
its
company were
a
and
even
enthusiastic
welcome by
given
hospitable
the Yuma chief, Palma, whose domain lay, it seems,
on both sides of the Colorado, and who had built a
large house of branches especially for the use of the
7
travellers.
Four soldiers were met here, who had
been sent in advance, and had been searching during
the past six days, on the California side of the Colo28th,
his
dc Septiembre de 1776, alRio Colorado para reconocer las Nctcioncs qve habit an
ana marye.nes, y d los pueblos del Aloqui del Nuevo- Mexico, in Doc. Hint. J/r <.,
serie ii. torn. i. 225-348. This diary is nearly as complete as Anza's, and more
so than Font's, down to the time when Anza's expedition left the Colorado
for the north-west.
Other authorities are Paloit, Jfot., ii. 213-15, 277-82;
Id., Vida, 204-5, 186-7; Arrkh-itn, Cron. *SYm/'., 461-90, the last being a
very full account but with some errors respecting minor details.
*
P. Font's map is incorrect in representing the ford of the Colorado as
below the Gila, while all three diaries say that it was a little way above.
PN THE COLORADO.
261
have more to say of their travels in California. Setting out December 4th from Palma's rancheria, Anza
262
FONT'S
1776
MAP
264
San
Gabriel.
foe.
The company
ANZA AT SAN
DIEGO.
265
11
Anza, Diario, MS., 97-100, 104, 106; Prcv. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS*,
22-3; Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 215-32.
i.
206
Anza at
only subject at present to be thought of.
yielded to the captain's views, realizing that as
ruler of the province he naturally felt for its safety,
but at last tidings came from San Gabriel which turned
Anza's attention again to his own affairs. Five men
arrived February 3d with a despatch from Moraga and
the purveyor Vidal, to the effect that the mission
could no longer furnish food for the immigrants except to the injury of its own neophytes, Father Paterna
first
He
12
Anza, Diario, MS., 108. He did leave 12 instead of 10. Palou, Not., ii.
275-6; Vida, 18&-7, implies that the 12 men were left at San Diego instead
of
San Gabriel.
267
up to Monterey by Rivera
himself.
13
The
showed no
The
Portezuelo, 61.; 73. Agua Escondida, 71. (10); 74. Rio Santa Clara, 91. (15);
75. Rincon or Rinconado rancheria, past Carpinteria, 61. (9); [117.] Assumpta
River]; 76. Mescaltitlan rancheria, 71. (9); Rancheria Nueva, 81. (9); 78. Cojo
rancheria, 71. (10); 79. River Santa Rosa, past Pt Concepcion, rancherias of
268
On
269
Monterey.
this
officer.
San Luis, and in reply to questions had told his business and presented Anza's and Moraga's letters, which
the captain refused to take, simply saying "Well,
19
Two
troops.
of the men were of Anza's guard, and the others of the Californian
Palou, Not., 288-90, says that G6ngora had but two men.
270
was mad.
20
Pieras was returning in his company to San Antonio.
Anza, Diario,
MS., 185, says he took a written certificate from the padres. Font, Journal,
MS., 43, says: 'We supposed that he had returned to speak with Capt. Anza
before his departure and treat about the affairs of the expedition, and that
we should probably have to return to Monterey or at least stay where we
were; but we soon found that his arrival did not cause us any detention whatever, for when we fell in with Capt. Ilivera, a short time afterward, the two
captains saluted each other on passing, and without stopping to speak about
anything Capt. Ilivera immediately went on to Monterey, and we continued
our journey toward Sonora.'
271
to the church
272
He
except in writing, and went on to San Gabriel followed by Anza. Here may
be mentioned a tradition of the natives recorded by Anza as having been
told to P. Figuer, of the arrival and wreck, 23 years before, of a vessel bearing 12 white men like the Spaniards, who before their death in the wreck had
landed and gave the Indians beads and other articles, including the knives
found by the Spaniards in 1769.
Qu6 gente seria esta queda al discurso de
quien estd mas instruido que yo,' writes Anza, and I can do no better than
follow his discreet example.
24
Palou says that Anza did not stop at the mission but encamped at a little
distance, fearing a controversy with Rivera; and that he subsequently sent
back Rivera's letters with the message that he was not the mail.
The correspondence "between the two was sent by Anza to the viceroy but has not, so
far as I know, been preserved.
'
'
'
WANDERINGS OF GAECES.
273
for allowing a quarrel in matters of etiquette to interfere with the public service; but Rivera's early removal to Lower California put an end to the matter,
as
it
friars.
May
I have now to narrate briefly the Californian wanderings of Father Francisco Garces, whom Colonel
Anza had left on the 4th of December 1775 at
Palma's rancheria opposite the mouth of the Gila,
and whom he had subsequently seen at Santa Olaya
on the 9th, the friar being already on his way to explore the country and learn the disposition of the
natives toward the Christians.
This first trip lasted
till
January 3d, and in it the friar wandered with
2b
74
all
On
275
Gabriel,
where it
will
Anza
in 1774, finding that establishment "muy adelantada en lo espiritual y temporal," and remaining for
27
This being the first exploration of most of this region, or of all west of
the river, I give the route in Ml. See also Font's map route marked
Puerto de la Concepcion, Gvj 1. N. w. 2 1. w. N. w. through pass in Sierra de
San Pablo to San Marcelo' watering-place; 5 1. N. w. in sight of Cabeza del
Gigante in the east, Grande Medanal, and vicinity of San Sebastian, passing
near Peiion de la Campana; 8 1. N. and N. N. w. through pass in the sierra on
north of the Medanal to San Jose" watering-place 33 28'; 3^ 1. N. N. w. and E. N.
E., across sierra to a valley; 61. N. N. w. and E. N. E.; 6L E. N. E. and N. into
Sierra of Santa Margarita to banks of Colorado, across valley to watering-place
in 3325'(?); 1J1. w.; Gor 11 1. N.W. and w. N.W. to Tinajas delTezquien, one
day's journey from river; 8 1. (or G 1.) N. N. w. and N. across a sierra, to Santo
.
Angel springs 34 31' (in Chemehneves country); 61. N. E. and N. w.; 71. N. N.
E. across a sierra to
Yamajab nation, whose rancherias, LaPasion, were across
the river. (35 on Font's map. }
28
The full route over a country which Garcds was the first, as also for many
years the last, to traverse is worth recording as follows. (See also map): 3 1.
N. w. to rancherias of Santa Isabel; 31. N. w. and E. N. w. (sic) to San Pedro
de los Yamajabs in 35 1', still near the river; 2^1. s. w. to San Casimiro wells;
81. w.
w. s. w. to wells; 5 1. w., 31. w. s. w. to Sierra de Santa Coleta; 41.
w. N. w. across sierra (Providence Mts.) to Canada de Santo Tomas; 61. w.
s. w. to wells of San Juan de
Dios, where the country of the Beiiemes begins;
51. to Pinta Pass and Arroyo de los Martires (Rio Mojave); 12-JL w. s. w. on
same stream; 2 1. w. N. w., and 2 1. s. w. and s. 34 37'; 5 1. s. w. up the
stream; 8-J1. up the stream; 31. s. w. and s. to San Benito rancheria; 31. s. s.
W. across sierra (Cajon Pass?) in sight of sea, and 31. E. s. E. to Arroyo de loa
Alisos; 211. w. s. w. into Anza's trail, and 81. w. N. w.; 21. \v. N. w. to San
Gabriel.
276
29
It had been his intention to reach
over two weeks.
San Luis instead of San Gabriel, but the natives had
He now derefused to guide him in that direction.
termined to go up to San Luis by the highway, and
thence to return eastward to the Colorado across the
He applied to the corporal of the mission
tulares.
an escort and supplies for the trip, and was
for
guard
whom
on his way to Monterey, and a discussion ensued on the matter, which finally elicited
from Rivera, after various excuses, the declaration
that he was not in favor of any communication between
the natives of the Colorado and those of the missions,
having already taken some measures to prevent it by
ordering the arrest of eastern Indians coming to the
missions to trade.
Garces deemed Rivera's views
but
he
was
erroneous,
obliged to submit, receiving,
from
the
missionaries
however,
supplies which enabled
him to partially carry out his plans, though he did not
arrived, however,
277
to
278
They went
in
New
,.
Fe by way
of the
31
Garcts, Diario, 246-348. Signed at Inbutama Jan. 30, 1777. Forbes,
Hist. CaL, 157-62, saw this diary in MS., at Guadalajara.
Journey mentioned in Prov. Rec., MS., i. 47-8; vi. 59.
Palou, Not., ii. 281-2, mentions
rumors that Garce"s had been killed by savages.
32
Dominguez and Escalante, Diario y Derrotero, 1776. In his Carta de 28
de Octubre 1775, MS., Escalante favors a route from Monterey to the Moquis
and to Santa Fe\ He has heard of some light-colored natives somewhere on
the route, who had probably reached the interior from Monterey, by the great
CHAPTEK
XIII.
THE
280
urging
twenty days, Anza left Monterey for San Fran23d of March 1776, having been but two
2
The party
days from his sick-bed at San Carlos.
followed the route of Rivera and Palou in tfreir jour3
ney of December 1774, to the Arroyo de San Franfor
cisco the
selected two
as
a
desirable
for
site
the
mission of
years previously
San Francisco. The cross set up in token of this
was
tion, as
Anza
still
etc., recalling
MAP OF EXPLORATIONS.
281
282
so.
ANZA'S VISIT.
283
'
284
9
Save that in going round
reaching Point Reyes.
the head of the bay they named Guadalupe and
Coyote streams, and further on the Arroyo de San
Salvador, or Harina, there is nothing of value or
interest in the diaries until April 2d when the explorers reached the mouth of "the fresh water port
held hitherto to be a great river," that is, to the
strait of Carquines and Suisun Bay. The water was
somewhat salt there was no current this great
River San Francisco was apparently no river at all,
but an extension of the bay. The matter seems to
have troubled them greatly, and their observations
were chiefly directed to learning the true status of
There was no reason for it,
this body of water.
but tbey were confused.
Crespi's diary of the former trip had described the body of water accurately enough, and had not at all confounded the
strait and bay with the River San Francisco, or San
Joaquin but, possibly, Fages had also written a
10
diary in which he expressed the matter less clearly.
The camp on the 2d was on a stream supposed to
be identical with the Santa Angela de Fulgino 11 of
On the 3d they continued eastward past the
Fages.
low range of hills, from the summit of which, near
;
9
It is noticeable that Anza several times implies that more than one exploration had been made in this direction, but only one, that of Fages, is
recorded.
10
See account of Fages' trip in chapter viii. According to Arricivita,
Croii. Serdf. 465-7, Font named the body of water Puerto Dulce.
11
No. 100 of Font's map.
12
See also Font's map in preceding chapter, on which 'a' is 'the hill to
which Fages arrived;' 'b' a rancheria at edge of the water;' c,' a hill from
which we saw the tulares;' *d' the summit of the sierra;' and
some 'min,
'
eral hills.'
'
'
'
is;
285
is
had an
effect
to deal.
be noted.
quines,
left
one place calls the hill the terminus of Fages' exploration, and
said hill which may be about a league from the water, Captain
Fages and P. Crespi saw its extent and that it was divided into arms which
formed islands of low land; and as they had previously tasted the water
on the road further back and found it to be fresh, they supposed without
doubt that it must be some great river which divided itself here into three
branches
without noticing whether it had any current or not, which was
not easy for them to do from said hill at such a distance.
Font counted
seven islands. Anza, Diario, MS., 168, says of the body of water 'nos pareci6
ser mas uiia gran laguna que rio,' and 172, 'Me hizo esta noticia (the statement of two soldiers that the tulares were impassable even in the dry season)
Font
'
says:
in
From
'
286
tains
14
rancheria visited.
10
Palou, Not., ii. 283. From the viceroy Rivera had permission dated
Jan. 20th, to delay the exploration only until Anza's arrival. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., i. 193-4. But of course the viceroy knew nothing yet of the San Diego
affair.
17
PREPARATIONS.
287
to
San
Gabriel, and
to
Moraga
at Monterey.
It
was resolved to
start
May
for
could be obtained.
On June
St.
288
make
dwellings.
another month.
__*.
of Sal to
.r
St.
Pap., MS.,
21
289
sites,
'
all
Cambon
and by
21
'On that same 17th of September on the other side of the continent Lord
Howe's Hessian and British troops were revelling in the city of New York.'
I.
19
290
of soldiers
by
land.
The two
24
Palou, Noticias, states that Quir6s sailed two days on the new estero,
and he might with unfavorable winds have spent that time on Petaluma
Creek; but if he waited a day for Moraga the two days rmist include the whole
return voyage.
He had not, however, disproved Font's theory that the bay
communicated with Bodega by way of the great fresh water port, or lagoon,
now called the Sacramento River. In his Vida, 210-14, Palou gives rather
vaguely additional details. At the mouth of the great river was a fine harThe lofty sierra
bor, as good as San Diego, named Asuncion (Suisun Bay?).
The estuary on the
stretching to Cape Mendocino was called San Francisco.
west of Round Bay, up which they sailed one day and night, was named
'
Merced.
'
291
23
San Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS., 3. These are the first entries in the
mission books; the first on August ICth was the baptism of Francisco Jos< de
los Dolores Soto, infant son of Ignacio Soto; the second that of Juana Maria
Lorenza Sanchez 15 days of age, on Aug. 25th. Both were baptized ad instantem
mortem without ceremony, the latter by a common soldier.
292
given his attention to the mission as well as the presidio, and immediately set six sailors at work to aid
the priests in constructing a church and dwelling, so
that the work advanced rapidly.
No orders came from Rivera authorizing the establishing of a mission, but Moraga saw no reason for
delay and took upon himself the responsibility.
church fifty-four feet long and a house of thirty by
fifteen feet, all of wood, plastered with clay, and roofed
with tules, were finished and the day of Saint Francis,
October 4th, was the time set for the rites of foundation.
On the 3d the church, decorated with bunting
from the vessel, was blessed; but next day only a mass
was said, the ceremony being postponed on account of
the absence of Moraga. He arrived, as we have seen,
on the 7th, and on October 9th the solemne funcion
EARLIEST ANNALS.
293
body
Annals of
S. F.,
46-7; Tuthill's Hist. Cal., 85-6; and many other modern writings in books,
magazines, and newspapers. This supposition was unfounded, except in the
statements of Palou, Vida, 209-10, the only authority extant until quite
recently, that Moraga's expedition encamped June 27th 'on the bank of a
great lagoon which emptied into the arm of the sea of the port which extends
inland 15 leagues toward the south-east,' and that a mission site was selected
'in this same place at the
lagoon on the plain which it has on the west.' To
John W. Dwinelle, Colon. Hist. S. F., p. xiii., belongs, I believe, the credit
of having been the first to show the inaccuracy of the prevalent opinion as
early as 18G7, and without the aid of Palou's Noticias which he had never
seen.
By the aid of the Vida, of La Pe"rouse's map (which I reproduce in
chap, xxii.) and the testimony of Dofia Carmen Cibrian de Bernal, an old
lady at the mission, he identified the Laguna de los Dolores with The Willows,' a lagoon, filled up in modern times, which lay in the tract bounded by
17th, 19th, Howard, and Valencia streets, discharging its waters into Mission
'
294
the
San
MS.,
i.
ing notes,
San
Francisco, Centennial
Mem.,
sibly
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
RIVERA AT THE
NEW
PRESIDIO.
295
in which that
the
north as
in
of
new
missions
the
spoke
that
it was
been
concluded
founded,
having
already
time to proceed north and attend to their founding.
On the way at San Luis Obispo he learned that his
orders had been disobeyed at San Francisco, and said
he was glad of it and would soon go in person to
found the other mission. From Monterey accompanied by Pena, who had in the mean while returned,
was obliged
O
to wait.
began to
was simply San Francisco de Asis and never properly anything else. Asis
was dropped in common usage even by the friars, as was Borromeo at San
Carlos and Alcala at San Diego.
Then Dolores was added, not as part of the
name but simply as the locality, like Carmelo at San Carlos, and, more rarely,
Nipaguay at San Diego. Gradually, as San Francisco was also the name of
the presidio, and there was another mission of San Francisco Solano, it became
customary among settlers, soldiers, and to some extent friars also, speak of
the Mision delos Dolores, meaning simply 'the mission at Dolores.' No other
name than San Francisco was employed in official reports. Dolores was in
full Nuestra Sefiora de los Dolores, one of the virgin's most common
appellations, and a very common name for places in all Spanish countries.
it
296
attempt was shut up and flogged by Grijalva, whereupon the savages rushed up and discharged a volley
of arrows at the mission buildings, attempting a
rescue, though they were frightened away by a discharge of musketry in the air. Next day the sergeant
at the mission.
sail for
27
San
i.
140-2.
297
CHAPTER
XIV.
ALL
much
Palou, Vida, 318-20. Anza in his report, Diario, MS., 133, represented
in a very prosperous condition, with over 300 neqphy tes.
San Carlos as
298
FRANCISCAN POLICY.
299
release.
MS.,
i.
19.
339-40.
ii.
The mission
MS.,
57.
'
'
300
MISSION PROGRESS
3
In a communication to Rivera Serra urges a suspension of hostilities,
which would do more harm than good, and a light punishment to captives.
Let the living padres be protected as the apple of God's eye, but let the dead
one be left to enjoy God, and thus good be returned for evil. St. Pap., MS.,
'
'
himself.
vi. 1-3,
WORK AT SAN
DIEGO.
301
made an arrangement
San Antonio, who ofto work on the mission, and
Then Rivera,
their labors.
About
Carrillo
was
positive that
6
Lasuen in his report of 1783, in Bandlni, Doc. Hist. Gal., MS., 2, states
that the mission was reestablished in June 1776.
There may, however, be
an error of the copyist.
7
The governor in a later report says that investigations had proved a
second convocation of 21 rancherias for hostile operations. Prov. Rec., MS.,
i. 60-1.
It is not certain however that the allusion is to this occasion.
302
MISSION PEOGEESS
303
In the
last
11
12
13
MS.
Zufiiga, Nicolas
'
He
He
He
October.
]5
.
Juan Capistrano,
151.
According to
Pap., MS.,
10
i.
Lib. de Mision,
MS.,
MISSION PROGRESS
304
judicious falsehoods applied by the San Gabriel neophyte, who affirmed that there was a large body of
soldiers close behind
for
friar.
17
As
and which
have been too long
One of them had indeed been established;
neglected.
Tomas de la Pena and Jose Murguia had long since
been assigned to the other; mission guard, church paraphernalia, and all needed supplies were ready; and
JPena had already been over the northern country and
cations
the commandant
now
as already founded,
realized to
17
Nov. 12th Corporal Beltran reports the hostile demonstrations against
Serra and the soldier Pena, and adds that the natives are at the mission ready to
Nov. loth Ortega reports having sent Mariano Carrillo to investigate.
fight.
He adds that two soldiers and a servant have deserted from the new mission.
Nov. 23d Carrillo reports that all is quiet since the original demonstration all
xi
i *
it
t
t
t
i
__
;
:i
5-13.
18
San Juan
MS. In
which was,
in all
305
made up
19
Palou, Not.,
Moraga
later;
ii.
but this
306
the way of material improvements the new establishment could show a church of six by twenty
varas, two dwellings of six by twenty-two and five by
thirty-one varas respectively, divided into the necessary apartments, all of timber plastered with clay and
roofed with earth.
There were likewise two corrals
and a bridge across the stream. 26
houses
'
307
being directly responsible to the viceroy and subordinate to the governor only in being required to report
Soon however a change was
fully to that official.
due
it
is
believed to the influence of
ordered,
largely
Jose de Galvez, now in Spain and filling the high position of minister of state for the Indies.
The 16th of
a
the
issues
1775
king
August
royal order that Governor Neve is to reside at Monterey as capital p-f the
province, while Rivera is to go to Loreto and rule
Baja California as lieutenant-governor. At the same
time, perhaps, Neve's commission as governor is forwarded, for his office down to this time had been
27
It is difficult to ascertain in the absence
immediately.
of original instructions of king and viceroy exactly
what effect the change of residence had on the respective powers of Neve and Rivera, especially those of
the latter. But it is evident that while Rivera's authority as lieutenant-governor on the peninsula was
less absolute and his subordination to the governor
greater than in Upper California as commandant,
Neve's authority in the north was practically the
same as Rivera's had been; that is, in California the
only change in government was in the title of the
ruler.
The new establishments were recognized by
In six
Carlos III. as more important than the old.
its
the
child
had
years
Monterey
parent.
outgrown
was to be capital of the Californias as it had always
b. n
of California Setentrional.
23
27
The order of Aug. 16th is merely referred to in a list of documents in Prov.
Pap., MS., xxii. 3, and may possibly be an error. The order of April 19th
is referred to in a letter of the viceroy in Id., i. 203.
Neve's commission as
governor was forwarded to him by the viceroy on Dec. 20, 1775. Prov. Rec.,
MS., i. 39.
28
The formation of the Provincias Internas de Occidents under Teodoro de
Croix as commandant general with viceregal powers was nearly simultaneous
with the change in California; and to this new official Gov. Neve became
March 8, 1777,
responsible instead of to the viceroy as Rivera had been.
Croix writes to Neve that Art. 20 of royal instructions requires the governor
and officials of California to render individual reports of acts and events to
St.
308
MISSION PROGRESS
For the
first time so far as the record shows, Vicetransmitted the king's orders to Neve
Bucareli
roy
at'Loreto the 20th of July 1776. During this month
and the next a correspondence took place between the
two official?, 29 which, from its fragmentary nature as
him. Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 245. Dec. 25, 1776, the viceroy notified Neve of
the appointment of Croix, to whom he is to report directly on occurrences in
California; but for supplies, etc. he is still to communicate with the viceroy.
Prov. Rec., MS., i. 66-7. Neve had written to the viceroy for certain instrucThe latter writes to Neve Aug. 15,
tions, which were transmitted to Croix.
1777, that his duties in other provinces will prevent his attention to California,
and he has therefore turned the whole matter over to he viceroy for the
He, however, asks for Neve's suggestions respecting reforms, etc.,
present.
for a new reglamento for California. Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 252-3.
29
/Vou. St. Pap., MS., i. 203-7.
30
Bucareli wrote on Dec. 25, 1776, to Serra, announcing the change ordered.
Palou, Vida, 194-5.
,
NEVE IN CALIFORNIA.
309
in April
81
time.
34
Letter of Jan.
2, 1775, in
i.
169.
MISSION PROGRESS
310
35
permit that navigator to enter any Califor nian port.
of
1777
were
The transports
the San Antonio and
the Santiago. The former under Francisco Villaroel,
with Serra as chaplain, arrived at San Diego in May
with supplies for the south, and having unloaded sailed
The latter, whose arrival at
at once for San Bias.
Francisco
has
San
already been noted, came down to
for San Bias the 8th of June.
and
sailed
Monterey
her
a
Neve
sent
By
report on the Santa Barbara
and
its
Channel
tribes, giving his views of what was
necessary to be done in that region to control and
convert a large native population, that might in the
future become troublesome by cutting off land communication between the north and south, which from
the peculiar nature and situation of their country they
could easily do.
His plan included a mission of San
Buenaventura at Asuncion at the southern extremity
of the channel, another of Purisima near Point Concepcion at the northern extremity, and a third of
Santa Barbara with also a presidio in the central
region near Mescaltitlan. The military force required
for the three establishments would be a lieutenant
and sixty-seven soldiers. This report was dated June
3d, and next day the governor wrote asking permission to resign and join his family in Seville whom he
had not seen since 1764, being also in ill-health growing out of seven years' service in administering the
36
colleges of Zacatecas.
The shipment
of grain from San Bias for the military establishments of the Californias was a very
expensive and uncertain method of supply, and officials had been instructed from the first to
suggest
some practicable means of home production to be
35
Royal order, July 14, 1776; sent by viceroy Oct. 23d. Prov. Rec., MS., i.
13; Prov. St, Pap., MS., i. 213. The governor acknowledges receipt of the
order on June 6th. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 76.
SG
There are 22 communications of Neve to Bucareli, written during the
first half of 1777, preserved in Prov. Rec., MS., i. 59-79. His
correspondence
for the last six months has for the most
part been lost.
FOUNDING OF SAN
JOSE.
311
with a re'sume'
Pap. MS.
,
i.
205-6.
38
MISSION PROGRESS
312
40
The first earth-roofed structures of plastered palisades were erected a little more than a mile north of
the centre of the modern city. 41 The settlers received
39
Palou, Not., ii. 348-50, says that all were of Anza's company, lying idle
at San Francisco. Neve, letter of April 15, 1778, in Prov. Rec., MS., i. 8,
says lie took 3 of those who had come as pobladores and recruited 2 more,
have no list of the San Jose" settlers
from what source it does not appear.
until the more formal distribution of lands in 1781, when the number was 9
instead of 14. The names of all the first settlers of 1777 cannot therefore be
given; but from Moraga's list of all the pobladores in the San Francisco district in December 1777, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., i. 8, 9, and from an examination of the Santa Clara records, Santa Clara, Lib. de Mision, MS., I conclude
that 4 of the 5 original pobladores of San Jos6 were Jos6 Ignacio Archuleta,
Manuel Francisco Ame"zquita, Jose" Manuel Gonzalez, and Jose Tiburcio Vasquez,
while the fifth was not improbably a lady, Gertrudis Peralta. Of 9 soldier settlers
I can give the names of only 4; Valeric Mesa, corporal in command, Seferino
Lugo, Juan Manuel Marcos Villela, and Jose" Antonio Romero. Gabriel Peralta
was the corporal in 1779. Romero was the only soldier who remained, and the 4
pobladores mentioned make up 5 of the 9 names on the list and map of April
1781. See St. Pap. Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 243. Of the other 4, Claudio Alvires was a servant before 1780, while Bernardo Rosales, Sebastian Alvitre, a
soldier in 1769-74, and Francisco Avila were new names.
40
See chapter iv. of this volume. In the heading of one document in
the archives I find the pueblo called San Jose" de Galvez. This name though
perhaps a copyist's error would have been a most appropriate one. In later
times an effort was made to christen the town San Jos6 de Alvarado, in honor
of the governor; but it was unsuccessful so far as common usage was concerned.
41
Near the little stream crossed by the first bridge on the road leading
from the city to Alviso. nail's Hist. San Jost, 14-19, 46. This modern work
contains a tolerably accurate and complete history of San Jose". Documents
on the early years are not numerous, and the author seems to have consulted
most of them. There are a few errors in names and translation, but the book
'
'
We
313
above the average of what has been given to the California public as
Hall's San Jos6, from the San Jos6 Pioneer, Jan. 1877, being an
address by the author on July 4th, is full of errors, many of which are doubtless due to the
newspaper and not the writer.
April 15th, Prov. Rec., MS., i. 7-8. A duplicate was sent to General
Croix. Id. 9, 10. See an English translation of this report in Dwindles Colon.
Hist. S. F., addenda, 8.
The viceroy's acknowledgment of this report and
approval of Neve's actswas dated July 22, 1778. St. Pap. Miss. andColon.,~MS.,
i. 28-9.
He mentions a servant besides the 5 settlers, and makes the whole
population G8 instead of 66. He also speaks of a dam not alluded to by Neve.
Croix's acknowledgment and approval was dated July 19, 1779, and included
that of the king dated March 6th. Hall's Hist. San Jose, 14-19.
is
far
history.
4:2
314
MISSION PROGRESS
sional or experimental.
43
43
Neve's communications in Prov. Rec.< MS.,
Prov. St. Pap., iii. 145.
i.
90-2, 125-6,
ii.
21-2;
INDIAN HOSTILITIES.
315
and two
tion to
44
This story is told by Hugo Reid and Benjamin Hayes, and it is also the
subject of a poem by Miss M. A. Fitzgerald. Hayes Mission Book, i. 197.
1
MISSION PROGRESS
316
in this battle
"
governor's approval. The sentence was:
Deeming it
useful to the service of God, the king, and the public
weal, I sentence them to a violent death by two
musket-shots on the llth at 9 A. M., the troops to be
present at the execution under arms, also all the
Christian rancherias subject to the San Diego mission,
that they may be warned to act righteously." Fathers Lasuen and Figuer were summoned to prepare
"
the condemned for their end.
You will cooperate,"
"
writes Ortega to the padres,
for the good of their
souls in the understanding that if they do not accept
the salutary waters of holy baptism they die on Saturday morning; and if they do they die all the
same!" This was the first public execution in California.
45
these Indian troubles see reports of Neve and Ortega in St. Pap. Sac.,
61-3, viii. 31-52; Prov. Rec., MS., i. 19, 96-7; Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
1-6; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., i. 41-4.
MS.,
ii.
On
45
vii.
CHAPTER
XV.
PERIOD OF PREPARATION SCHEMES FOR THE FUTURE GOVERNMENT REFORMS PUEBLOS CHANNEL ESTABLISHMENTS NEVE WANTS TO RESIGN
AND IS MADE COLONEL SACRAMENT OF CONFIRMATION EPISCOPAL
POWERS CONFERRED ON PADRE SERRA TOUR OF THE MISSIONS QUARREL WITH NEVE ECCLESIASTIC PREROGATIVE AND SECULAR AUTHORITY
A FRIAR'S SHARP PRACTICE SERIOUS CHARGES BY THE GOVERNOR
MOVEMENTS OF VESSELS ARRIVAL OF ARTEAGA AND BODEGA FROM A
NORTHERN VOYAGE THE FIRST MANILA GALLEON AT MONTEREY
LOCAL EVENTS AND PROGRESS PRESIDIO BUILDINGS.
THE years 1778 and 1779, completing the first decade in the annals of Alta California as a Spanish
province, together with 1780, formed a period rather
of preparation than of accomplishment, of theories
rather than practice, in matters affecting the general
interests of the country ; though there was a satisfactory showing of local progress at the several missions.
One of the most important general subjects which
claimed Governor Neve's attention, was the preparation of a new reglamento, or system of military government for the Californias; the new establishments
having in a general sense outgrown Echeveste's regulation of 1773, and some articles of that document
having in practice proved unsatisfactory. The king's
order of March 21, 1775, for the reform of the system was, on August 15, 1777, forwarded by General Croix to Neve with a letter in which he says
"Lacking knowledge on the subject, I need that you
report to me at length and in detail what are the
:
(317)
318
A DECADE COMPLETED.
may
We
An
NEVE'S PROJECTS.
319
events,
5
only major before.
The
right to administer the rite of confirmation belonged exclusively to bishops, and could be exercised
even by the highest officials of the religious orders
4
ii.
8, 9.
320
A DECADE COMPLETED.
It
only with special authorization from the pope.
was of course desirable that mission neophytes should
not be deprived of any privileges and consolations
pertaining to the new faith they 'had embraced; but
in isolated provinces like the Californias, episcopal
visits must of necessity be rare, so that most neophytes, to say nothing of gente de razon, must live
and die unconfirmed but for some special exercise of
the papal power.
In fact Alta California, though
included successively in the bishoprics of Durango
and Sonora, never was visited by a bishop until it
had one of its own in 1835. When Father Juniper o
first came to Lower California he found in the Jesuit
archives a bull of Pope Benedict XIV. conceding the
power of confirmation to missionary officials of the
company. Anxious that the neophytes should lose
nothing of their privileges under Franciscan management, he soon forwarded the old bull to the guardian
of San Fernando, with a request that a similar favor
be obtained from the pope in behalf of himself and
6
his flock.
The Franciscan authorities -exerted themselves in bringing this matter before the pope, and
obtained under date of July 16, 1774, a papal decree, approving that rendered by the sacred congre-
gation of propaganda fide on July 8th, which authorized the comisarip prefecto of the colleges for a
period of ten years to administer confirmation and to
delegate his power in this respect to one friar connected with each of the four colleges in America.
Both church and crown in Spain were zealous defenders of their respective prerogatives; and as not
even a bishop could exercise the functions of his office until his
appointment had received the royal apof
course
this special concession of episcopal
proval,
6
is
to
have sought the episcopal power for the dignity involved in fact hearing
that a great honor was in store for him he had made a vow to accept no
honor that would separate him from his mission work, and had directed the
influence of his friends in Spain toward the obtaining of the episcopal power
;
RITE OF CONFIRMATION.
321
same subject.
8
focultad de Confirmar, MS., 270, Serra says he had confirmed 2,455 before
the power was suspended, and the mission books make the number 2,457.
HIST. CAL., VOL.
I.
21
A DECADE COMPLETED.
322
summoned him
to
not do, since he had no document to prove it. The same statement is made in
a communication from Bonilla to Croix on Apr. 20, 1780. St. Pap. Sac., MS.,
viii. 53.
This is however partially erroneous, for Serra did go to Sta Clara
and San Francisco with or without an escort. The guardian simply says, Id.
253, that Neve had raised a doubt whether the apostolic brief has the proper
sanctions.
Had Serra's papers been defective he would have known it find
would have hesitated to administer a sacrament which might prove illegal.
,
323
The order to Neve is not extant, but its purport is given in the communication to Serra in St. Pap. Sac., MS., viii. 28; and Facultad de Confirmar,
., 258-60.
"
A DECADE COMPLETED.
324
tion to get rid of them; and he suspended confirmations, as he flattered himself, at the 'entreaty' of
Croix and not the 'command' of Neve. The 20th of
"
July Serra replied to the letter of Croix about a con-
tinuation of administering the sacrament of confirmawhich I solicited." He has the day before
s
received Neve's letter containing the general's order
to suspend confirmation, which of course he will cheerfully obey; though he regrets that the legal adviser has
not given more weight to his argument on the gossip
and wonder that a suspension of the power to confirm
In order, however,
will cause among ignorant people.
to prevent this gossip as far as possible, he will absent
himself on some pretext or other, when he hears that
the vessel is coming; though that will be just the time
when his presence will be most needed. As to the
papers, he has sent them nine months ago to his college, and as a tribulation sent upon him by an all-wise
God, the vessels are late this year and the documents
tion
have not come; but they will soon be here and will
be delivered to the governor for the purposes indicated, though with a little delay they might be delivered in a more complete and satisfactory state. 1 2
'
l2
Facultad de Conjirmar, MS., 260-6. There are two copies of the letter,
both in Serra's handwriting, but differing somewhat in the closing portions.
The variations are not however in substance essential. It is but fair to the
padre to say that in speaking about the documents his language is not clear,
and might possibly bear a different construction from that I have given in the
text; that is, he may mean to say in substance, 'I have sent copies of my
papers (though it reads remitiendo alld todos mis papeles que hacian al
caso ) to Mexico for completion by the addition of missing ones, and by a
little delay I could send them in a completed state; but as it is I give up the
Or he might mean that he had sent
originals as they are to the governor.
the most important papers to Mexico and would give up what were left. There
is however no evidence outside of this letter that he ever gave up any papers,
but it appears rather that he gave up none. It is not impossible that his
language was intentionally made vague. Governor Neve in a subsequent
letter to Croix, March 26, 1781, in Pror. Rec., MS., ii. 81, speaks very plainly
on the subject, saying that Serra claimed to have sent his patent to Mexico,
and he does not deem it wise to take possession of and search his papers, because if he has not sent the document away he will have hid it with his
unspeakable artifice and shrewdness; and the only result will be trouble
with the padres and delay in the Channel foundations, for which they will
refuse to contribute supplies.
Being exasperated there is nothing these friars
with their immeasurable and incredible pride will not attempt, since 011
more than four occasions it has required all Neve's policy and moderation to
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
ECCLESIASTICAL PREROGATIVE.
S25
The commandant
general, on receipt of Serra's letter, simply repeated on November 29th his previous
order that the papers were to be given up at once.
fitting
'
'
'
'
A DECADE COMPLETED.
326
They were
ber.
whence
received
by Neve
at
San
Gabriel,
he informed
shown to
been
that
as
the
brief
had
Serra
apostolic
have the requisite approval of the council, there was
no longer any obstacle to his administering the sacrament. 15
in a letter dated
May
19, 1781,
During the continuance of this quarrel the president took advantage of another opportunity to show
his independence of the government.
The governor
had been ordered to send in connection with his an15
jirmar,
MS.
327
Mexico. 16
This episode of California history, now for the first
time made public, exhibits the character of Junipero
Serra in a new and, considering the previous character of the man, in a startling light. And though
from this distance nothing can be seen in the controversy which might affect the interests of Christianity,
of the Franciscan order, or of the California missions,
we must conclude that Serra was conscientious in his
belief that principles of the gravest character were
involved or he never would have manifested the firmness and the stubborn pertinacity he did from the
beginning to the end of this dispute with the governor. The great battles between the royal prerogative
and ihefuero eclesidstico had been fought in Spain; it
certainly could have been no trifling matter that would
induce this man of peace to renew them in California.
On the other hand Neve claimed what he regarded
as a well known right, nothing in the slightest degree
humiliating to the president, and so far as can be
known he urged his claims in a courteous and respectful manner; and when obedience to his demands
was refused nothing but his moderation and coolminded patriotism prevented a scandal which would
have been unfortunate to the country, and perhaps
disastrous to the missions.
No ardent churchman
entertains a more exalted opinion of the virtues of
Junipero Serra, his pure-mindedness, his self-sacrificing
devotion, his industry and zeal than myself. Nor would
I willingly detract from the reputation of a man who
has been justly regarded as an ideal missionary, the
father of the church in California; but I am writing
16
Neve to Croix June 4, 1779, in Prov. Rec., MS., i. 127-8. The governor
says that the natives are taiight that the padres are supreme and the secular
officials are to be regarded with indifference.
A DECADE COMPLETED.
328
The
The
license
Palou, Vida, 235-6, alludes to the quarrel very briefly, admitting that
malice.
In his Noticlas he does not mention the
Shea, Cath. Miss., 100, says that Serra was for a time presubject at all.
vented by the government from exercising his right. Taylor, Ditcov. and
Founders, ii. No. 28, affirms that P. Junipero had a serious fright soon after
beginning to confirm on account of a rumor from Mexico that there was something i rregular in his papers; but on assurance from all the prominent men accessible that there was nothing wrong he was comforted Gleeson, Hist. Cath. Ch.
ii. 84-6, attributes the hindrance to the Chevalier de Croix who was
opposed
to the missions, and would not allow Serra to confirm until the viceroy was
to
and
told
him
to
let
the
alone.
appealed
padres
l%
San Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS., 10. She came back next year with
329
courier now
arrived overland with tidings of Viceroy Bucareli's
death and of the war with England. This hurried the
vessels away, and after hasty preparations in view of
possible hostilities on the high seas, they sailed October 30th, bearing important despatches from Serra,
and leaving Matias Noriega in place of Father Cam20
bon, who retired on account of ill-health.
the same officers, except that Miguel Ddvalos was chaplain, entering Monterey in October and unloading there, to the great inconvenience of San Francisco, whither the cargo had to be carried by land. Pdlou, Not., ii. 368-9;
Prov. Etc., MS., ii. 32-3.
19
According to S. Francisco, Lib de Mision, MS., 11-12; Pdlou, Vida,
Cauizares and
231-3.
Lieut. Quiros y Miranda was one of the officers.
Maurelle were also on the vessels.
20
San Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS., 11 ; Boderja y Cuadra, Navegacion,
etc., 1779, MS.; Arteaga, Tercera Exploration, 1779, MS.; Maurelle, Nave-
A DECADE COMPLETED.
330
There
in
much
at
gacion,
LOCAL ITEMS.
331
i; ttle
Diego, and one for San Antonio, San Luis, and San
Neve at his coming had found the so-called
Gabriel.
to
be mere collections of huts, enclosed in
presidios
fences of sticks called palisades, altogether
inadequate to purposes of defence, even against the
poorly armed Californians. He gave special attention
to this matter and with such success that on the 3d
of July 1778 there was completed at Monterey a wall
of stone 537 yards in circumference, 12 feet high and
four feet thick, enclosing ten adobe houses each 2 1 by
24 feet, with barracks 136 by 18 feet not quite finished.
At San Francisco walls were also being built,
but of adobe, which the rains of January and February
of 1779 undermined and destroyed, showing that here
also stone must be used.
At San Diego stones were
being collected for foundations in 1778, but we hear
slight
house was bunied at the presidio Oct. 11, 1779, and with it the hospital tent of the two vessels Princes' i and Favorita.
25
On local matters 1778-80 see Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., x. 495-513; Prov.
7?ec.,
MS.,
Pap., MS.,
i.
ii.
36-7.
ii.
A DECADE COMPLETED.
332
For a
lisj of
this volume.
CHAPTER
XVI.
AND MISSIONARIES.
1-33
COLONISTS
334:
AND RECRUITS.
in
the other
Elsewhere
in this series I
3
*
or Neve.
NEW
REGLAMENTO.
335
by each
presidial
sponsible for
plies
any
re-
While sup-
ter of necessity, the habilitado was authorized to purchase California productions whenever offered, and it
\J
centre,
It
risima, at the extremities of the Channel coast.
also made provision for two pueblos, the one al-
ready founded at San Jose, and another to be established on the Bio Porciiincula and called Nuestra
Senora de los Angeles. For the four presidios, and
0(
he eleven missions and two pueblos under their proction, a force of four lieutenants, four sub-lieutenants,
r alfereces, six sergeants, sixteen corporals, one hundred and seventy-two soldiers, one surgeon, and five
master-mechanics was allowed at an annual expense
From this force a sergeant
for salaries of $53,453.
soldier,
The
336
COLONISTS
AND RECRUITS.
at
and translated. 8
PUEBLO REGULATIONS.
nists, such as
337
privileges.
In return
were
they must build houses, dig irrigating ditches, cultivate, own, and keep in repair certain implements, and
maintain a certain number of animals; they could not
kill or otherwise dispose of their live-stock
except
under certain regulations to insure its increase; neither
could one person own more than fifty animals of a kind
and thus monopolize the pueblo wealth; and finally,
each pueblo must perform certain community work in
the construction of dams and irrigating canals, on
roads and streets, in a church and the necessary town
buildings, in tilling the propios, or pueblo lands, from
the product of which municipal expenses were to be
paid.
Municipal officers were at the beginning appo
pointed by the governor but afterwards chosen by the
pe ople. This system of colonization was in every
respect a wise one and well adapted to the needs of
the country.
If it was not successful, it is to the
character of the colonists, the mildness of the climate,
and the opposition of the missionaries that we must
look for the causes of failure.
The regulation provided in its last section for the
HIST. CAL. VOL.
I.
22
COLONISTS
338
AND RECRUITS.
establishment in the future of new missions, in addition to the three to be immediately founded.
By the
line of eleven missions located along the coast at intervals of from fourteen to twenty-five leagues, with
four protecting presidios at greater intervals, communication would, it was thought, be sufficiently secured;
and new missions should be located on a second line
farther inland, each new establishment being as far
as possible equidistant from two of the old ones, and
from fourteen to twenty leagues east. Two ministers as
before were to be left in each of the old and of the
three Channel missions, but the places of those who
died or retired were not to be filled so long as one
padre was left at each mission, except that at presidio
missions there were to be two friars until some other
shows
of missionary influence
than
did
Echeveste's
which was inshaping
but
we
shall
also
see
that most of
Serra;
spired by
the present provisions were of no practical effect until
modified by Franciscan influences.
lation
in
less indications
its
Meanwhile preparations for the proposed new establishments were going on slowly, preparations that had
begun with Neve's arrival in the country, his report
of June 1777 on the means and importance of controlling the eight or ten thousand natives of the twenty-
339
Queen
of the Angels.
In a preliminary
"
COLONISTS
340
AND RECRUITS.
13
three years,
'
Coming now
14
been selected and commissioned, and that twentyfive soldiers had been selected from the volunteers of
the presidial companies of Sonora to serve out their
time in California, their service beginning February
1st when they were to assemble at Horcasitas. There
were to be recruited twenty-four settlers and fiftynine soldiers, and to obtain them Rivera was allowed
to go beyond the limits of the Provincias Internas,
Twenty -five of
necessary.
the new recruits were to fill the places of those taken
from the presidios, so that only thirty-four soldiers
were to go to California. These and the twenty-four
settlers must be married men, accompanied by their
families, healthy and robust, likely to lead regular
The
lives, and to set a good example to the natives.
settlers must include a mason, a carpenter, and a
All must bind themselves to ten years'
blacksmith.
Female relatives of the pobladores, if unservice.
married, should be encouraged to accompany the families with a view to marriage with bachelor soldiers
as far as Guadalajara
if
18
This, strangely enough, does not agree exactly with the regulation,
which offers $116 per year for two years and $60 for the next three, these
sums including rations neither was the pay to begin according to the regla;
fourth alferez.
ENLISTMENT IN SINALOA.
The rendezvous
341
for the
whole
might
by sea
already in California.
company was
five soldiers
15
cles,
man
16
At the end
of the Instruction (pp. 80-4) are given full lists of the artichiefly of clothing, to be furnished each recruit, soldier or poblador,
or
woman, boy or
girl.
St.
Pap., MS.,
ii.
89-99.
342
COLONISTS
AND RECRUITS.
ARRIVAL OF SETTLERS.
343
Meanwhile the
from Guaymas to Loreto, under command of Lieutenant Jose Zuniga substituted for Gonzalez.
Seventeen
with
their
left
Loreto
men, probably soldiers,
families,
March 12th under Alferez Lasso and reached San
Luis Bay by water April 24th, soon followed by the
rest under Zuniga, this last division including apparently eleven settlers and their families, two of the
original number having deserted and one remaining
for a time at Loreto.
All were en route for the north
on May 16th, when Neve communicated the preced20
ing facts to General Croix, and all arrived August
18th at San Gabriel, where they were obliged to
encamp in quarantine for a time, at a distance of a
league from the mission, some of the children having
21
recently recovered from the small-pox.
Neve to Croix, July 14, 1781, in Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 87-8. Some other
unimportant correspondence on the general subject of the new foundations is
found in Id., ii. 14, 40-1; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., ii. 41; Prov. St.
Pop., MS., iii. 265.
Neve to Croix, May 16, 1781, in Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 82. In this letter
Neve announces his intention to send Robles with 12 men to meet Rivera. I
have already stated that he sent only 5 or 6 men. Palou, Not., ii. 381, says
the number was 5. Rivera certainly had 11 or 12 men and all may have been
those sent with Robles; but if lie started with 42 and only 35 arrived, Palou 's
version accounts for the discrepancy.
21
Neve to Croix, Oct. 29, 1781, in Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 89-90.
T2
St. Pap. Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 105-19.
This document is literally
identical with section xiv. of the reglameiito already referred to and found in
344
Though
COLONISTS
AND EECRUITS.
the following chapter, the resulting excitement furnished no motive for delay at Los Angeles.
Governor Neve issued his instructions for founding
the pueblo of La Reina de los Angeles from San
Gabriel on the 26th of August. While agreeing
with, or literally copying the clauses of the regulation
which I have translated in the preceding note, this
particulars
re-
rainfall,
this being the area generally occupied by a fanega, a bushel and a half, of
maize in sowing. The distribution of said suertes, which like that of the solares
must be made in the king's name, will be made by the government with
equality and with proportion to the irrigable land, so that, after making the
corresponding demarcation and after reserving as baldios, or vacant, one fourth
of the number which results from reckoning the number of settlers, they
(suertes) shall be distributed, if there are enough of them, at the rate of two
suertes of irrigable land to each settler and two more of dry; and of the realengas (royal lands including the lots left vacant as above) there shall be set
apart such as may be deemed necessary for the pueblo's propios (municipal
lands as above), and from the rest grants shall be made by the governor in
the name of his majesty to such as may come to settle later,' especially to dis-
charged soldiers, etc. The original is somewhat vaguely worded and badly
punctuated, hardly two of the copies in manuscript and print, or of the many
translations extant, being punctuated alike. The above is the meaning of the
clauses as clear as I can make it.
I see no good reason for reproducing the
Mr
345
23
Of
specting the survey and distribution of lots.
subsequent proceedings for a time we only know that
the pueblo was founded September 4th, with twelve
and their families, forty-six persons in all,
whose names are given and whose blood was a strange
mixture of Indian and negro with here and there a
24
Two of the original recruits, Miguel
trace of Spanish.
Villa and Rafael Mesa, had deserted before reaching
the country, one was still absent in the peninsula, and
settlers
23
MS.
pueblo.
Los Angeles, Padron dell81, MS. ; Ortega, in St. Pap., Miss, and Colon.,
104-5. The settlers were as follows: Jose de Lara, Spaniard, 50 years
of age, wife Indian, 3 children; Jose" Antonio Navarro, mestizo, 42 years,
wife mulattress, 3 children; Basilio Rosas, Indian, 68 years, wife mulattress,
6 children; Antonio Mesa, negro, 38 years, wife mulattress, 2 children; Antonio (Felix) Villavicencio, Spaniard, 30 years, wife Indian, 1 child; Jose"
Vanegas, Indian, 28 years, wife Indian, 1 child; Alejandro Rosas, Indian, 19
years, wife coyote (Indian); Pablo Rodriguez, Indian, 25 years, wife Indian,
i.
iii.
MS.,
ii.
65.
COLONISTS
346
AND RECRUITS.
material.
25
For scattered references to buildings, see Prov. Rec., MS., i. 1T5-G, 184;
23; Prov. St. Pap., MS., iv. 91.
Early in 1782 Lara, Mesa, and Quintero, a Spaniard, and two negroes,
were sent away as useless to the pueblo and themselves, and their property
was taken away by order of the governor. The record does not show that
Miranda, the 'chino,' ever came to Los Angeles at all, unless lie be identical
with another 'useless' settler said to have been sent away in 1783. Jose"
Francisco Sinova, who had lived a long time as a laborer in California, applied
for admission as a settler in 1785, and was admitted, receiving the same aid
as the original colonists in the way of implements and live-stock, save in
One of
respect of sheep and goats, which the government had not on hand.
the deserters, Rafael Mesa, seems to have been caught and brought to California, but there is no evidence that he settled at Los Angeles. Two grown-up
sons of Basilio Rosas appear on the list of 1785, as does also Juan Joso Dominguez, a Spaniard; but all three disappear from the next year's list. Pror.
iii.
26
Rec., ii. 79; iii. 185; Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 144-5; xxii. 29-30; Prov. St.
Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., iii. 1.
27
In fact the titles given to settlers seem to have been approved by the
commandant general on Feb. 6, 1784. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 152.
28
Art. 17, sect, xiv., simply provides that the governor or his comisionados shall give titles and cause the same, with register of brands, to be recorded and kept in the archives impliedly at the beginning.
DISTRIBUTION OF LANDS.
347
regulation.
the performance of his duty Argtiello with his witnesses summoned each of the nine settlers in succession and in presence of all granted first the house-lot,
then the four fields, and finally the branding-iron by
which his live-stock was to be distinguished from
that of his neighbors. In both house-lots and fields
the pretence of a measurement was made.
In each
case the nature of the grant was fully explained, the
grantee assented to the conditions involved, and for
each of the twenty-seven grants a separate document
was drawn up, each bearing, besides the signatures of
Argtiello and his witnesses, a cross, for not one of the
nine could sign his name.
I give herewith a map
30
the
of
lands.
distribution
Argiiello's surshowing
of
of
reserved
lands is not
the
classes
various
vey
the
are
however,
very clearly expressed;
propios,
said to extend 2,200 varas from the dam to the limit
29
Los Angeles, Repartition de Solares y Suerte*, 178G, MS. The document
contains Argiiello's appointment, his acceptance, the appointment of two
witnesses, three autos de diligencias, or records of granting house-lot, field,
and branding-iron respectively to each of 9 settlers, one auto of survey of
municipal and royal lands, and a final certificate of having completed his task
and deposited the records in the archives.
*Prov.
21, 1793.
St.
iii.
55; Id., Ben., ii. 2; signed by Argiiello Dec.
of the pueblo is on a scale five times larger than that
Pap., MS.,
The map
COLONISTS
348
AND RECRUITS.
At San
in
November
1777, were
still
PUEBLO MAPS.
349
the government. 31 In
PUEBLO OF
LOS ANGELES
Manuel Camero; N, 0, streets; P, Plaza. Two other maps are given St.
Pap., Miss, and Col, MS., i. 103, 307 one of which I reproduce. For the
third transfer 1 to 2; add a lot at 3; and move 4, 5, 6, 7 one tier to the east.
I suppose these maps to have been of earlier date than 1786.
31
According to documents in Prov. St. Pap. Ben. Mil. MS. iii. 23, the pay
or rations of G of the 9 settlers ceased Nov. 1, 1782; one had rations to Nov. 3d;
and "2 had rations all the year. According to other records in Prov. St. Pap.,
MS. v. 25-G, 28, 4 had rations during 1783, and 3 at beginning of 1784. In Id.
iii. 244-7,
Moraga says that from June to Dec. 1781 three settlers had pay
and rations, while 2 had rations only.
32
In Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 154-6, this document is given under date of
Dec. 2cl, and is preceded, Id., 153-4, by a letter of instructions dated Dec.
12th, and ordering that the mandamiento (the document of Dec. 2d) be placed
at the head of each title.
On Jan. 4, 1783, Moraga writes that he cannot
attend to the distribution at once as ordered by the governor in letter of
Dec. 6th, but will do so at an early date. Stat. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS.,
,
i.
COLONISTS
350
AND RECRUITS
Yz
Way
to Mission
LOCAL ITEMS.
351
the Santa Clara boundary, designating half the space (no width is given) as
Then the cnidos 1,500 x 700 varas were
propio* and the rest as realengas.
located on the eminence where the pueblo stood.
31
Prow. St. Pap., MS., iii. 130-1.
25
Letters of Sept. 25th and 28th in Monterey Co. Arch., MS., vii. 3, 4.
*&
ki<nita Clara, Lib. de Ilision, MS., 10, 11; Palou, Not., ii. 369-70;
Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xi. 131 ; Palou, Vida, 23G-7.
scrap in Levett's
Scrap-book says the site was called by the natives Gerguensen, or valley of
the oaks.'
37
Orders for a war tax circulated by C4en. .Croix and sent to California.
Misiones, MS., i. 59-70.
'
352
COLONISTS
AND RECRUITS.
CHAPTER
XVII.
THE reader
money
I.
23
difficulties,
(353)
never
354
See chapters
1 suppose that
355
presidio.
He
early in
Dominican ground.
3
Garce"s suggested a route by water by way of the gulf and river, or by
the ocean to San Diego. He also recommended that San Diego be subject to
the Colorado presidio instead of Monterey, so as to protect communication
and prevent conflicts with the California authorities. Thus his views in behalf of his college were somewhat ambitious.
Whether they resulted in some
degree from his own treatment by Rivera, or whether Rivera's policy was influenced by the views of Garce's, there is no means of knowing.
4
In 1778 Croix writes to Galvez on the importance of conciliating the Colorado and Gila tribes, and of founding settlements on the route to California.
it.
356
sidio captain
Still
no Span-
for a while
governor gave an order for supplies, but the commandant could not furnish a proper guard, for his
force was small and the natives were unusually bitter.
In obedience to orders, however, he told Garces to
select the smallest
immediate
number of
The
soldiers that
would meet
that in
a
mission
circumunder
these
distant
establishing
stances there was danger.
But delay was also for
many reasons undesirable, and the early establishment of a presidio was confidently hoped for. Therefore after much discussion, including a reference to the
viceroy and college, the two friars chose seventeen
necessities.
friars
realized
started in
the Yumas.
A NEW SYSTEM.
357
PUEBLO-MISSIONS
358
ON"
Palou, Not.,
ii.
374-88.
The
359
Islas.
The pueblo of La Purisima Concepcion was
at once founded, and the adjoining lands were distributed, Garces and Barreneche being its ministers.
pueblo,
S.Pablo
oSto-Tomaa
Sonoita,
THE COLORADO
MISSIONS.
families.
360
tempo-
milpas,
We
Pakm, Not., ii. 375, says that in asking for this aid they declared that if
were not sent they would have to abandon the Colorado establishments.
.Neve reports on June 23, 1781, having sent the succor asked for by Alferez
Islas. Prov. Etc., MS., ii. 85.
it
PREMOMTIOXS OF DISASTER.
3G1
9
According to Arricivita the priests for many days devoted almost their
whole attention to labor among the Spanish population, striving to reawaken
interest in religious exercises and thus to prepare the souls of the unsuspecting
men, women, and children for death. In these efforts they were also said to
have been remarkably successful.
362
MS.,
11
ii.
09.
Sunday.
was
Arricivita, followed
certainly Tuesday.
12
Arricivita, 529-54, gives some details respecting the lives of the missionaries.
Juan Marcelo was born in 1736 in the city of Alajar, Spain, taking
the
name
in 1768
MASSACRE OF RIVERA'S
MEN".
363
fields.
Some
of the houses
contemporaries.
College in 1763; and became minister of San Javier del Bac in 1768. He
travelled extensively among the gentile tribes, from his first coming to Sonora
down to the time of his death. Juan Antonio Barreneche was born in LacaHe became a
zor, Navarre, in 1749, and came when a child to Habana.
Franciscan in 1768; joined the Quere'taro College in 1773. His first missionary work was in the Colorado pueblos where he died at the early age of 32
The author in connection with these facts repeats much of the history
years.
told in this chapter, and adds many details of the lives and Christian virtues
of these four martyrs for which I have no space.
13
It is not impossible that Arricivita draws on his imagination for details
about the religious services, supposing the day to have been Sunday.
H InProv. St.
Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., iii. 19, 22, are revistas of 1782 showing
the following soldiers of the San Diego and Monterey company who had died
besides Sergt. Robles Manuel Cafiedo, Tomas Maria Camacho, Rafael Marquez, Joaquin Guerrero, Jose" M. Guerrero, Nicolas Beltran, Juan Angel
Amarillas, Francisco Peila, Joaquin Lopez, Joaquin Espinosa, Antonio Espinosa, and Pablo Victoriano Cervantes. These 12 names doubtless include the
:
Colorado victims.
15
Father ConsagZevallos, Vida de Konsay, 14 writing in 1753 of his
third expedition says of Rivera
No perdono ningun trabajo personal de
'
364
The natives returned to Concepcion the same afterThe priests on their approach escaped with
noon.
the families and took refuge with some of their conThe buildings were sacked and burned
vert friends.
as at the lower village, and next day the two priests
were killed notwithstanding the efforts made by certain
Indians in their behalf. Only two men are known to
have saved their lives at Concepcion, and the whole
number of the slain at the two pueblos and Rivera's
hear
camp was at least forty-six, probably more.
of no killing of women and children.
The captives
were made to work, but no further outrage is recorded. 16
Alferez Limon after escorting the California colony
to San Gabriel started back for Sonora by the old
route with his nine men. Drawing near the Colorado
he was informed by the natives that there had been a
We
modo que
tura; and still another March 9, 1767. Loreto, Libro de Mision, MS., 174,
Alvarado, Hist. Gal, MS., ii. 106-7, says that his memory was
177, 195.
long honored by anniversary funeral masses at San Diego, and that Gov.
Echeandia in 1825 proposed a monument in his honor.
16
The information that the hostilities lasted three days comes from Arricivita. Most other authorites state or imply that the bloody work was begun
and ended on July 17th; butCroix in a note dated July 17, 1782, and in correction of a report from Neve that Rivera died on July 1st, states that it was
on July 18th, thus sustaining Arrici vita. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., iii.
10. Neve in a letter to Croix of March 10, 1782, Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 76-8,
says that the savages attacked the two villages and Rivera's camp simultaneously and by 8 o'clock had completed their work at the former; that they
found Rivera's men scattered and at first entered the encampment as friends,
attacking before the soldiers could be gathered, and killing the last man at
night after fighting all day. In another letter of Sept. 1st, Id., 88-9, Neve
ii.
87-93; Taylor, in
365
366
whose
know
life
since he sailed
little
beyond the
fact that
He
captain and now returns a lieutenant-colonel.
was accompanied by Captain Fueros of the Altar
20
presidio.
20
In a record of certain California documents existing in Mexico in 171
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 205-G, is mentioned the original account of
Diario del viaje de tierra hecho al Rio Colorado de 6rden
expedition.
Comandante General, El Caballero de Croix, al mando del Tenicnte Corond
Pedro Fayes, etc., dated at Altar Sept. 16, 1781 (it should probably be Sonoit
Dec. 20th), a document I have been unable to find.
21
Palou, Vida, 247-54, who saw the original narrative, seems to be
authority for the finding of the Yumas down the river. He is quoted
Arricivita, who, however, implies erroneously that the captives were rj
somod on a subsequent
22
Arricivita
is
visit.
who
367
ination at Sonoita October 31st and took the testimony of six men who had survived the massacre,
material which I have already utilized in describing
that event. 23 At San Pedro y San Pablo on December 7th the bodies of Diaz and Moreno were discovered in a good state of preservation, though the head
properly attested certificates were drawn up and forwarded to the Santa Cruz College in Queretaro by
Croix at the request of the Franciscans. The remains
of the four martyrs were carried south and buried in
one coffin in the church at Tubutama.
On September 10th Croix had forwarded to Neve
the resolutions of the council of the day before, to the
end that he, as the proper official to direct all military operations in California, might on hearing of
Pages' arrival at the Colorado send orders or go in
person to take command. Neve did prepare a force,
composed chiefly of the men waiting to found Santa
Barbara, which he held in readiness; and he seems
also to have sent Alferez Velasquez with a small
But
inquiries about Pages' coming.
an
but
back
unintelligible
Velasquez brought
nothing
party to
make
dition;
evidence in
2:i
murder
names
as a traitor to
whom
the
'368
Yuma
leaders
FINAL CAMPAIGN.
369
MS.,
ii.
53.
ii. 383, says that the messenger overtook Neve March 26th,
the sanio day he had left San Gabriel to found San Buenaventura.
28
Prov. St. Pap., MS., iii. 198-207, including a letter of Croix of May
18th, communicating to Neve the junta's action, and another letter announcing the sending of 200 horses and 40 mules to mount the California!!
27
Palou, Not.,
troop3.
HIST. CAL., VOL,
I.
24
370
29
Captain Jose Antonio Romeu with a force of one
hundred and eight men reached the seat of proposed
war at the
specified time.
his
always more or
less hostile.
29
Romeu, afterwards governor of California, had been with Fueros on the
Colorado earlier in the year, and had written a diary of that expedition, which
by resolution of the junta was sent to Neve for his instruction.
30
Neve's instructions to Soler, July 12, 1782. Prov. St. Pap., MS., iii. 120.
Neve to Croix, Aug. 3, 1782, receipt of letter announcing approval by the
junta of the suspension of Yuma campaign. Prov. Rec., MS., ii. G5-6. Neve
to Croix,
own
31
Aug.
12, 1782,
chapter.
32
In Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 205-6, there is mentioned as existing in
Mexico in 1795 a Diario tie las marchas y ocurrencias. .descle 21 de Agosto
A short let1182, which my search of the archives has not brought to light.
ter of Neve to Croix dated Sonoita Oct. 16th Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 53 is the
only original account extant. He says he sent an alfe"rez with 8 men to reconnoitre, heard firing, and hurried up to support the alfcrez, but the enemy iled.
Then Romeu attacked a Yuma rancheria and inflicted some loss, having 4 soldiers wounded.
He vaguely states that he should have subdued the Yiimas
and left communication by that route secure, had it not been for distrust
caused partly by the imprudent actions of precediDg expeditions. Arricivita,
Cr6n. Seraf, 514, says 108 natives were killed, 85 taken prisoners, 10 Christians
freed from captivity, and 1,048 horses recovered, but all without pacifying
the foe. Palou states that after receiving his appointment as inspector, Neve
did not care to march against the Yumas. The enemy, however, came out
boldly to taunt and challenge the Spaniards until one of the Sonora captains
(Romeu) could endure it no longer, and obtained Neve's permission to punish
the Yuma insolence, which he did in three days' fighting in which many
.
natives
fell.
371
nor pueblo was ever. again established on the Colorado; and communication by this route never ceased
to be attended with danger. Truly, as the Franciscan
chroniclers do not fail to point out, the old way was
best; the innovations of Croix had led to nothing but
disaster; the nuevo modo de conquistar was a failure.
CHAPTER
XVIII.
but
Diego.
Neve writes
the same
91.
ello,
(372
PRESIDIO INSTRUCTIONS.
373
374
was
safely enclosed
by a
line of
They were
to be civilized
by example and
pre-
was
prices.
NEW
MISSION REGULATIONS.
375
end were to be afforded every facility by the military; but the natives must not be taken from their
rancherias or required to live in mission communities,
except a few at a time, who might be persuaded to
live temporarily with the missionaries for instruction.
The reasons given for these regulations were the
this
small area of tillable land in proportion to the number of inhabitants, rendering agricultural mission
communities impracticable, and the great danger that
would be incurred by any attempt to break up or rearrange the numerous and densely populated native
towns or rancherias along the Channel. Without
open denunciation, trusting to their influence in Mexand Spain to restore the old state of affairs. Their
practical success was rapid and not very difficult, as
ico
we
shall see.
376
Buenaventura as regular
of Neve's escort of 10
the 10.
6
San Buenaventura, Lib. de Mislon, MS. On the day of foundation Serra
writes to Lasuen expressing his joy at witnessing the foundation. Arch. Sta.
Barbara, MS., ix. 288. Gen. Croix congratulates Serra in letter of July 22,
1782. Id., i. 261-2.
April 24th, Neve writes to Croix that by April 12th the
enclosure of 40 by 50 varas, of palisades 4 varas high with two ravelins, a
Facilities were good for
gate, and a small warehouse had been completed.
irrigation and for obtaining building material. Prov. JRec., MS., ii. Gl.
Giovanni di Fidanza was born at Bagnarea in Tuscany in 1221. St Francis
of Assisi, meeting him one day and foreseeing his future greatness, exclaimed
buona ventura and the name, Buenaventura in Spanish, clung to him.
He became bishop, minister-general of the Franciscan order, and cardinal.
His title of seraphic doctor was founded on his skill in mystic theology, to
which a large part of his numerous writings was devoted. He died in 1274.
'
'
14th.
Palou, Vida, 254-5, says that the mission had been established on the old
footing though Neve had entertained the idea and had been instructed, as
it afterward proved, to found it on the Colorado plan; but late events bad
7
changed his mind and he made no objection. This sounds somewhat strange,
in connection with the instructions already noted. Possibly the nature of the
instructions was not made public at first, and this accounts for the quiet of
the priests.
377
ministers in May.
Only two adults received the
in
of
1782. 8
rite
baptism
About the middle of April the governor, president,
commandant, and the whole company of soldiers,
except a sergeant and fourteen men left as a guard
for the mission just founded, started up the coast to
The site
establish the -presidio of Santa Barbara.
chosen was on the shore of a small bay affording tolerably secure anchorage, at a place said to have been
tion of 1769,
for
temporary service at
In December 1782 a Frenchman, Pierre Roy, was a sirviente at the misBuenaventura, Lib. Mision, MS., 2.
The original diary gave no such name. See chap. vi. of this volume.
But the place was called Pueblo de la Laguna and Concepcion Laguna.
10
On foundation of Santa Barbara presidio see letter of Neve to Croix
April 24, 1782, in Prov. Kec., MS., ii. 61-2, 64; Serra, April 29, 1782, in
Arch. Santa Barbara, MS., ix. 293-4; baptismal book of presidio in Id.,
vii. 32-3; Croix to Neve,
July 22, 1782, approving foundation, in Prov. St.
Pap., MS., iii. 232-3; Id., iii. 128-9; iv. 38; vi. 172-3; Neve to Fages August
25, 1783, in St. Pap., Sac., MS., xv. 18.
sion. S.
9
378
was to come
'
MS., 153-5.
Doc.^Mex.,
15
Bishop Reyes was consecrated at Tacubaya on Sept. 15, 1782. He remained for some time at the two colleges, where there was much discussion
about his future plans and considerable opposition on the part of the colleges
to giving up the missions to custodios.
The bishop finally proceeded north to
establish the custodia of San Carlos de Sonora, and proposed later to go over
and establish that of San Gabriel de California. In connection with this
movement the Dominicans were to give up Lower California. Such was the
news that came to California in June 1783. Palou, Not., ii. 394-5. Bishop
Reyes was vicar general of the Californian troops. Prov. Rec. } MS., iii. 183;
Prov. St. Pap., MS., iv. 121.
CONTROVERSY IN MEXICO.
to the surprise of
all,
379
ima.
and that
carries us
the guardian
16
California,
The
friars
it
he
380
in California to
No implements of house
implements in question
proposed.
easier.
381
way to the native heart is through the nastomach and pride of personal adornment; that
the only
tive
amount
and crown.
but armed
and equipped for their work of conquest and defence;
why should the militia of Christ be denied arms and
ammunition for spiritual warfare?
Yet another point de no menor consideration is
brought forward in this document, which is signed
not only by Pangua but by the other five members of
17
The
his escort
priests
382
new
regulations here.
18
The preceding correspondence is found in Arch. Santa Barbara, MS., i.
231-46; vi. 266-71. It is a fact worthy of notice that Palou, Not., it 388,
does not argue the case, and that while opposed to Neve's policy he makes
no charge against him either of immorality or of bitter feeling against the
friars.
Gleespn, Hist. Cath. Ch., ii. 93-4, tells us that Governor Croix of
California wanted to found missions on the Colorado plan, but the priests
refused to serve.
19
Guardian to Serra, Jan. 8, 1783, in Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xii. 158-9.
20
July 22, 1782, General Croix refers to Serra 's request for live-stock,
servants, and other aid for the San Buenaventura padres, and seems to favor
granting the request, although contrary to the reglamento. Prov. St. Pap.,
383
On
Neve
leaving
left
MS.,
384
His
Palou
most of the fugitives returnAt the end of October the governor reached
ing.
San Francisco, whence he turned back to Monterey,
might
refuse.
asserts,
were
successful,
24
Pap., MS.,
iii.
20.
385
It
On
the 25th of April there was laid at San Frannew church, with
the ceremonies prescribed for such occasions by the
Roman
ritual.
Murguia officiated as
prester, assisted
S. Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS., 16, 17. There is no evidence that this
corner-stone has ever been disturbed.
26
Monterey Co. Arch., MS., vii. 11; Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 158-9; Prov. St.
Pap., MS.,iv. 90-1.
27
Carrillo was a native of Loreto and entered the service as a private in
HIST. GAL., VOL. I. 25
386
years.
the presidio company on July 26, 1756. He came to San
corporal; was made sergeant in April 1771; and alfe"rcz
was also habilitado of the Monterey company at the time
occurred on Jan. 27th, being buried by P. Srra on Jan.
Diego in 1769 as a
in Feb. 1780.
He
of his death, which
His hoja de
28th.
as of 'medium' valor,
i.
108-9, represents him
capacity, of good conduct, and unmarried.
Juan Crespi there is a shadow of doubt whether it should be so written
and pronounced, or without the accent was born in 1721 on the island of
Mallorca, where he was also educated, being a school-mato of Francisco Palou.
He was distinguished from the first for humility and piety, if such expressions
servicio, St.
application,
and
28
from a priestly biographer and eulogist mean anything, and was sometimes
He came to San Fernando
called by fellow -students El Beato or El Mistico.
do Mexico in 1749 and was sent two years later to the Fame missions of the
Sierra Gorda, w here he served over sixteen years, particularly distinguishing
himself by the erection of a large stone church in the Valle del Tilaco. the
mural decorations of which he paid for out of his own scanty salary. He
.arrived in Baja California in April 1768, and served on the peninsula at La
Purisima. He accompanied the first land expedition which reached San Diego
in May 1769, and a little later was one of the party that searched for Monterey
.and discovered San Francisco Bay. His diaries of both these trips are extant
and have been utilized in my narrative. Returning from San Diego to Monterey in 17 70 he assisted infounding the missionof San Carlos in June, and served
ihere as minister until March 1772. Then he went with Lieutenant Fages to
the San Joaquin River, of which exploration his diary is the only record. He
was now sent south to serve with Jaume at San Diego from May to September,
.and returning resumed his duties at San Carlos, where with the exception of
two short periods of absence, he toiled until his death. From June to August
1774 he served as chaplain on board the Santiago in northern waters, writing
a diary of the voyage; and in the autumn of 1781 he accompanied Serra to
San Francisco and Santa Clara. On his return from this last journey he was
attacked by a fatal illness. It was from his old friend, companion, and
superior Father Junipero, that Crespi received the last consolatory rites of
his religion, and his body was interred in the mission church within the
presbytery on the gospel side, with the assistance of commandant and garrison, and amid tears from his flock of neophytes, who lost a true friend in
Padre Juan.
T
CHAPTER
XIX.
AN UNEVENTFUL DECADE
STATISTICS OF PROGRESS
MISSIONS, PRESIDIOS,
THE
savagism.
r
et
1
more pronounced.
of horses,
These were in their order from south to north: San Diego, San Juan, San
San Buenaventura, San Luis, San Antonio, San Carlos, Santa Clara,
~>riel,
Francisco.
(387)
3S3
Improvement
and
irrigat-
on duty. 2
No new pueblos were founded, nor did any new
few pobladores
immigration of settlers take place.
left the country; a few soldiers became pobladores,
and a few boys growing up adopted an agricultural
in preference to a military life.
Hence the united
population of San Jose and Angeles varied from 185
to 220, men, women, and children of so-called gente
de razon. The pueblo herds increased from 750 to
4,000 head of cattle and horses, while the small stock
remained at about 1,000 head. Agricultural products
were 3,750 bushels in 1783, and over 6,750 in 1790,
their posts, leaving twenty-six
still
STATISTICAL VIEW.
389
provinces,
in
made the
souls.
4
land of barbarism, to live at Monterey.
3
Leaving
390
MS.,
ting a queen.
5
Palou writes from San Francisco Nov. 13. Arch. Arzob., MS., i. 7. There
are however some documents to show that Fages was at San Fernando de
Velicatd in December, the lady being delayed by a miscarriage at Mulege.
See also Fages' trip. Prov. liec., MS., iii. 101, 108, 111, 122, 138, 200-25, 249;
Prov. St. Pap, MS., iv. 94; Palou, Not., ii. 392.
6
Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 127.
7
San Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS. 20.
,
MS.,
i.
90-1.
A JEALOUS CATALAN.
391
392
Antonio. 9
He
303
It must
the charges against him were unfounded.
not be supposed, however, that Dona Eulalia gave
up her original scheme of quitting California and
taking the governor with her, for in October he writes
that she has sent to the audiencia a petition asking
his removal on the plea that the climate was injurious
He begs a friend to interfere and preto his health.
vent the document from being forwarded to Spain. 10
know nothing further of Don Pedro's domestic
affairs; let us hope that all quarrels ended with the
We
year 1785.
Why
it
especially
received the royal confirmation, did not become, as prescribed by the regulation, commandant inspector, I
am unable to explain; yet he frequently admits that
he has nothing to do with the military command, 11
only claiming a kind of civil jurisdiction over Soler as
a citizen of the province which he ruled.
The two
were personal friends and compadres; and, so long as
their jurisdictions were separate, seem to have made
an earnest effort to avoid an open quarrel yet all the
;
10
Soler to Fages April 14, 1785 ; to Sra. Fages April 9th, in Prov. St. Pap.,
254-5; Fages to Garrido, May 2d; to Sra. Fages May 3d, in Prov. Rec. y
ii. 107-8;
Fages to bishop, Id., iii. 144; to Garrido, Oct. 25th; Id., ii. 111.
11
In a communication to Romeu dated Dec. 21, 1782, Fages says 'the
reglamento keeps me in a chaos of confusion since it supposes the government
and inspection united, and as the latter has been separated I find myself very
much embarrassed in my projects and measures, in order not to make them
impertinent and cause discord with the ayudante.' Then he goes on to ask
some information about the respective duties of the two offices. Prov. Rec.,
MS., iii. 72-3. Additional correspondence on this subject in Prov. Rec., MS.,
170; ii. 99, 106, 112-15, 131; Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 45, 186, 251, 253.
MS.
"
"
v.
394
sumed
12
Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 21-2, 136, 138, 154, 189-93; xxii. 31; Prov. Rec.,
MS.,i. 30-1, 200-2, ii. 137.
13
Soler, Liforme al Comandante General sobre Policia y Gobierno, 3 de Nov.
1787, MS. At the beginning the author says, 'I confess, Sefior, that I have
had no head to present any project or circumstantial plan,' which may be
taken as a resume" of the whole document with its 35 articles.
and thus be
395
and to
proper service;
this
proper
gentiles as
civilized
might
life.
fail
Whether under
396
verts were to undergo a preliminary training as neophytes under the friars' care, or were to pass directly
to the state of citizens and land-owners, does not
'
clearly appear.
This series of
for
to
whose
deficits
Fages, Comentcirios sobre Informe del Capitan Soler, 8 de Nov. 1787, MS.
Soler's views respecting the existence of certain minor evils
in the present sj'stem, and claiming to have already suggested measures for
the removal of those evils for instance, annual slaughters and exportation of
meats to San Bias to reduce the excessive number of presidio cattle he declares that it would be folly to abandon San Francisco and leave the northern
missions unprotected; that there is no reason for transferring the Loreto captain to San Diego in order to get rid of Ziiniga, who cannot be spared; that
the soldiers' work in caring for cattle, though considerable, is exaggerated by
the adjutant, and the existence of wild cattle would be a great evil to the
country; that the cattle of settlers as yet do no harm to the natives; that
inducements to remain in the country are good, and more discharged soldiers
remain than go away; that the natives are kept in order as neophytes only by
the unremitting efforts of the friars, and are as yet wholly unfit to become
citizens; that the pobladores can and do cultivate all the lands given them and
often more; and finally that the introduction of Spanish settlers into the
missions would interfere with the laws of the Indies providing that the mission lands are to belong to the natives eventually when they shall be fitted to
While approving
profit
by
their possession.
FINANCIAL ^K,JUBLES.
397
On
398
June 25th.
Palou, in Id., viii. 40, says the clause was annulled by the king's order of
20, 1782, providing that each mission must have two priests.
May
CHURCH VERSUS
STATE.
399
left still
rel.
la oposicion del P. Serra a toda providencia gubernano solo en palabras sino con obras y por cscrito,' says Fages to
the inspector general on March 1, 1783. He charges the president with too
great severity not only toward Indians but the padres. Prov. Rec., MS., iii.,
On Sept. 15, Id. 124-5, he says that Serra 'tramples upon the measures
87.
of the government and bears himself with much despot iquez and total indifference.'
The padres commit many abuses in opposition to the government.
Id., ii. 128. Sept. 20, 1785, Fages \vrites to the bishop on the padres' neglect
of chaplain service, and avers that they cannot be spoken to on the most
trivial matters without showing disdain. Id., ii. 109.
On the same day to
the viceroy he protests against the fatal consequences of the missionary policy,
which is diametrically opposed to the reglamento. Id., ii. 95. Dec. 7, 1785,
Fages complains to Cambon of Palou's sullen and cold behavior, and of the
padres at San Carlos who have twice received him (the governor) with disYet he has been so devoted to the
respectful cries and stamping of feet.
padres as to have drawn upon himself the name of /ra^ero. Several friars
have told him to his face that they doubted his word, forgetting the respect
due him as governor. Letters are written him without proper politeness.
He will no longer endure this, even if he be termed a persecutor of friars
yet he will never cease to venerate them. Id., iii. 60-3. July 9th and 10th, Fages
gives orders forbidding public murmurs against the padres and orders the arrest of soldiers who make public comments on their conduct. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., vi. 1GO; xxii. 24. Aug. 10, 1786, the guardian informs the president
that projects for the weal of California have been presented to the viceroy,
and the opinion of the fiscal and his agent is that the proposals should be
carried out and the governor restrained.
Fages is warned that he must have
a care and that on the least complaint of the padres he will lose his position
and honors. Arch. Santa Barbara, MS., xii. 37-40, Aug. 23, 1787. Fages to
Lasuen, regrets that he can make no provision without being suspected, 'que
no se haga misteriosa.' Prov. Rec., MS., iii. C4-5. Nov. 19, 1700, Lasuen
to the padres, a secret letter referring vaguely to a bando which the padres
must obey because they can't help themselves, though he has rcprcsentodo on
the subject. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 15, 16. May 28, 1791, Fages recounts
the troubles to his successor. He says quarrels with the "Fernandinos have
been frequent, since they are very much opposed opuestisimos to the maxims of the reglamento, wishing to be wholly independent, f At San Buenaventura it even came to blows with Padre Santa Maria. Prpv. St. Pap., MS.,
'Es ya declarada
tiva, signiiicdda
x. 149-50.
400
One of the privileges obtained by Serra for the- missionaries in 1773 was that of sending letters to the
college free of cost, and certain other letters to and
from the president were also exempt from postage as
communications. The friars were inclined to
official
Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 80-1, 88, 103; bt. Pap. Sac., MS., i. 128-9, 134; Prov.
Pap., MS., iv. 32, 122-3. August 16, 1786, the guardian says the junta
real has allowed letters between padres and the college to pass free.
They
must be in a separate package and directed 'Contador General de Correos.'
Arch. Santa Bdrbara, MS., xii. 37. July 22, 1791, President Lasuen issues
a circular stating that last year the formalities were not observed, and the
St.
532.
19
Putting neophytes in irons and forced labor very frequent in all the
and particularly at San Carlos. Fages, 1783, in Prov. Rec., MS.,
iii. 87.
June 11, 1785, Fages writes to Noriega that the natives accuse him
of beating them with chains for
investitrifling faults, charges which he has
gated and found to be true. Implores him in the name of humanity and of
the king to change his course. Id., iii. 51. Lieutenant Ziiniga complained in
1788 that the natives of San Diego were overworked and too severely pun-
missions,
401
ished. Id.,
ear,
7.
22
402
24
24
In a correspondence between Gen. Ugarte and Lasuen in March 1786,
the latter makes the same reply on the San Francisco matter as in his
inforrne. Arch. Santa Barbara, MS., i. 285-7. March 5, 1783, the padres of
San Francisco to Fages excuse themselves for failure to say mass on the plea
that the place is unhealthy, there are no proper implements, the soldiers have
no regard for the missionaries, and stigmatize their friends asfraiferos. The
corporal had even ordered that no soldier must approach the padres' house.
Fages directs the commandant to be indifferent until orders come from the
general. Prov. Jf?ec., MS., iii. 91-2. Several communications respecting failure to say mass at San Francisco in Prov. fiec., MS., i. 192; iii. 24, 1(36, 209,
all written by Fages.
Orders from commandant that the reglamento must be
enforced. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 115; Arch. tita. Barbara, MS., viii. 132;
xi. 375-6.
In these orders it is charged that fees are being collected by the
friars; and Fages makes the same statement. Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 87. The
governor also complains on several occasions that the other presidios are
neglected, and the pueblo of San Jose", where P. Peiia has refused confession.
Id., ii. 109; iii. 171; St. Pap. Sac., MS., ix. 83-4.
403
complaint
all
404
tance.
27
to ride too
ifornians
might become
skilful warriors.
The
friars
viceroy, while approving the claims of the college, turns the matter over
the commandant general, who he says may have had good reasons for hi
orders. The decree requiring the viceroy's permission for any padre to com
or go was dated Dec. 7, 1786. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 202-3. In April 178
the fiscal of the royal treasury explained that as the movements of the padre
were paid from the missionary fund, their going to California if not needed o
retiring for a mere whim would cause useless expense; therefore, the govern
ment had a right to know the reasons. April 23d the audiencia decreed i
conformity to the fiscal's opinion; May 21st the archbishop communicated t.i
decision to Palou and June 22d and 23d Fages gave corresponding orders,
though the president of Baja California protested that this was contrary to
royal orders. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 8, 9; Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xi. 53.
July 9, 1788, the viceroy informs the governor that the viceregal authorities
and not the general will determine the sending and recalling of friars oven if
the command becomes independent of Mexico. Prov. St. Pap., MS., viii. 1-3.
;
VIEWS OF FATHER
LASTJEN.
405
G8
Thi subject" trf mission guards and their duties was really one of the
v
most serious in. the whole controversy. The padres wished entire control of
the soldiers to use as they deemed best, and particularly in pursuing runaway
converts. Neve had opposed the employment of soldiers to hunt fugitives in
ordinary cases, because he deemed other means better fitted for the purpose,
and because men enough could not be spared for effective and safe service.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., iii. 123-4. The French voyager La Perouse praises
Ne ye highly for his position on this point. La Perouse, Voy., ii. 297-8. In his
ins ructions to Fages, Sept. 7, 1782, Neve advised that not more than two
soldiers should accompany a padre to confess, etc., at a rancheria, and that
thev should not be absent overnight. The Indians must not learn to fight
with and kill soldiers. Prov. St. Pap., MS., iii. 138-9. Yet Fages did not rely
entirely on persuasion to bring back fugitives, but favored a resort to arms
only after all other means had failed, such as persuasions by padres, sending
1784 Fages repeats the order forbidding an escort of more than two soldiers,
The safety of the mission demands the
night.
presence of all, and the king has confirmed orders to that effect. Prov. Rec.
The latest orders do not permit him to let the troops pursue
MS.^jii. 47-8.
cu'.trrones except in extreme cases. Fages to Dumetz, Jan. 5, 1785, in Pror.
/.V.. MS., ii. 103-4.
No escort to be given to
Oct. 17, 1785, Fages to Sal.
except when they go to say mass at presidios, or to confess or baptize.
Sackes
Escoltas refused, except as above, at San Antonio
7V/?., Sac., MS., ii. 51.
aiic\ Santa Barbara.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 142, 167. P. Dumetz at San
Buenaventura being refused an escort to go to San Gabriel says, Feb. 4, 1786,
tance: 'Very well, since we are to be thus restricted to our missions we
can no longer visit the presidio, which is beyond our jurisdiction.' Prov. St.
March 3, 1786, however, Fages orders an escort to be
P(ij'., MS., vi. 45-6.
furnished when the padres of Sail Buenaventura wish to visit San Gabriel and
Santa Barbara'. Id., vi. 72.
Aug. 16, 1788, in a long letter to Lasuen Fages
explains the policy of the government respecting escorts, and the forcible capture of cirnarrones. Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS., i. 167-73.
''.
'
406
seem to have regarded the stealing of cattle as a much more serious offenc
and one much more dangerous to Spanish domination in California, than di(
the padres. It was by no means one of the trivial faults in which the fria:
had exclusive jurisdiction. Fages hag something to say on this subject in il
letter last alluded to.
Still there is no doubt the military authorities di
abuse their power in this direction with a view to get workmen free of cost.
GENERAL REPORTS.
encouragement or aid either
407
in spiritual or
temporal
affairs.
political
ities
to decide
408
and
It
president, as representa-
This is an excellent
Fages, Informe General de Misiones, 1787, MS.
of the past progress and present condition of the Californian establishments, containing a separate notice of each mission and some general sugstatistical
gestions of needs, but with no reference to current controversies.
presentation of the subject seems to have accompanied the original, which
was made in answer to an order of the general of December 1, 1786. The date
in 1787 is not given, and it may have been after the receipt of the king's order
of March 21, requiring governors to render such reports every two or three
resum6
my
general information about the Indians and the mission system, without
of chronological annals.
much
CHAPTER
XX.
PRESIDENT SEKRA'S LAST TOURS ILLNESS AND DEATH BURIAL AND FUNERAL
HONORS His LIFE AND CHARACTER SUCCESSION OF PALOU AND LASUEN
MUGARTEGUI AS ViCE-PRESIDENT CONFIRMATION NOTICE OF PALOU 'S
HISTORICAL WORKS VIDA DE JUNIPERO NOTICIAS DE CALIFORNIA
MAP PROPOSED ERECTION OF THE MISSIONS INTO A CUSTODIA NEW
MISSIONS FOUNDING OF SANTA BARBARA INNOVATIONS DEFEATED
FIVE YEARS' PROGRESS MISSION OF LA PURISIMA CONCEPCION FOUNDED
EARLY ANNALS.
hat
his
all,
E^ffXv^g
(409)
410
to
-.
p.
M.
411
rest,
and was
in
in the coffin,
here, except perhaps the statement in the latter that Serra died just before
p. M.
Gov. Fages was not present at the funeral, being absent from Monterey.
Capt. Soler was the highest official who took part in the ceremonies.
Palou was aided by PP. Sitjar and Noriega, and by Diaz the chaplain of the
San (Jdrlos. On Sept. 4th there was a renewal of funeral honors with the
same crowded attendance as before, and with the additional assistance of P.
Paterna of San Luis.
the relics were blessed. The crew of the paquebot
secured Serra's tunic which was made into scapularies ; the small clothes were
distributed by lot among the troops and others; and the surgeon obtained a
handkerchief, which cured a sailor of a headache, as did a girdle cure P.
Paterna of the colic. P. Serra's body was buried in the presbytery of the
church on the epistle side before the altar of our lady of Dolores. When the
new church was built the remains of both Serra and Crespi were probably
transferred, but so far as I know there is no record.of such transfer or of the
place where they finally remained.
Taylor, in Hwichings* Mag., May 1800,
and in Cal. Farmer, Nov. 28, 1862, says that the body lies near the altar
covered by the debris of the roof, which fell in 1852. The parish priest made
an unsuccessful search for it in 1855. Vischer, Missions of CaL, pp. i.-ii.,
says the remains are supposed to have been taken to Spain, shortly after 1784;
and that the priest in his 'antiquarian mania' found the remains of another
friar which believers seized upon as precious relics.
There is no doubt the
bodies still rest at San Carlos, and in 1882 they were identified to the satisfaction of the parish curate.
Now
412
years of California mission history that any attempt to present it here would
result in an unnecessary resume of the preceding
2
chapters. I subjoin however in a note for convenient
first fifteen
2
Miguel Jose" Serra, son of Antonio Serra and Margarita Ferrer, was born
at Petra on the island of Mallorc.t Nov. 24, 1713, took the Franciscan habit
at Palma Sept. 14, 1730, and made his profession Sept. 15, 1731, on which
occasion he assumed the name Junipero. In early boyhood lie served as
chorister and acolyte in the parish church greatly to the delight of his parents,
a God-fearing couple of lowly station. The lives of the saints were his favorite
reading, and his fondest ambition was to devote his life to religious work.
He was an earnest and wonderfully proficient student, and taught philosophy
for a year before his ordination in the chief convent of Palma, then obtaining
a degree of S. T. D. from the famous Lullian University with an appointment
to the John Scotus chair of philosophy which he held with great success until
he left Spain. He was also noted for his doctrinal learning and still more so
as a sensational preacher.
He was wont to imitate San Francisco Solan o and
often bared his shoulders and scourged himself with an iron chain, extinguished lighted candles on his flesh, or pounded his breast with a large stone
as he exhorted his hearers to penitence.
Thus he is represented in the
engraving which Palou has attached to his life, but which has probably little
or no merit as a portrait.
March 30, 1749, after repeated applications he obtained his patente to join
the college of San Fernando and devote himself to missionary work in
America. With Palou he left his convent April 13th and sailed via Malaga
to Cadiz where he arrived May 7th.
On the way to Malaga he maintained
a continuous disputation on dogmatic theology with the heretic master of the
vessel and would not yield even to the somewhat forcible though heterodox
arguments of a dagger at his throat and repeated threats to throw him overboard. Sailing from Cadiz Aug. 28th, he touched at Puerto Rico where he
spent 15 days in preaching, anchored at Vera Cruz Dec. Cth, and walked to
Mexico, reaching the college Jan. 1, 1750. Assigned the same year to the
Sierra Gorda missions of Queretaro and San Luis Potosi, he made the journey
on foot and reached Santiago de Jalpan on June IGth. For nine years he served
here, part of the time as president, devoting himself most earnestly and sucIn 1759 or 17GO ho
cessfully to the conversion and instruction of the Pames.
was recalled and appointed to the so-called Apache missions of the Rio San
Sabd in Texas ; but the plans being changed he was retained by the college
and employed for seven years in preaching in Mexico and the surrounding
bishoprics, in college service, and in performing the duties of his office of
comisario of the inquisition held since 1 752.
July 14, 17G7, Serra was named president of the Baja Californian missions,
arrived at Topic Aug. 21st, sailed from San Bias March 12, 17G8, and reached
Lorcto April 1st. March 28, 1769, he started always on foot for the
north, founded San Fernando de Velicatd on May 14th, reached San Diego
July 1st, and founded the first California mission July IGth. April IG, 1770,
he sailed for the north, reached Monterey May 31st, and founded San Carlos
June 3d. July 14, 1771, he founded San Antonio. Aug. 20, 1772, he
started south by land, founded San Luis Sept. 1st, and reached San Diego
On Oct. 20th he sailed from San Diego, reached San Bins Nov. 4,
Sept. IGth.
6, 1773.
Leaving Mexico
in September,
Bias Jan. 24, 1774, arrived at San Diego March 13th, and went up to Monterey by land, arriving May llth. From June 30, 1776, to Jan. 1, 1777, he
was absent from San Carlos, going clown to San Diego by water, returning by
land,
413
reference an outline of dates with' some items illustrative of his character and habits taken from his
sions on his way back; and in October and November lie visited Santa Clara
and San Francisco on the same business. In September and October 1781 he
again visited San Antonio, San Francisco, and Santa Clara. In March 1782
he went to Los Angeles and San Gabriel, founded San Buenaventura March
3 1st. was present, at the founding of Santa Barbara presidio in April, and
returned to San Carlos via San Luis and San Antonio about the middle of
In August 1783 he sailed for San Diego, arriving in September, returnJune.
ing by land, visiting all the establishments, and arriving at home in January.
Between the end of April and the early part of June 1784 he visited San
Francisco and Santa Clara.
In the last chapter of his biography Paloti recapitulates the virtues which
were especially brilliant in the servant of God, Fr. Junipero,' declaring that
'his laborious and exemplary life is nothing but a beautiful field decked with
*
'
'
essential to holiness.
During his novitiate
'
414
mission archives.
Serra doubtless owes
much of his fame to his position as first president of the California missions and
to the publication of a biography by a warm personal
But
friend.
it
Sixty persons
who
neglected to attend
'
arises not to be repressed with the force at hand, then retire to the presidio,
write me the facts in detail; then dirdn y diremos.'
writes a long letter
to induce Figuer to give up his intention of retiring, reminding him that
'patience and suffering are the inheritance of the elect, the coin with which
heaven is bought.'
begins by an anecdote of a friar at matins who
v.ished to retire to his cell not feeling in a good -humor, and to whom the
prelate replied that if such an excuse were admitted all would retire, 'and I
He
He
among the
first.'
life
SERRA'S CHARACTER.
415
Few
prove him a great and a remarkable man.
to California during the missionary regime
were his equal in devotion to and success in his work.
All his energy and enthusiasm were directed to the
performance of his missionary duties as outlined in
the regulations of his order and the instructions of his
superiors.
Limping from mission to mission with a
lame foot that must never be cured, fasting much and
passing sleepless nights, depriving himself of comfortable clothing and nutritious food, he felt that he was
imitating the saints and martyrs who were the ideals
of his sickly boyhood, and in the recompense of abstinence was happy. He was kind-hearted and charitable
to all, but most strict in his enforcement of religious
duties.
It never occurred to him to doubt his absoto
who came
less
'
416
At
417
privilege.
him
find
no
official
act
by
chapter.
6
Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS., ix. 306-9; xii. 35-6, containing the patents of
Lasuen and Mugartegui. Lasuen's first record as president was Jan. 27,
1786: but he seems to have served from Palou's departure, which was probably in September or a little later. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 180, ii. 128-9.
7
S. Carlos, Lib. Mision, MS., 66-8; S. Diego, Lib. Mision, MS., 45. March
2, 1790, Gen. Ugarte orders Pages to interpose no obstacles. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., ix. 350.
HIST. CAL., VOL.
I.
27
418
though
While
my researches
have brought
substantially the
among
419
same ground.
to light a large amount of material not given by Palou, yet his writings contain a few diaries which I
dedicatory letter and protesta is dated San Francisco, Feb. 28, 1785. The
license of the audiencia to print is dated Dec. 7, 178G; and the latest of the
In his provarious approvals of Franciscan authorities on March 12, 1787.
logue the author, after explaining that the work, written for the province of
Mallorca, is published at the urgent request of certain friends of Serra who
bear the expense, goes on to say: 'I well know that some who read new
things expect the historian to indulge in theories and to clear up all diffiThis method although tolerated and even applauded in profane hisculties.
tories, in those of saints and servants of God written for edification and to excite imitation, is deemed by the best historians a fault, the which I have
aimed to avoid. As the soul of history is simple truth, thou canst have the
assurance that almost all I relate I have witnessed, and the rest has been told
me by other padres worthy of faith.' On Aug. 16, 1786, Palou writes to
Lasucn, Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xii. 41-2, that everything is going well with
the book, which he is told will circulate all over Europe, where all are curious
to learn about California. He thinks it has been heard of at court, will send
some copies to California, and asks Lasuen to pray for its success. It was
sent to California, where each mission library had a copy.
The work has become less rare and costly of late years than formerly. I have three copies,
the most expensive of which cost loss than $25. I have also the edition of
420
tempted to entertain a
or that his writings
original auof
mission
for
the
earliest
history.
period
thority
9
I have copie^i his map of Upper California.
missions.
CUSTODIES PROPOSED.
421
10
For a
full
The royal order in favor of custodies was dated May 20, 1782.
Aug. 17, 1792, after numerous petitions, the king, on advice of general, governor, bishop, and audiencia, issued an order which restored the old system.
Jail, 8, 1783, the
guardian sends to Serra the brief and laws for custodies with
the remark that
they contain many falsehoods and impossibilities, saying, 'we
Seruf.
564-75.
work here with all our might to overthrow these projects in the beginning, realizing that merely to attempt them will cause great mischief.' The bishop will
try the experiment in Sonora, and we shall be left in peace for a while at any
rate. If you
get orders from the bishop you must reply that your superior is to
be consulted. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xii. 156-8. Feb. 3, 1783, the guardian
of San Fernando and
agents of Santa Cruz and Guadalupe colleges unite in a
protest to the viceroy. Id., xii. 212-13.
422
Not
12
viceroy that notwithstanding the opposition it is the king's will that the custodies be promoted.
April 12, 1785, guardian informs Lasuen that there is
nothing for it but to be silent and cautious. Id., 214-15. It seems that general Neve had favored the custody in California. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii.
13-14. March 21, 1787, the king ordered that if there were not enough friars of
San Fernando for the California missions, others might be taken from Michoacan. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., x. 287; Doc. Hist. CaL, MS., iv. 32:
11
April 1, 1784, the general wrote to Fages authorizing the founding of a
mission at Montecito near the presidio of Santa Barbara. The governor notified
Pres. Serra on July 27th from San Francisco. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., vi.
194, xi. 5. No notice seems to have been taken of this. March 9, 1785, Gen.
Rengel, presuming that the padres sent for have arrived, orders Fages to pr
ceed at once to found a mission at Montecito. Instructions have been givt
to pay the $1,000 allowed each new mission. St. Pap., Sac., MS., iv. 34
Sept. 30th Fages notifies Lasuen that in company with P. Santa Maria he
explored the Montecito site three fourths of a league from the presidio am
found it suitable for a mission. He has informed the general who orders
immediate foundation. Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 55. The same day Fages al
writes to Lasuen that as the two padres (Noboa and Rioboo) have arrived,
hopes he will proceed at once to found the mission. Arch. Sta. Barbara, Mfc
xi. 386-7.
Lasuen replies that the padres are destined elsewhere and thei
can be no foundation yet. Id., 389-90. PP. Mariner and Giribet came in 17
but still nothing was done.
^Guardian to Lasuen April 1, 1786, in Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS., viii. 13'
4; xi. 214. On the same date he forwarded instructions, not extant, and direct
Lasuen to show them to the governor if necessary, but on no account to allc
!
423
"
'i.
43, 58-9.
16
See lists of padres at Santa Barbara from the beginning, compiled from
the records by E. F. Murray, in Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS., vii. 8-10, 25-9,
39-43, 08-70, 75-7.
424
the erection of buildings at first, and the first baptism on December 31st was administered at the preOn account of the proximity of the presidio
sidio.
17
only the ordinary guard of six men was allowed.
end
of
had
been
188
1787 there
baptisms,
By the
which number was increased to 520 in 1790, with 102
deaths, leaving 438 existing neophytes. At this time
large stock numbered 296 and small stock 503 head,
while products of the soil amounted to about 1,500
church 18 by 90 feet was completed in
bushels.
and
1789,
by the end of 1790 other mission buildings
of adobes with tile roofs were sufficiently numerous
and
in
18
good condition.
1
first.
19
FOUNDING OF PURISIMA.
425
1,700 bushels.
22
List of over 50 rancherias in Purisima district, in Purisima, Lib. Mision.
MS.,
10.
CHAPTER
XXI.
No FEARS
'
'
1
July 26, 1778, Croix to Neve, strict neutrality to be observed in the
Anglo-French war by royal order of March 22. Prov. St. Pap., MS., ii. 28.
Aug. 6, 1779, Gen. Croix forwards to Gov. Neve royal orders for defence and
reprisals against the English with whom Spain was at war. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., ii. 49. Feb. llth and 18th, Croix to Neve forwarding orders for nonintercourse, reprisals, etc., Id., ii. 102, 108.
Aug. 25, 1780, Croix to Neve
warning him of Admiral Hughes' departure from England in March 1779 with
a fleet to operate on west coast of America. Id., ii. 112-13.
Sept. 22, 1780,
Croix expresses to Neve the remarkable, not to say idiotic, opinion that to
stop the breeding of horses in California and other frontier provinces would
keep foreigners away 'pues dificilmente lo emprenderan (internarse) faltando
los ausilios principales para transitar los desiertos que promedian.' Prov. St.
Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., iv. 14. March 22, 1781, Neve orders Carrillo to drive
away the
WARLIKE PRECAUTIONS.
427
after
dollar.
428
full lists and records of the contributors in each establishment were to be made and forwarded to Spain.
It was the opinion of General Croix that the soldiers
should not be required to aid in the donation, but
might do so if they wished. The missions of San
The
3
Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS. i. 259-60; xii. 230-2. President Serra approved
the plea of San Diego. According to Prov. Itec., MS., iii. 132-3, several missions sought exemption.
*
The sums paid by each establishment were as follows San Francisco
presidio and two missions, $373; Monterey, $833; San Carlos, $106; San
Antonio, $122; San Luis, $107; Sta. Barbara presidio, $249; Los Angeles, $15;
San Gabriel, $134; San Juan and San Diego, $229; San Diego Pr., $515;
Dec. 7, 1782, Gen.
total, $2,683, but there is some variation in the records.
Croix names the total amount as $4,216. Besides Gov. Neve, Ignacio Vallejo,
majordomo at San Carlos, is the only contributor named. He gave $10. San
,
June 13, 1780, prayers both public and private were ordered by the
padre presidente on June 24th. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., ix. 277-80; x. 273.
foniia
VISIT OF
LA PEROUSE.
429
fornia.
in the
down the
will try to learn the condition, force, and aim of these establishments ; and
to inform himself if they are the only ones which Spain has founded on those
coasts. He will likewise ascertain at what latitude a beginning may be made
of procuring peltries ; what quantity the Americans (Indians) can furnish ;
what articles would be best adapted to the fur- trade;' what facilities there
might be for a French establishment, all this relating of course chiefly to the
northern coast. La Perouse, Voyaye de (Jean frangois Gala/up) de la Perouse
autour du monde, publie conformement au decret du X2 Avril 1791, et rediye par
M. L. A. Milet'Mureau. .Paris, 1798, 8vo, 4 vol. with atlas in folio, torn. i.
28-9.
It does not seem desirable to mention here the various translations
and abridgments of this narrative and its accompanying documents.
6
Doubtless the Monterey, Estracto de Noticias, or Costansti, Diario Hist.
7
On the northern explorations see Hist. Northwest Coast, i. 174-7.
.
430
the vessels.
expected.
The
letter
all
431
We
We
regime and
its effects
on the natives.
They probably
visited
feeling
*La
9
Peroiise, Voyage,
Id., ii. 315, 299.
ii.
291-4.
432
During the
in obtaining
gators parted from Martinez, who came off in his longThen California's
boat, and set sail for the far west.
relations with the outside world were for a time sus11
pended.
10
In a note of Sept. 14th (?) the commander says: 'Noa
Id., iv. 176-86.
vaisseaux ont e"te" reus par les Espagnols comme ceux de leur propre nation ;
tons les secours possibles nous ont e"t6 prodigue"s; les religieux charge's des
missions nous ont envoye" une quantite" tres-conside"rable de provisions de toute
espece, et je leur ai fait present, pour leurs Indiens, d'une infinite de petits
articles qui avaient e"td embarque's a Brest pour cet objet, et qui leur seront
de la plus grande utilite".' Again Sept. 19th: 'Nous sommes arrives a Monterey le 15 septembre ; les ordres du roi d'Espagne nous y avaient pre'ce'des,
et il cut 6te impossible, dans nos propres colonies, de recevoir un meilleur
accueil.' M. de Langle says on Sept. 22d, of Capt. Martinez: 'II a preVenu
nos besoins avec un zele infatigable, et nous a rendu tous les services qui
II m'a charge" de vous supplier de le recommander h son
dependaieiit de lui.
ministre
Je pars d'ici sans avoir un malade. Again from Macao Jan 3d, Id.
I send the chart of Monterey made by ourselves ;
iv. 235, La Perouse writes
I have met at Monterey officers of the little San Bias establishment who certainly are not without ability and who seemed to me very capable of making
charts with exactitude.
11
La Pe"rouse's visit left but a slight record in the Californian archives, yet
it is alluded to in several official communications.
See Prov. St. Pap., Ben.
Mil., MS., viii. 14; Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii. 6, 42, 135; letter of Governor
Fages of September 28th, in Gaceta.de Mex. ii. 286-8. September 18th, P. Lasuen
writes to La Perouse sending him three pieces of reed and a stone worked by
the Santa Barbara Indians. Will send 70 fanegas of grain. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xii. 364.
Taylor, Discov. and Found., No. 31, ii. 193, tells us that
a picture of La Pe"rouse's vessels by one of his officers was preserved for many
years at San Carlos, but disappeared after 1833, having been carried away as
the old settlers say by Petit-Thouars. This writer is very likely wrong about
the subject of the picture. An anonymous Spanish writer in 1845, C. S., Description Topogrdfica de las Mlsiones, Pueblos, y Presidios del Norte y de la
Nueva-California, in Revista Cientlfica y Lit., i. 327-9, says that one of La
Pe"rouse's officers made a sketch of his reception at San Carlos by Palou (Lasuen) and two padres, which was kept in the mission locutorlo. Captain
Beechey wished to buy it, but P. Abella refused to part with it. When PetitThouars came it had disappeared. The writer made every effort to find it,
It was thought to have been stolen.
offering as high as $1,000, but in vain.
The writer found at San Carlos (no date) two Indians who remembered all
about La Pe"rouse's visit. Finally Mrs Ord, Occurrencias en California, MS.,
57-9, says that P. Moreno, soon after his arrival (1833), gave the painting to
her brother, Juan de la Guerra, who on his death-bed presented it to her. In
'
'
'
433
I.
28
434
Ic.Perpetua.
o
Triniie
'1 2'ort
Pte.
Delgada
;>
Pt.St.Fmnqo!s
;p>
v , -;
Egfeax.
fto.-
MONTEREY
^Vv
^ ?ij
fte.
Conception
Rio Colorado
LA PEROUSE'S MAP.
'
435
diers.
of the
which he
msrcle
ceed perfectly.
Crops of maize, barley, wheat, and peas can be compared
only to those of Chili, wheat yielding on an average 70 to 80 fold. The climate
differs little from that of our southern provinces in France, but the heat of
summer is much more moderate on account of the constant fogs which will
'
California would be
give this land a moisture very favorable to vegetation.
in no wise behind Virginia, which is opposite, if it "were nearer Europe, but
its proximity to Asia might indemnify it, and I believe that good laws, and
especially free trade, would soon bring it some inhabitants; though the possessions of SpanTare so broad that it is impossible to think that for a long
time population will increase in any of her colonies.
The large number of
celibates of both sexes who as a principle of perfection have devoted themselves to this condition, with the constant policy of the government to admit
but one religion and to employ the most violent means to maintain it, will
ever oppose a new obstacle to increase. M. Monneron, in a note on Monterey,
torn. iv. 122-3, says: 'A century will probably pass, and perhaps two, before
the Spanish establishments situated to the north of the Californian peninsula
can attract the attention of the great maritime powers. That which is in
possession will not think perhaps for a long time of establishing colonies susceptible of great progress. Yet its zeal for the spread of the faith has already
founded there several missions; but it is to be believed that not even the
pirates will interfere with the friars.'
14
The number of natives in both Californias is estimated at 50,000.
These Indians are small, feeble, and do not show the love of independence
which characterizes the northern nations, of which they have neither the arts
nor the industry; their color is very similar to that of negroes, with straight
hair.'
The governor said the Indians plucked out the hair on face and body;
while the president thought it was naturally lacking. They are very skilful
hunters.
M. de Lamanon obtained the vocabularies chiefly from two Indians
who spoke Spanish. M. Rollin, surgeon-in-chief of the expedition, wrote a
Memoire physiologique et pathologique, sur les Americains, joined to La Pe"rouse's
journal, torn. iv. 50-77, which relates largely to the natives of California and
'
'
ia
of great importance.
436
study, considering the brief time at his disposal. Doubthe represented a Catholic nation did
much to open the hearts and mouths of the friars, who
seem to have held nothing back. The author not only
presents a general view of the system, and of the missions in their material aspects with statistics of the
condition of each establishment, but he gives an excellent picture of the neophytes and their routine of
Of the missionaries personally, of their
daily life.
character and their zeal and their motives, he speaks
15
in terms of the highest praise;
but their efforts for
the civilization of the natives did not seem likely to
succeed.
The neophyte was too much a child, too
much a slave, too little a man. The mission regime
was not fitted to dispel ignorance, missionary efforts
were directed exclusively to the recompenses of another
less the fact that
my
'
'
'
CRITICISED.
437
them a
right of property
new order of
his
field with
cultivate
to
one
to
induce
each
things
emulation, or to devote himself to some other class
of work?
I admit that the progress of this new
rights, to establish among
so attractive to all men;
and by
this
heard by him
worthy of
it;
433
with
promised rewards can compensate the sacrithe ennui, the risks of such a life. I have only
to desire a little more philosophy on the part of the
its
fices,
met
in these missions."
for the
religious,
whom
have
M. de La Perouse longed
The
Northwest Coast
fur- trade a
silver
16
government monopoly as that in quickhad always been. With this view Vicente Ba-
cations that it
was
so shipped.
BASADRE'S PROJECT.
sadre
439
as a commissioner to California
make a beginning
of
18
good account of the project and its results is given in Fonseca andf
Urrutla, Hist. Gen. Real Hacienda, i. 372-81.
19
The royal ce'dulawas dated June (July ?) 2, 1785; the viceroy's letter announcing Basadre's coming to Fages, Jan. 23, 1786; viceroy's letter to Lasuen
on same subject March 1, 1786; Fages' proclamation Aug. 29, 1786, including
regulations for the collection of skins. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 38-9, 52, 1405, 204-6; Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS., i. 283-4, x. 8-10.
Curiously the earliest
document in the archives relating to the otter is dated Oct. 24, 1785, after
the king's order was issued but before it could have reached California. It is
an order from Fages to Ignacio Vallejo at San Jos6 that if any one goes out to
trade with the Indians for otter-skins he is to be punished. De.pt. tit. Pap. S.
Jose,
20
MS.,
i.
March
6, 7.
440
We
'
iv.
177-8.
441
prise.
22
Fonseca and Urrutia, Hist. Gen. The records of the skins collected are
meagre and incomplete. Oct. 7, 1786, Lieut. Zufiiga of San Diego speaks of
having some time in the past shipped $2,000 worth to Jose Maria Arce. Prov.
Stut. Pap., MS., vi. 38.
Sept. 15, 1787, Josd Soberanes charged $55 for dressing 95 otter-skins. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., ix. 6. Oct. 6, 1787, there
were shipped on the San Carlos and Favorita 267, of which 97 belonged to
presidio of Monterey, 62 to Lieut. Ortega, 56 to San Carlos, and 52 to San
Antonio. Id., ix. 14. July 30, 1788, Lasuen says to viceroy that Basadre collected from the mission 64 otter-skins worth $405. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS.,
i. 289.
Nov. 9, 1789, commandant of Santa Barbara to governor. He has collected and delivered to Canizares of theAranzazu 74 otter-skins from Purisima,
79 from Santa Barbara, 81 from San Buenaventura, besides 32 fox-skins.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., ix. 146.
Aug. 10, 1790, the Procurador Sampelayo has
collected for otter-skins remitted 1786-9, $1,472 on 169 skins to king; $132
on 18 skins to Basadre. Arch. Sta. Bdrbara, MS., xii. 4, 5.
Date March 29th, Prov. St. Pap., MS., ix. 144. The following notes
from the archives are all I have found for the period of 1790-1800, and some
of them indicate that notwithstanding the royal order of 1790 some skins
were still bought on government account. Aug. 3, 1791, Sal to Romeu asking
for $823 for 97 skins in Mexico. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 21.
1792, treasury
paid $439 for 59 skins from Santa Barbara Company. Id., xxi. 86. Dec. 30,
skins
are sold to
1793, viceroy to court of Spain says some otter and seal
vessels visiting the ports. St. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 17.
Feb. 1794,
by order of viceroy otter-skins may be exported free of duty. Prov. JRec., MS.,
viii. 141; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi., 159.
June 8, 1795, governor to commandant.
King allows Nicolas Manzaneli of San Bias to take otter-skins to
China from California and trade for goods. Prov. Rrc., MS., iv. 134. Feb.
1:3
iii.
356-9.
442
The causes
of failure, without going into petty dewere mainly as follows the furs obtained in California were less numerous than had been expected, the
natives lacking both skill and implements for otterhunting; the quality was not equal to that of the furs
brought to China from the Northwest Coast; the
tariff of prices fixed by Basadre at first was thought
too high; the royal fur-traders were not content with
a fair profit the Spaniards had no experience or skill
in preparing, assorting, and selling the furs; and there
were some diplomatic obstacles to be overcome in
China. No private company ventured to engage in
the trade thus abandoned by the crown; but skins
in small quantities continued for many years to be
tails,
'
that a padre and other persons went on board the galleon and brought off
four bales of goods. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 182. In December 1785 P. Noriega
denies that there has been any trading between missions and galleon. Monterey,
PRICES CURRENT.
443
27
26
Soler, Parecer sobre comercio con el Buque de China, 14 de Enero 1787, MS.
Fages, Informe sobre Comercio con Buques de China, 18 de Febrero 1787, MS.
The reasons urged against free trade were, that so far as the soldiers were
concerned better goods were received with greater regularity and at more
uniform prices by the present system;. as the galleon could not touch at
all the presidios, a monopoly and inequality would be caused; the soldiers
becoming traders would be distracted from their regular duties ; avarice and
pride would be engendered in California; China goods were not fitted for the
Yet Soler
California trade; and there was no money to pay for them.
favored the trade if the barter of peltries could be included; and Fages was
disposed to favor taking no notice of the barter of trifling articles by individuals.
July 14, 1786, Gen Ugarte asks Fages for his views on the matter.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 134-5. June 23, 1787, having received the reports, he
renews the old prohibition. Id., vii. 38-9.
27
Jan. 1, 1781, Gov. Neve formed a new arancel in accordance with royal
order of March 21, 1775, and decree of audiencia of Jan. 11, 1776. Prov. M.
Pap., MS., vi. 14, 15; announced to Gen. Croix March 4th. Prov. Rec., MS.,
ii. 41-2;
approved by Croix July 27, 1781, and by king Feb. 22, 1782, and
royal approval published by Fages Jan. 12, 1784. Prov. St. Pap., MS., iv.
156-8. This arancel given in full under date of Aug. 12, 1782, in Arancel de
Precios, 1782, MS. January 2, 1788, Gov. Fages issued a new arancel which,
however, only included live-stock and agricultural products, or articles likely
to be purchased by the government. Arancel de Precios, 1788, MS. Manuscript copy certified by Gov. Borica, in Estudillo, Doc. Hist. CaL, i. 7; Savage,
Doc. Hist. CaL, MS., 2; Prov. St. Pap., MS., viii. 36-8. In the following
list the prices of 1788 are given in parentheses
reales expressed in 'cents':
Horses, $9 ($3-$9); asses ($6-$7); calves ($1.50); bulls ($4); sheep (75c.-$2);
swine ($l-$4); cocks (12c.-25c.); quail, per doz. (25c.); hares (12c.); mules,
$16-$20 ($14-$20); horses (unbroken, colts, mares, $3); cows ($4); oxen ($5);
goats (75c.-$l); hens (25c.-37c.)'; pigeons, per pair (25c.); rabbits (12c.)
Beef, jerked, per 251bs.'(75c.); beef, fresh, per251bs. (25c.); eggs, per doz. 24c. ;
hides, un tanned (37c.); hides, tanned, $2.75 ($2.25); wool, per 25 Ris. ($1.25$2); tallow, per 25 fts. ($1.25-$2.50); candles, per 25 Its., $3 ($2.50); lard,
per 25 Its. $3 ($3); sheep-skin, 50c.; deer-skin (25c.); dog-skin, 75c.; buckWheat, per
skin, or antelope, tanned ($1.25-$1.50); cheese, perlb., 6|c.
fanega ($2); barley, per fan. ($1); lentils, per fan., $2.50; maize, per fan.,
fan.
fan.
$1.50; beans, per
($2.50); peas, per
($1.50-$3); flour, per 25 tts.
;
(8l.25-$2); $2 per 25 tt>s. to $6 per fanega. Sugar, R., 25c. ; panocha, It).,
brandy, pt., 75c. ; saffron, oz., 50c.; olive-oil, jar, $4.37; figs, K>., 12c. ; gunpowder, R>.,$1; soap, K)., 18c.; chocolate, fi>., 37c.-56c.; cloves, oz., 62c.;
cinnamon,
oz., 62c.
cumin,
oz., 3c.
red pepper,
R>., ISc.
444
domestic, yd., C2c.; linen (glazed), yd., 37c. cloth (ordinary woollen), yd.,
$1.25; silk twist, 82c. ; sackcloth, yd., 25c. Shirt (crea), $3.75; shirt (linen),
$6.00; blankets (pastoras), $1 ; blankets (cameras), $2; medals, oz., 12c.; silk
shawl, $6; hat, $1.12; handkerchiefs, silk, $1.50; stockings (thread), $1.50;
stockings (woollen), 75c.; stockings (silk), $4-$4.50; shoes, 75c.
28
For records of arrival and departure of the vessels each year see Prov.
St. Pap., MS., iv. G9, 133-4; v. 104-5, 161, 166; vi. 50, 53; vii. 4, 70; viii.
68, 89, 91-100; ix. 100, 243-4; Prov. Rec., MS., i. 177-8; ii. 95; iii. 124,
200; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., iv. 21; St. Pap. Sac., MS., i. 52, ii.
16, 17 ; S. Buenaventura, Lib. Minion, MS., 4; Gaceta de Mex., i. ii.; Palo it,
Mot., ii. 393-6.
2S>
See Hint. Northwest Coast, i.; and Hist. Alaska. See also references of
preceding note.
;
'COLUMBIA.'
445
28' in
August 1788,
Hist.
Tablet,
In trod., cxii.
31
certified
MS., i. 53-^4.
Mag., v. 310;
'
446
usually announced with all due formality in this remote corner of the world; and on one occasion a de-
serter at
princess.
the padres. 35
Felipe de Neve, ex-governor, went to Sonora in
the autumn of 1782, as we have seen, to take the position of inspector general with the rank of brigadier.
Early in 1783 he succeeded Don Teodoro de Croix as
commandant general of the Provincias Internas, a
position second only to that of viceroy among Spanish
officials in
like
his
prede-
447
down
in
superior instruc-
inspector. July 12, 1783, royal cddula confirming Neve's appointment dated
See Prov. Itcc., MS., i. 1G6, 188; iii. 182; St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
12, 1783.
xv. 18; Prov. St. Pap., MS., iv. 62-4; v. 25, 88.
37
He died probably on November 3d, and his death was announced to Gov.
Fages on Nov. 30th. Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 63-4. Fages speaks of his
death on Feb. 1, and April 22, 1785. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 201, ii. 93. Don
Felipe de Neve was a major of the Quere"taro regiment of provincial cavalry
July
from its organization in 1766 until September 1774, when he was selected by
Viceroy Bucareli to succeed Gov. Barri in the CaUfornias. He assumed the
office at Loreto on March 4, 1775.
When the capital was changed he came
to Monterey, arriving on Feb. 3, 1777.
He made a beginning of colonization
in 1777; offered his resignation, and was made colonel in 1778; prepared in
Subse1779 his new reglamento; and had his quarrel with Serra in 1780.
quently he spent most of his time at San Gabriel superintending the foundation of Los Angeles and making preparations for the Channel missions. On
Aug. 21, 1782, he started for the Colorado River on a campaign against the
murderers of Rivera, but (Jn the way, unexpectedly as it would seem, he received notice of his promotion dated July 12th to be inspector general. In
September he received the cross of the order of San Carlos and at the same
time or a little later the rank of brigadier general. He was made commandit general Feb. 15, 1783, probably; was confirmed July 12, 1783; and died
ov. 3d of the next year.
i"
448
St.
formada de
Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 58, 61. May (or March) 11, 1788, king gave viceroy increased and full powers over Provincias Internas. Mayer JMSS., No. 1;
San Miguel, Rep. Mex., 13. July 9, 1788, Viceroy Flores gives Ugarte full
powers. Prov. St. Pap., MS., viii. 5, 6. March 7, 1790, Ugarte succeeded
by Nava and Ugalde (in eastern provinces) by Rengel. Mayer MSS. , No. 2;
November 28, 1790, Nava announces his appointment. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
ix. 348.
1792, all provinces reunited. Escudero, Not. Sonora, 71. 17U3, Instrucclones de Vireyes, 201.
SPAIN.
449
Revilla Gigedo in 1789 devoted considerable attenand to the importance of its defence
and further colonization, recommending war-vessels
to protect the coast, since an attack by foreigners
was possible and the reconquest would be extremely
reenforcement of soldiers who would later
difficult.
become settlers was likewise proposed for consideration; and the viceroy had also asked the king for a
few families from the Canary Islands to take care of
a large number of foundlings whom he intended to
send to California. 40 During the period, however,
there was practically nothing done in behalf of colonization, beyond allowing discharged sailors in the
ports to be enlisted as settlers or soldiers yet Fages
reported strongly in favor of colonization, since the
missions with their increasing number of neophytes
could not be depended on to supply grain for the pretion to California
sidios.
41
42
large ones could not be spared.
40
CHAPTER
RULE OF FAGES
XXII.
SAN DIEGO PRESIDIAL DISTRICT PRESIDIO OFFIALFEREZ JOSE VELASQUEZ FORCE AND POPULATION BUILDINGS GARRISON LIFE INDIAN AFFAIRS EXPLORATIONS SAN DIEGO
MISSION JUAN FIGUEROA RIOBOO MATERIAL AND SPIRITUAL PROGRESS SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO GREGORIO AMURRIO PABLO MUGARTEGUI SAN GABRIEL PUEBLO OF Los ANGELES SETTLERS FELIX AS
COMISIONADO PRESIDIO OF SANTA BARBARA PLAN OF BUILDINGS A
VOLCANO SOLDIERS KILLED WHILE PROSPECTING FOR MINES SAN
BUENAVENTURA PRESIDIO OF MONTEREY OFFICIAL CHANGES SURGEON
DAVILA SAN CARLOS NORIEGA SAN ANTONIO SAN Luis OBISPO
JOSE CAVALLER PRESIDIO OF SAN FRANCISCO LIEUTENANTS MORAGA
AND GONZALEZ LASSO DE LA VEGA PRESIDIO CHAPEL THE MISSIONFRANCISCO PALOU MAP OF THE BAY SANTA CLARA NEW CHURCH
MURGUIA PUEBLO DE SAN JOSE VALLEJO AS COMISIONADO.
CIALS
DURING the era of exploration, conquest, and foundation, which was for the most part ended soon after
the beginning of the second decade, the local history
of each new establishment has been a link in the
chain of provincial development so closely united with
affairs of government and the general march of events
.as to be susceptible of strict chronological treatment.
Local annals will be to the end an important and
deservedly prominent element in California!! history,
,as in any provincial history properly so called; but
hereafter it will be best, that is, most conducive to a
clear presentment and easy study of the subject, to
group these annals in decades, or other convenient
periods, and to present them side by side with and to
some extent independently of the more formal
(450)
451
To begin
Fages to Gen. Ugarte Nov. 8, 1787, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 4, urges
it would be unsafe to remove Zuiiiga in view of his success in
ruling the
natives. Capt. Soler wished to put him in command at Santa Barbara so that
under his supervision a stupid alf6rez might be utilized as habilitado. Id., vii.
that
114-16.
432
132, it is implied that Velasquez had been habilitado, that the office fell to
Zuniga at his death, and that Raimundo Carrillo was to be sent to aid Ziiiiiga
in his new duties; but this is certainly an error.
3
His commission as alfe"rez of the San Diego company was sent by the general Feb. 9, 1787. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii. 45.
*San Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS., 79.
5
Company rosters, containing the names of all officers and men, were
made out monthly for each presidio. In the early years only a few of these
rosters for each year have been preserved; but in later times they are nearly
complete. The reglamento gave San Diego $13,000 per year; but the average annual expense as shown by the company accounts was about $16,000.
The average pay-rolls were $12,000]; Mexico memorias, $8,000; and .San Bias,
In 1786 supplies to the amount of $3,653 were bought of the mis3,500.
sions.
Between $400 and $500 were retained from soldiers' pay each year for
thefondo de retention. Military accounts in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS.,
ii. 21; iii.
14; vi. 4; v. 9; viii. 3-5; xx. 6, 7; St. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS.,
i.
For lists of arms and ammuni169-70; Monterey Co. Arch., MS., vii. 6.
tion see St. Pap., Sac., MS., ii. 26-7, v. 25; Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 17C-9.
453
Each year in
persons, men, women, and children.
summer or early autumn one of the transport vessels
entered the harbor and landed a year's supplies at the
einbarcadero several miles down the bay, to be brought
Every week or two small
of
from Loreto in the
soldier-couriers
arrived
parties
south or Monterey in the north with ponderous despatches for officials here and to the north, and with
items of news for all.
Each day of festival a friar
came over from the mission to say mass and otherwise
care for the spiritual interests of soldiers and their
families; and thus the time dragged on from day to
day and year to year, with hardly a ripple on the sea
of monotony.
There was an occasional rumor of intended hostilities by the natives, but none resulted in anything
serious, most of the trouble occurring south of the
line in Baja Californian territory and requiring some
attention from Fages during his southern trip in the
spring of 1783. Here in the south, as in fact throughout the country, the natives were remarkably quiet
up by the presidio mules.
454
455
Juan Antonio Garcia Rioboo was associate until October 1786, and was then succeeded by Hilario Torll
Sutil y Mexicana, Viage, Atlas; La Perouse, Voy., Atlas.
I omit the
soundings.
12
San Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS., 80, containing his partida de entierro
signed by Lasuen. Figuer was a native of Anento in Aragon, and became a
Franciscan at Zaragoza. Of his coming to America and to San Fernando colWith 29 companion friars for the Californias
lege I have found no record.
he arrived at Tepic from Mexico at the end of 1770, and with about 19 of the
number sailed for Loreto in February 1771. The vessel was driven down to
Acapulco and in returning was grounded at Manzanillo. Most of the padres
returned to Sinaloa by land, but Figuer and Serra intrusted themselves again
to the sea, when the San Carlos was got off, and after a tedious voyage
reached Loreto in August 1771. Figuer was assigned to the Baja California!!
mission of San Francisco de Borja. In November 1772 he was sent up to
San Diego by Palou in company with Usson, both being intended for the
proposed mission of San Buenaventura ; but that foundation being postponed
Figuer became minister of San Gabriel in May 1773. He served at San
Gabriel 1773-4; at San Luis Obispo Oct. 1774 to June 1777; and at San Diego
until his death in Dec. 1784.
He was buried in the mission church on Dec.
19th, by his associate Lasuen. In 1804 his remains, with those of the martyr
Jaume and of Mariner, were transferred with all due solemnity to a new sepulchre under an arch between the altars of the new church.
456
rens.
MAP
Rioboo is not
doing their first work at San Diego.
heard of after he left this mission, and I suppose him
13
to have retired to his college at the end of 1786.
13
Juan Antonio Garcia Rioboo, who should properly be spoken of as
Garcia-Rioboo, whose last name should perhaps be written Riobo, and of
LASUEN'S REPORT.
457
whose early
We
palisade corrals.
458
standing
He
all difficulties
first
mission
beyond naming
its
of the
left
459
At San
19
San Diego
Antonio
and
Cruzado
Miguel
military jurisdiction,
Sanchez served together throughout this decade as in
the next and a large part of the preceding, the former
having begun his service in 1771 and the latter in
1775, while both died at their posts after 1800. They
had Jose Antonio Calzada as a supernumerary associate from 1788 to 1790. They baptized on an average
a hundred converts each year, half of whom soon
died.
In neophyte numbers San Gabriel was second
to
San Antonio, while in live-stock and farm
only
products this mission had in 1790 far outstripped all
Gabriel, the third mission of the
20
the
rest.
aid
18
Pablo de Mugartegui came to California with Serra on that friar's return
from Mexico, arriving at San Diego March 13, 1774. Being in poor health he
remained for some time unattached to any mission, first serving as supernumerary at San Antonio from January to July 1775. He was minister at
San Luis Obispo from August 1775 until November 1776, and at San Juan as
we have seen from November 1770 until November 1789. He writes to Lasuen
on Jan. 30, 1794, from the college, that he had been very ill but was now out
of danger.
From Aug. 16, 1786, he held the office of vice-president of the
California missions, having charge of the southern district.
Taylor, in Cal.
Farmer, July 24, 1863, says, erroneously I suppose, that he died on March 6,
1805, at (San Buenaventura.
19
Much of the information respecting the friars in charge I have obtained
from San Juan Capistrano, Lib. de Mision, MS. Among the visiting padres
who officiated here during the period and before were Serra, Oct. 1778; Figuer,
June 1780; Miguel Sanchez, May 1782; Lasuen, Oct. 1783; Rioboo, Feb. 1784;
Mariner, Oct. 1785; Jose Arroita, Dec. 1786; Jos6 Antonio Calzada, April 1788;
Thus we
Torrens, Cct. 1788; and Cristobal Onimas, Dec. 1788 to Jan. 1789.
see that San Juan for some not very clear reason was much less isolated in
of
visitors
than
San
respect
Diego.
20
Neophytes in 1783, 638; in 1790, 1,040. Baptisms during period, 818;
Increase of large stock, 860 to 4,221; small stock, 2,070 to
deaths, 466.
Harvest in 1790, 6,150 bushels.
6,013.
460
pobladores
in 1786
who
21
Fages to Gen. Ugarte Dec. 5, 30, 1785, in Prov. fiec., MS., ii. 131-2;
Ugarte to Fages, Dec. 14, 1787, in Arch. 8ta. Barbara, MS., vi. 116-17.
M
Zuniga to Fages, Aug. 15, 1786, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 35-6.
23
See chapter xvi., this volume.
24
An
estado of
August
17, 1790,
461
menta, Juan Ramirez Arellano, Sebastian Alvitre, Roque Cota, Faustino Jose*
Cruz, Juan Jose* Uominguez, Manuel Figueroa, Felipe Santiago Garcia,
Joaquin Higuera, Juan Jose" Lobo, Jose" Ontiveros, Santiago de la Cruz Pico,
Francisco Reyes, Martin Reyes, Pedro Jose" Romero, Efigenio Ruiz, Mariano
Verdugo, Jose" Villa, besides Vicente Felix, corporal and comisionado. In
1789 there had been 5 additional names: Jose" Silvas, Rejis Soto, Francisco
Lugo, Melecio Valde"s, and Rafael Sepulveda, or at least lands were ordered to
be granted to these men. Nine only drew pay and rations in 1789. Prov. St.
Pop., MS., v. 29-36; ix. 120, 159-63; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., x. 2-6;
St. Pap., Miss., i. 66-72.
Large stock had increased from 340 to 2,980 head;
small stock from 210 to 438; and the crops of 1790 amounted to 4,500 bushels.
Prov. St. Pap., Miss., MS., i. 68, 71. Aug. 10, 1785, 35 pounds powder
and 800 bullets sent to Angeles as reserve ammunition for settlers. Prov. Hec.,
MS., ii. 7. Nov. 9, 1786, Goycoechea to Fages, will take steps to stop excesses. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 57.
May 8, 1787, commandant general congratulates Fages on progress reported. Id., vii. 41. Pueblo called Santa Maria
de los Angeles. St. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 125.
27
Prov. Rec.., MS., i. 163-4; Prov. St. Pap,, v. 180; ix. 105, 119-20, 225-6.
Jose Vanegas was the first alcalde in 1788; Jose" Sinova the second in 1789,
with Felipe Garcia and Manuel Camero as regidores; and Mariano
Verdugo
the third in 1790.
402
settlers
performed
finder.
new
Commonado por el
29
(jobierno
el
cabo de
para
The Santa Barbara situado by the reglamento was $14,472; average pay$13,500; average inemorias of supplies, $12,500; average total of habiiiwhich about $6,000 was a balance of goods on
hand; fondo de gratification, $2,000, and fondo de retention, 1,000 in 1784;
de
invdlidos
and
fondo
Monteplo, $427 in 1 782. Company accounts in Prov. St.
Pap., Presidios, MS., i. 2, 90; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., ii. 1, 8, 20-2,
Inventories of arma38-9; iii. 18; iv. 22; vi. 3; viii. 13; ix. 3, 4; xiv. 6, 7.
ment in Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 96-9; vii. 86; St. Pap., Sac., MS., i. 6, 7.
list of inhabitants with families,
age, etc., showing 67 male heads of fami
lies, dated Dec. 31, 1785, in St. Pap., Miss., MS., i. 4-9.
roll,
463
after 1790.
80
Work
30
Ortega appointed commandant of Sta. Barbara Sept. 8, 1781. Prov. St.
Pap., Presidios, MS., i. 1,2. Ortega removed for incompetency, not understanding his own accounts. Soler, June 7, 1787, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii.
115. Ortega and Goycoechea ordered to change places.
Soler to Pages, May
14, 1783, in Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 120-1, 132.
Goycoechea' s commission sent to
him Jan. 17, 1783. Id., iii. 55. Goycoechea arrived at San Diego en route
north Aug. 24, 1783. Prov. St. Pap., MS., iv. 78. Ortega gave up command
Jan. 25, 1784. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 102; ii. 4.
Ortega thanks Fages for offer
of any presidio, and selects Santa Barbara Jan. 3, 1787. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
vii. 175.
Soler's complaints against Goycoechea and suggestion of changes
March and June, 1787. Id., 114-15, 135. Argiiello left for San Francisco in
April, 1787. There was some correspondence about Goycoechea giving up the
habilitacion. Id., 59, 67.
Ugarte to Fages Oct. 25, 1787. The viceroy will
fill the vacant
Hermenegildo Sal wafe one of the
place of alferez. Id., 31.
sergeants at the foundation but left the company very soon. Prov. St. Pop.
Ben. Mil., MS.
It would serve no useful purpose to refer here to the hundreds of company rosters and similar documents scattered through different
,
464
4G5
34
operation.
The aborigines
very
little
trages on neophytes which called for Spanish internee. In August 1790 Sergeant Olivera with eight
en went in search of an Indian deserter, and wr ere
instructed also to prospect for mines. While the force
was scattered somewhat in the search for minerals,
they were attacked by a large number of Indians
of the Tenoqui rancheria and driven away with
the loss
Ion.
15
for
having
ft.;
7, alfe"rez'
houses, 15
12,
14,
I.
30
4G6
engaged
in
diers' lives.
sol-
35
was put
in his place.
33
The missions
of Santa Barbara and Purisima, belonging to this military district, as new establishments
have been disposed of in the preceding chapter.
2,
Mil, MS.,
ix.
6-8; Fages to
killing 5 in retaliation for the killing of 13 of their kinsmen. LI. vii. 92.
July 26th, Playanos have killed some cattle at Angeles, but sickness in the
,
company prevents chastisement at present. Id., 68. Oct. 30th, When Lieut.
Gonzalez passed through Espada rancheria a woman was cut in pieces- or
perhaps in several places for refusing to yield to the wishes of a soldier. Id.,
In August 1787 there was an expedition to punish pagans for out70-1, 91.
Several arrests were made and some fugitives brought
rages on neophytes.
in.
The Calahuasat rancheria was the principal one involved. Id., 76-7.
Jan. 1788, Sergt. Cota went to the Tachicos rancheria in the mountains to
catch a neophyte thief, but was attacked and had to kill 3 and wound 8. Id.,
viii. 123.
36
ANNALS OF MONTEREY.
alferez,
4G7
this decade
never
fell
it was sometimes
fifty, though, including invalids,
as high as sixty-two; and there were, besides, a surgeon
and two or three mechanics.
guard of six men
below
new
San Francisco.
to
The commandant
at
Monterey
passim.
38
Letters of Sal, Soler, and Fages in Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii. 60-1, 120,
130, 143, 167-8; viii. 41-2, 54-5; ix. 140-1; x. 162-3; Prov. St. Pap., Ben.
Mil., MS., x. 10, 11; iii. 9; Prov. Rec., MS., i. 33-4.
468
At
command on
May
3d, left
San Miguel in May, was at San Diego on June 5th, arrived at Santa Barbara
June 27th, and started north Aug. 21st. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii. 71, 76, 78,
After his accounts were settled Sal did not resume the place of
81, 105-6.
habilitado at Monterey, but was sent to San Francisco in April 1791, Argiiello
coming to the capital.
40
Surgeon Davila came to San Diego in July 1774 and to Monterey in
December. As early as 1781 Gov. Neve favored granting his petition for leave
to quit the country as being incompetent and captious. Prov. Eec., MS., ii.
CS. The exact date of his departure does not appear, but it was before December 1783. Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 57-8. Davila's first wife, Josefa Carbajal,
died at San Francisco in November 1780. San Francisco, Lib. deMision, MS.,
12, 64, and in January 1782 he married Maria Encarnacion Castro, a daughter
of Isidore Castro. Sta. Clara, Lib. de Mision, MS. 40.
41
Prov. St. Pap., MS., ix. 1, 2; x. 166; xiii. 191; xxii. 87; Id., Ben. Mil,
i. 9.
The old presidio chapel stood in the middle of the square, and April 14,
1789, Fages had ordered adobes made for a new one.
,
MISSIONS OF
MONTEREY
DISTRICT.
469
follows:
At San
42
Matias Antonio de Santa Catarina (written also Catharina and Catalina)
y Noriega, who was best known by the name Noriega, came up as chaplain on
the transport of 1779, and took Cambon's place at San Francisco. He remained there until 1781, and then served at San Carlos until 1787, when he
not yet been completed. St. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 139-40.
44
Increase in neophytes, 585 to 1,076; baptisms, 773; deaths, 333; large
stock, 429 to 2,232; small stock, 466 to 1,984; crops in 1790 only 1,450 bushels.
Fages says the soil is tolerably good though irrigation is difficult, and the
mission has raised enough for her own use and a surplus for sale. San Antonio
had the best church in California excepting, perhaps, Santa Clara. St. Pap.
,
Miss,
and
Colon.,
i.
MS., 145-7.
470
fill
the
habilitado of
'
foot,
foot.
48
Gonzalez' arrest at Monterey in August 1784. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 186; ii.
102-3; Prov. St. Pap., Den., MS., i. 41. Soler alludes to his mucha ridiatlez
Nov. 14, 1786, and proposes Argiiello as a successor. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
vi. 198; vii. 114-16.
Gonzalez arrested at San Francisco by Lasso at Soler's
order Feb. 4, 1787, and sent south to meet Fages March 18th. Id., vii. 98-9;
Prov. Rec. MS. , iii. 39. Fages tells the story to his successor, Rpmeu, Feb.
26, 1791. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 162-3. General approves measures against
Gonzalez. Id., vii. 50.
Gonzalez was born at Ceste del Campo in Spain, and
He served 3 years as a
enlisted as a private at about the age of 26 in 1762.
private, 2 as corporal, 10 as sergeant, and a little over one year as alfdrez.
Having seen much service in Indian campaigns in the Provincias Internas, he
was promoted to be lieutenant for California service in December 1779. Uoja de.
Servidos, in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., ii. 12-13; iv. 15.
Fages says of
,
471
amount having been in great part repaid, he was dismissed from the service; but the king subsequently
49
Jose Argiiello
granted him retirement and half-pay.
was taken from Santa Barbara and promoted to be
him after he was sent to the frontier 'no tiene narizes ni asiento.' Prov. St.
x. 148.
In Nov. 1791 the king's permission was sent to, the governor to put Gonzalez on the retired list. Id., 94.
He retired as invdlido to
Rosario in Sonora, and his name was dropped from the company rolls after
Jan. 1, 1793. Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 157.
49
On Lasso's San Francisco troubles see correspondence in Prov. Rec., MS.,
ii.
13G-9; iii. 35-7; Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 93-4; vii. 114-17, 121-3, 128,
141-2; viii. 7-9; xi. 179; xxi. 157; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xiii. 10.
Sept. 16, 1786, Fages speaks of the appointment of Sergt. Jose Perez Fernandez as alferez of San Francisco; but it was not done before 1 790. On same date
he orders the deficit charged to the company. July 6, 1787, Fages blames Soler
for not having been more strict in Lasso's case.
Soler went up to straighten
out Lasso's accounts, but himself made a blunder, probably in 1782. Aug. 9,
Dec. 1,
1788, the general orders Lasso's dismissal when the deficit is paid.
Pap., MS.,
'
27th the govern or writes to Arrillaga our poor Lasso has received his retirement
with half-pay as alferez, as petitioned by you, for which may God reward you.'
Prov. Rec., MS., v. 320-1.
Though 'quiso la naturaleza negarle una precisa
parte de espiritu' Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii. 114 yet by birth he was entitled to be called 'Don.'
He was of Spanish blood and a native of Chihuahua.
He was school-master at San Jose" in 1795-6, as late as Aug. 19, 1797, is urged
to pay a balance still due, Prov. Rec., MS., v. 266, and he died Nov. 30, 1821,
at the age of 64,
being buried at San Rafael. Arch. Misiones, MS., i. 905.
472
alferez to
to
fill
his place.
The
Argiiello's
Pap., MS.,
vii. 45.
473
excelled
sula.
by only four
59
Pr<w.
60
Francisco Palou, sometimes written with an accent Palou, without any
good reason so far as I know, was born at Palma in the Island of Mallorca,
probably in 1722. Mr Doyle in his introduction to the reprint of Palou, Noticias, i. iii., infers that the date was about 1719; but in a letter dated 1783,
Hist. Mar/., iv. 67-8, the padre calls himself 61 years of age.
Taking the
habit of San Francisco he entered the principal convent of the city, and in
1740 became a disciple of Junipero Serra, with whom and with Juan Crespi of
the same convent he contracted a life-long friendship. With his master he
volunteered for the American missions in 1749, left Palma in April, Cadiz in
August, and landed at Vera Cruz in December. Joining the college of San
474
and Garcia
'
LA PEROUSE'S MAP
OF SAN FEANCISCO.
475
476
Palou resigned. Taylor, Discov. and Founders, ii. No. 28, 171, says he seems
to have died about 1796.
For a sample of his handwriting with autograph
signature see S. Antonio, Doc. Sueltos, MS., 13.
It is chiefly through his writings, the Vida de Junipero Serra and the
Noticias de California, both of which have been noticed fully in a preceding
chapter, that Palou's fame will live; yet as a missionary and as a man he
deserves a very high place among the Californian friars. I regard him as
but little inferior to Serra in executive ability and in devotion to his work,
while in every other respect, save possibly in theological and dogmatic learning, he was fully his equal. His views as expressed in his writings are notably broad, practical, and liberal. Palou, Serra, and Crespi presented three
good types of the missionary. Their friendship did not' result from similarity
of character, but rather from opposite qualities; and their reciprocal confidence and zeal fora common object, 'as Doyle remarks, 'could not fail to
prove most beneficial to the enterprise in which they all felt the greatest
interest.
'
61
Santa Clara, Arch. Parroq. MS. 12. Roof of beams labradas y curiosa
lo posible.' Fages to general, in Prov. Rec., MS., i. 172; HaWs Hist. S. Jose,
418-20; Levett's Scrap Book. The date has been incorrectly given as May 16th.
02
Joseph Antonio de Jesus Maria de Murguia was born Dec. 10, 1715, at
Domayguia, Alava, Spain. He came to America as a layman, but became a
Franciscan at San Fernando college June 29, 1736; was ordained as a priest
in 1744; and was assigned to the Pame missions of the Sierra Gorda in 1748.
Here he toiled for 19 years and built the first masonry church in the district;
that of San Miguel. Transferred in 1767 to Baja California he reached Loreto
April 1, 1768, and was assigned to Santiago mission, where he served until
March 1769. In June he was at San Jose" del Cabo waiting to embark for California; but sickness saved his life by preventing him from sailing on the illfated San Jose.' He subsequently served at San Javier, but in July 1773
joined Palou at Santa Maria and accompanied him to San Diego, arriving Aug.
30th. Residing for a while as supernumerary at San Antonio, he became
minister of San Luis Obispo in October 1773, and in January 1777 founded
Santa Clara where he served continuously until his death. He died while preparing for dedication the church on which he had worked so hard as architect,
director, and even laborer. He was buried on May 12th in the presbytery of
the new edifice by Palou, Santa Clara, Lib. de Mis/on, MS., 33-4, by whom as
by Serra and others he had been regarded as a model friar. Palou, Vida, 265-6.
63
Fages in a report to the general in 1786 speaks of these complaints, stating
that one or two Indians have died from the effects of his severity, and that he
will be retired to his
college. Prov. St. Pap., MS., ii. 136.
'
JOSE.
477
number of
converts.
478
least
local government.
The
to
allowed
the
alcaldes
regulation
appoint
governor
the first three years, after which time they were to be
elected by the people.
Fages, however, permitted an
Archuleta
was chosen for 1783, and
election, Ignacio
of
the
Mesa, corporal
guard, was removed in September of that year for inharmonious relations with the
alcalde. Who held the position of alcalde in 1784 the
records fail to show; but by reason of irregularities
and slow progress the governor was obliged to resume
the power of appointment, naming Manuel Gonzalez
as alcalde for 1785 with Romero and Al vires as
regidores, and also appointing a comisionado to manage these officials. Corporal Jose Dominguez, the
successor of Mesa, was at first made comisionado but
died probably before the appointment reached him. 68
Ignacio Vallejo, who had been sent to San Jose in
January to make a survey for a new dam or reservoir,
remained as corporal to succeed Dominguez, and in
May was appointed comisionado by Fages, with duties
inefficient
management and
Pap., MS., viii. 71. Mesa, Tapia, Hignera, and Lugo were soldiers in
1784 and the question came up whether they ought like the original settlers
exempt from tithes since they cultivated lands like the rest. Prov. llec.,
MS., i. 1G3-4. July 30, 1788, Argiiello reports having gone to San Jose to
put Ignacio Castro and Seferino Lugo in possession of lands, but did not do
so because they claimed pay and rations, only allowed to the original settlers.
St. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 50-1.
In the list of 1790 the name of
Tapia disappears and there appear those of Joaquin Castro, Antonio Alcgre,
Antonio Aceves, Ignacio Higuera, and Pedro Cayuelas, agrecjados; Gabriel
St.
to be
OFFICIALS
like those of
some
JOSE.
479
Vallejo had
was allowed
account, and held
tions,
later prosperity.
68
for this.
The
command was to
march in January 1783 against the gentiles of the
San Jose region who had stolen some horses from
67
MS.,
the people against the comisionado. All that the fault-finding inspector could
find against Vallejo, in his official capacity at least, was a mando insipido,
whatever that may be. He recommended that he be put to personal labor in
the fields; but nothing was done in the matter. Id., vii. 132.
09
Hall, Hist. San Jos6, 40-50, erroneously states that there was a long correspondence on the subject in 1797, and that the removal was effected in that
year; but the quarrel of that year was about boundaries between mission and
pueblo, and in the correspondence the site of the 'old town' is mentioned;
moreover Fages in his instructions of 1791 to Romeu speaks of the change
as already effected. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 152.
Vallejo first urged the
removal on Feb. 20, 1785, in a communication to Moraga. The latter found
it difficult to decide because the land on the proposed site had already been
distributed to settlers.
He accordingly addressed Fages on April 1st. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., v. 26.
On March 9th Fages writes, to Vallejo approving the
scheme. Dept. St. Pap. , S. Jose, MS. i. 25 ; and on July 7th he assures the
people of San Jos6 that they shall be at no expense in the removal, and that
the pueblo shall lose no land for it seems there was a fear that to move the
pueblo would also move the boundary between the pueblo and mission lands.
Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 30-1. Fages refers the matter to Ugarte on Aug. 5th,
Id., ii. 126; and that official on June 21, 1787, grants the petition of the
settlers, and orders that there be no change in the boundary lines. St. Pap.,
,
Miss,
and
Colo.i.,
MS.,
i.
274.
480
the
settlers.
Palou, Not., ii. 392; ^Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 98; Id., in. 98, 170. Thirtypowder, 800 bullets, and 100 flints sent to San Josd as reserve ammu-
five Ibs.
CHAPTEK
XXIII.
RULE OF ROMEU.
1791-1792.
los at
ie
I.
31
481
RULE OF ROMEU.
482
rule.
With his orders to Arrillaga under date of February 26th, Fages transmitted the instructions which
it was customary for a retiring governor to prepare
for the use of his successor, outlining the country's
past history and present condition, and embodying the
results of his own experience in recommendations reThe
and paid
for in
goods and
drafts.
The distribu-
May
The
capacious, the necessary furniture; a sufficient stock of goats and sheep which
I have raised; and near by a garden which I have made at my own expense,
from which you will have fine vegetables all the year, and will enjoy the fruits
He asks for information as to when and
of the trees which I have planted.
by what route Romeu will come. Prov. St. Pap., Ben., MS>, i. 8-10. Romeu takes
'
possession April 16, 1791. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,T. 124; St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
v. 86-7; Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xi. 414-15. r February 26, 1791, Fages
notifies Romeu that he has ordered Arrillaga to make the transfer, and has
directed presidial accounts, etc., to be made ready. Prov. St. Pajj., MS., x.
144-5.
483
It
was intended at
first
to
remove the
The sending
causing such ravages in the peninsula.
of soldiers for escaped neophytes is extremely dangerous, and should be avoided, being resorted to only
after other means
the best being for the friars to
send other natives with flattery and trifling gifts to
enlist the services of chiefs
have failed, and then
with every possible precaution. The granting of
escorts whenever asked for has also proved dangerous
and inconvenient, since only two men could be spared,
leaving the mission exposed and the friar only slightly
It has therefore been restricted, and the
protected.
soldiers are not allowed to pass the night away from
the mission.
This policy, notwithstanding protests,
and in consequence of Neve's confidential reports, has
been approved by superiors and by the king.
In the case of mail-carriers and escorts passing from
one presidio to another, careful orders have been given
to prevent disaster and at the same time to insure
humane treatment of the gentiles. Each presidio has
in its archives properly indexed the orders that have
be
been
issued for its government and the prevention of
all disorder.
The abundance of products in proportion
consumers has led to a reduction of some of the
r^v.
Cattle
prices affixed by Neve to grain and meat.
from
excessive
incrown
are
to
the
kept
belonging
crease and consequent running wild by annual slaugh-
484
RULE OF ROMEU.
beef.
is
2
Pages, Papel de varlos puntos concernientes al Gcbierno de la Peninsula de
California e Inspection de Tropas, que recopila el Coronel D. Pedro Fa yes al
Teniente Coronel D. Jose Antonio Romeit, 26 de Febrero 1701, MS.
On May
28th Pages wrote again to Roineu a most interesting letter in which he gives
his opinion of various persons with whom his successor will come in contact.
He
somewhat prone
'
LIFE
AND CHARACTER OF
FAGES.
485
for Sari
at
Monremained
in
Francisco
San
common consent a kind
He
4
May, and
Monterey
exercised by
of superintendence over the actions of his former subordinates, though now addressed as colonel instead of
governor. There are letters of his in the archives
5
dated at Monterey July 13th. His intention was to
remain until October or November, and I suppose he
still
1791, though
for
do, reluctantly.
matter needs looking after. Mission stock is increasing too much, and the
neophytes are becoming too skilful riders and acquiring Apache insolence.
Some advice is given about the journey north. A promise is made of more
letters, and Fages closes by making a present of his famous orchard, well
pleased that the fruits of his labors and expenditures are to be enjoyed by
'
'
On May
MS.
November. Prov.
4
/d,x. 44.
5
St.
Pap., MS.,
x. 148, 150.
x. 142-3, 169. In one of the letters he says that, suffering in his foot,
unable to review the troops at Santa Barbara.
Sailing of the San Carlos Nov. 19th. St. Pap., Sac., MS.', v. 91. According to a letter in Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 134, however, the schooner Saturnina,
from Nootka was at Monterey on Oct. 14th and ready to sail for San Bias, so
that Fages may have sailed in her; yet if there is no error it is strange that
while the arrival of the San Carlos was announced to Gen. Nava on Nov. 30th,
that of the Saturninavfas not announced until Dec. 22d. St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
-*
he
Id.
is
6
iv. 3.
7
Pedro Fages, a native of Catalonia, and first lieutenant of a company of
the 1st battalion, 2d regiment, of the Catalan Volunteer Light Infantry, probably
left Spain with his battalion in. May 1767, and soon after his arrival in Mexico
RULE OF ROMEU.
486
He
487
his province,
and
his nation.
He
possessed less
less culture,
Fages.
In/orme,
MS.
RULE OF ROMEU.
488
make
certain
investigations
of
presidial accounts.
in some confusion
view to his fitness for unravelling past financial complications and effecting a final adjustment.
Whatever may have been his abilities in this special
direction, he had very slight opportunity to show
them; for from the moment of embarking on the
Santa Gertrudis his health failed indigestion, sleepless nights, and an oppressive pain in the chest left
;
of this chapter.
Tages March 21, 1791, announcing Romeu's arrival. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 38.
a
The Informe sobre los ajustes de Pobladores de la Edna de Los A nyeles y
demas <le las Provincias de California*, MS., a report of the contador mayor
dated Mexico, Dec. 30, 1789, and filling above GO pages, is a specimen of the
many wordy communications on the subject which are extant in the archives.
ViceI have made no attempt to reach the bottom of this financial puzzle.
roy's orders to
Sept.
1,
DEATH OF ROMEU.
him but
duties.
10
little
489
Yet he
Diego
in
August,
He was
u St.
finas
conque
'
v. 92.
15th.
me
RULE OP ROMEU.
490
all
15
and Espinosa. 17
Cdxliz in
July
Pnw.
MS.,
8t.
vi., 76;
Pro.
ec.,
v. 96.
full list of officers made at Monterey, is as follows: Captains Alejandro Malaspina and Jose" de Bustamante y Guerra; lieutenants Dionisio Galiano,* Jose Espinosa, Cayetano Valde"s, Manuel No vales,* Fernando Quintano,
Juan Bernaci, Secundino Salamanca, Antonio de Tova, Juan Concha, Jose'
Robredo, Areaco Zeballos, Francisco Viana, and Arcadio Lineda;* alfe"reces
Martin Olavide,* Felipe Bauza, Flavio Aleponzoni, and Jacobo Murphy; contadores Rafael Rodriguez de Arias and Manuel Esquerra; chaplains Jose" de
Mesa and Francisco de Paula Aiiino; surgeons Francisco Flores and Pedro
Gonzalez; pilotos Juan Diaz Maqueda, Jos6 Sanchez, Geronimo Delgado, Juan
Inciarte y Portu, and Joaquin Hurtado; apothecary Luis Nee* and Tadeo
Haenek; pintor de perspectiva Tomas Suria; disecador y dibujante do plantas
Jos6 de Guio. * The names marked with a star remained behind in Mexico.
Malaspina, Nota de Oftciales de Guerra y Mat/ores, Naturalistas, Botdnicos,
Dibujantes, y Disecadores, gue tienen destino en las corbetas de S. M. nombradas Descubierta y Atrevida, que dan vuefya al Globo. .que salieron de Cadiz en
30 de Julio de 1789, MS.
17
MALASPINA'S EXPEDITION.
491
Cape Mendocino
September 6th, being off San Fran18
cisco the 10th, and anchoring the 13th at Monterey,
where his vessels remained till the 25th, thence continuing the survey down to Cape San Lucas, San
Bias, Acapulco, and returning to Spain by the Phil19
ippines and Cape Good Hope.
Of the stay at Monterey, of scientific observations
there, of Malaspina's impressions of California and
The archives contain only
its people we know little.
the merest mention of the arrival and of courtesies
exchanged between the visitors and Lasuen, who
aided in gathering specimens, 20
Malaspina seems
entitled to the honor of having brought to California the first American who ever visited the
country, and he came to remain, his burial being
recorded on the mission register under date of September 13th, and name of John Groem, probably
Graham, son of John and Catherine Groem, PresbyHe had shipped as gunner at
terians, of Boston.
21
Cadiz.
The reports of this expedition were never
22
As
new
two
and
18
At least 4 or 5 shots were heard from a fog-hidden vessel on that date.
Bustamante, in Cavo, Tree Siglos, iii. 106-7, says he left Nootka August 25th,
and anchored at Monterey September llth.
19
For account of Malaspina's explorations in the north, see Hist. N. W.
Coast, i. 249; and Hist. Alaska, this series.
20
Sept. 21, 1791, Malaspina and Bustamante to Lasuen thanking him for
aid.
Lasuen in reply gives thanks for presents. The letters are full of flattering expressions, and the voyagers promise to make the king and the world
acquainted with their favorable impressions of California and with the sucv;ce and zeal of .the
cess
padres. Malaspina and Bustamante Carta al P. Lasuen
rcxpuesta de dlcho Padre, Sept. 1791, MS. March 27, 1792, Gen. Nava has
rned of Malaspina's visit. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 19.
21
Taylor, in Pacific Monthly, xi. 649-50, from San Carlos, Lib. de
ision.
^Navarrete, Viages Apdcrifos, 94-8, 268-70, 313-20; Id., in Sutil y Mexican a, Via<je,Introd.,'cxzu.-i.u. Taylor, in Pacific Monthly, xi. 649, and L. Cai,
492
RULE OF EOMEU.
493
but
could not be accomplished. Day before yesterday, however, some were sent there by land, and with
them a man from the schooner which came from
Nootka under Don Juan Carrasco. 25 The plan is to
see if there is any shelter for a vessel on the coast
near Santa Cruz, and there to transport what is left.
This means is
To-morrow a report is expected.
lack
animals.
because
we
To-day eleven Indsought
ians have departed from here with tools to construct
a shelter at Soledad for the padres and the supplies.
I and the other
padres are making preparations, and
will be, by the favor of God, the
thither
my departure
26
after
San
Francisco, October 8th, at latest."
day
The preliminaries having been thus arranged Alferez
Sal started from San Francisco September 22d with
it
25
This schooner was the Horcasitas, which under Narvaez had taken part
northern explorations. See Hist. N. W. Coast, i. 244-250. The
Aranzam had also made a trip to the north, under Matute.
26
Laxuen, Carta al Sr. Gobernador Romeu, sobre fundacion de Misiones,
29 W/V
WV
de Sept. 1791, MS.
in Elisa's
*_>(_
RULE OF ROMEU.
494
the
first
godfather.
Sugert and his people having been fortified by assurances against the noise of exploding gunpowder, and
the friars having donned their robes, Don Hermenegildo took formal possession as he says, "in such words
as my moderate talent dictated," and at the conclusion
the guns were discharged.
Five more salutes were
fired while the padres said mass and chanted a te
27
Sept. 17, 1791, Sal to Romeu, excusing himself for sending, without
Romeu 's arrival or orders, at Lasuen's request, a guard and
mule train for the new mission. St. Pap., Sac., MS., vii. 18-20. The corporal
of the mission guard was fully instructed respecting his duties under date of
Sept. 17th. Sal, Instruction al Cabo Luis Peralta al cargo de la Escolta de la
having awaited
Mision de Santa Cruz, 1791, MS. The general purport was, constant precautions, kindness to gentiles, harmony with padres, strict performance of
The details were much the same
religious duties, and the details of routine.
in all missions.
It is to be noticed, however, that in the matter of escorting
the priests the soldiers were strictly limited, and were not allowed to pass
the night away from the mission. If a priest desired to go to a distant mission, word must be sent to San Francisco and a guard obtained from the
On the 29th or 30th of each month a report to Sal must be sent by
presidio.
two soldiers to Santa Clara, where the two must wait till two Santa Clara
men carried the despatch to San Francisco and returned. As the rainy season
was drawing near, the gentiles might be induced to work on the warehouse
"'
and guard-house by presents of food, etc., even against the wishes of
padres.
495
12, 1865.
May
investigate a
St.
18.
rise
and
kill
RULE OF ROMEU.
496
30
A full
497
the
friars'
32
In March artisans were sent to build the mill and instruct the natives.
In August a smith and miller were sent to start the mill. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
224, 232; v. 50, 58, 65-6, 98, 115; vi. 68; Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., ii. 78; St.
Pap., Sac., MS., vii. 30. Four millstones were ordered made at Santa Cruz
for San Carlos.
A house for the mill was also built; and in 1793 a granary of
two stories and a house for looms had been finished. St. Pap., Hiss., MS., ii.
17, 78.
33
vi. 99.
35
Of Alonso Isidro Salazar we know nothing till he became minister of
Santa Cruz in Sept. 1791, having probably arrived from Mexico a little earlier
in the same year.
He and Lopez did not get along amicably together, and
the archives contain an order of the guardian to the president to send Salazar
to some other mission since he and his confrere would not 'listen to reason,'
and in order to reduce their pride.' Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., xi. 251-2. He
never served at any other mission, and his license to retire, dated by the viceroy Jan. 23, 1795, reached him before June 10th of the same year. Prov. Rec.,
MS., vi. 47. St. Pap., Sac., MS., i. 50. No reason for his retirement is given.
He doubtless sailed in the transport of that autumn; and on May 11, 1706,
he wrote at the college of San Fernando a long report on California, of which
I shall have
something to say elsewhere. Condition Actual de Cat., MS.
Baldomero Lopez, like Salazar, came to California in 1791, like him served
'
HIST.
CAI,.,
VOL.
I.
32
RULE OF ROMEU.
498
We
come
new
mission of 1791,
La
Encro 1794> MS. An original letter. He was impetuous, violent, cruel, and
a bad manager of neophytes. Prov. Bee., MS., vi. 103; or at least over-zealous in converting pagans, and w as admonished by the president to moderate
his zeal. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 125-32. This was at Santa Clara where he
served in 1794. He was much at San Francisco in the early part of 1795.
During his service at Santa Cruz in 1795-8 we hear no complaint against him,
and in October 1798 he obtained license to retire on account of sickness. Arch.
Arzolnspado, MS., i. 52.
T
37
See
p. 493, tliis
volume.
FOUNDING OF SOLEDAD.
499
since
of
the
country.
occupation
Beyond the names of officiating missionaries and
the usual statistics Soledad has no recorded history
for this first decade.
One entry in the mission books
however deserves mention, by which it appears that
on May 19, 1793, there was baptized a Nootka Indian,
twenty years of age, "Iquina, son of a gentile father,
the
first
ton."
killed
vessel
39
38
Romeu
Soledad, Lib. Mision, MS., 1, 2. Narrative signed by Lasuen.
to viceroy Dec. 1, 1791, in St. Pap. Sac., MS., v. 93. The first baptism of an
The following names from the mission records
aboriginal was on Nov. 23d.
are those of the soldiers and sirvientes during the decade: Soldiers, Macario
Castro, corporal in 1792, Ignacio Vallejo, corporal in 1793, Josd Dionisio Bernal, Leocadio Cibrian, Teodoro Gomez, Jos< Ignacio Mesa, Antonio Buelna,
Marcos
Villela, Manuel Mendoza, Salvador Espinosa, Miguel Espinosa, Cayetano Espinosa, Marcos Briones, Bartolomd Mateo Martinez, Jos6 Maria
Servants: Antonio
Soberanes, Juan Maria Pinto, and Manuel Rodriguez.
Santos, Leocadio Martinez, Matias Solas, Pedro Bautista Leonardo, Jos<
Bernardino Flores.
"Soledad, Lib. Mision, MS., 4.
40
Mariano Rubi was one of the four padres who arrived in California in
July 1790 sent expressly for the new establishments. He served at San
Antonio 1790 to Sept. 1791, and from Oct. 1791 to Jan. 1793. He retired
under a provisional license, being in ill-health. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 33;
Prov. Ilcc., MS., ii. 160. In Oct. 1793 and again in Feb. 1794 the guardian
wrote to the president asking for detailed reports on Rubi's conduct and
excesses, and an official certificate on the nature of his disease, which was
doubtless venereal. He was to be expelled for the honor of the college. Arch.
RULE OF ROMEU.
500
these
first
roof of straw. 41
Sta. Bdrbara, MS., xi. 229-31, 255. Of Garcia's shortcomings I shall have
more to say hereafter. At Soledad he once neglected to sow grain on some
frivolous pretext, and the neophytes were near starving in consequence.
41
St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 120.
Supplies to the presidio in 1796 $418.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 203.
CHAPTER XXIV.
RULE OF ARRILLAGA VANCOUVER'S
VISITS.
1792-1794.
Argiiello
been put in
had succeeded Ortega in the spring of 1791, and Alferez Sal had
at San Francisco.
command
(501)
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
502
On May
2
Junta de 5 de Abril de 1791 en Monterey, MS. Argiiello's letters to commandants Zufiiga and Gonzales, same date. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxii. 13-15.
3
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 4, 7, 8. May 4th, Arrillaga to viceroy. Id.,
xxi. 71.
May 7th, Id., to Goycoechea and Argiiello. Id., xi. 25; St. Pap.,
Sac., MS., i. 115.
May 7th, Id., to Lasuen, and the padre's congratulations
on June 25th. Arch. Arzobi&pado, MS., i. 27-8. May 10th Gen. Nava sends
to the governor a copy of Neve's previous instructions to Fages ; but this
document was probably intended for Romeu since Nava first announces knowledge of Romeu's death on June 17th. St. Pap., Sac., MS., i. 72-3; Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xi. 59.
4
June 8, 1792, Arrillaga to commandants in St. Pap., Sac., MS., vi. 7G-8.
Viceroy to governor, July 8, 1792, in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xx. 3.
I Sept.
is
A NEW GOVERNOR.
at the complicated task
503
success,
though
many
MS.,i. 320-1,341-2.
8
Arrillaga to viceroy, November 8. 1792, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 85-6.
Jordan is said to have spent 8 months in Alta California at some previous
time, and to have caused some dissatisfaction by his intrigues, though 1 iind
no other record of his presence than Arrillaga's statement. Jordan asked for
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
504
tion of
object.
it will be
apparent to the
occurred to distract Arrillaga's attenThe period was one of quiet
tion from his figures.
for
the
missions, and no new establishments
prosperity
were founded. The governor was liked by the friars,
reader that
little
We
Prov
Rec.,
MS.,
i.
213.
505
10
Spain no
common
to both nations.
i.
chap, v.-ix.
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
5G6
'SUTIL'
AND 'MEXICANA.'
507
The author of the diary devotes two chapters to California, which contain a description of Monterey and
a somewhat extended account of
its surroundings,
O
*
is
to
Span-
vals
ing duties.
12
en
Sutll
el
aho
508
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
MAP
OF 1792.
509
the truth,' has, I believe, no just foundation. Galiano, Valde"s, and Alava
who visited Monterey a little later, all fell at the famous naval battle of
Traf
The viceroy had at first intended Lieut. Maurelle to make this
Trafalgar.
expl
exploration. JRevilla-Gigedo, Informe de 12 deAbrill793, 141; Prov. St. Pap.,
MS.
"S.,
is
xi. 40.
Arrillaga, still at Loreto, communicated this order to the presidio commanidants on Sept. 16, 1792. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 35; St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
i. 42-3.
Orders had also been given in the spring of 1792 for the friendly
reception and aid of the French expedition in search of La Perouse, which
never arrived. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 73; St. Pap., Sac., MS., i. 112.
u
Oct. 31st, Sal writes
Revilla-Gigedo, Informe de. 12 de Abril 1793, 137.
to Gov. Arrillaga that he judges from Cuadra's remarks that the English
want the mouth of San Francisco Bay for a boundary. St. Pap., Sac., MS., i.
119. Sept. 9th, Sal had written to Arrillaga that he had seen a suspicious
vessel off the port on the 7th, and fired 6 shots at her. She anchored for the
night about a league from Mussel Point. Id., i. 69-71.
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
510
Spaniards, Private Miranda serving as pilot, the Discovery was transferred to the usual anchorage nearer
the presidio. 17
Vancouver's reception at San Francisco was most
cordial and satisfactory.
Every attention was shown
and every possible aid furnished the visitors by Commandant Sal and his wife and the friars at the mission.
Couriers were despatched to Monterey with a message
for Cuadra. Facilities were afforded for obtaining wood
and water; feasts were given at both presidio and mission, and meat and vegetables were sent on board the
vessel.
Indeed everything the Spaniards had in this
the most poverty-stricken of their establishments was
at the disposition of the strangers.
On the 20th of
November Vancouver and seven of his officers made
an excursion on horseback to Santa Clara, being the
first foreigners who had ever penetrated so far into
15
i.
196-200.
i.
vi. 72.
VANCOUVER'S FIRST
VISIT.
511
the interior.
They were escorted by Amador with
a squad of five soldiers, and were delighted with much
After most hospitable
of the intermediate country.
treatment by fathers Pena and Sanchez at Santa
Clara, they returned to San Francisco on the 22d.
by their respective governments consequently Vancouver made arrangements with Cuadra to send
~roughton to England via San Bias and Mexico, to
;
18
for acct. of
Cuadra
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
512
which end the Spanish commander offered every faThe Discovery and the Chatham remained at
cility.
Monterey for about fifty days for reloading and
tent and observatory for astronomical
repairs.
were
set up on the beach, and the Dceobservations
sailed
in
December
for New South Wales with
dalus
and
of
cattle
other
a load
supplies generously fur-
20
VANCOUVER'S DEPARTURE.
513
not given up were 2 Portuguese and one Dane. Id., xii. 172-3. The purport
of 2 preceding communications in Vancouver's Voyage, iii. 333-4.
Nov. 20,
1794, Fidalgo takes the 3 remaining deserters on board his vessel to work out
the 8421 of charges. Id., xii. 171-2, 174.
22
Vancouver, A Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean, and round
the World. .1700-5. London, 1798, 3 vols. 4to, and folio atlas. On .this visit
to Monterey, see vol. ii. 29-49, 99-105.
Other editions and translations of
Vancouver's voyage with numerous abridged narratives and references all
drawn from this original source I do not deem it necessary to notice here.
Dec. 15, 1792, Lasuen writes to Vancouver thanking him for his gifts to the
missions. Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., vi. 260-1.
March 13, 1793, Viceroy to
Vancouver, has given Lieut. Broughton all possible aid, and with the greatest
pleasure. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 93-4.
.
I.
33
RULE OF ARRILLAGA
514
nary license to a foreign power. He was only temporary governor and he entertained a nervous dread
of overstepping the literal instructions of his superiors.
He feared that what had taken place would be disapHis
proved, and that he would be held responsible.
trouble was increased by an order from the viceroy
November
dated
25
23
March
ii.
162.
COAST DEFENCES.
515
516
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
517
is
Francisco.
31
518
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
making known the current orders respecting foreign vessels, and politely informing the visitor that
only himself and one officer could be permitted to
This restriction seemed
land and visit the presidio.
"
to Vancouver ungracious and degrading, little short
of a dismission from San Francisco," due as he was
also
VANCOUVER'S SECOND
VISIT.
519
viously
all
the ocean joined the fleet. Mention of arrival and departure from San
Francisco in St. Pap., Sac., MS., ii. 90-1, iv. 9; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 160;
xxi. 121-2.
fourth vessel, the Vucas, is mentioned. Supplies amounting
to .$737 were furnished.
Sal says the vessels left on Oct. 29th.
30
These instructions or similar ones dated Jan. 12, 1793, and addressed to
The letter of the viceroy to
Argiiello are in Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 163.
Vancouver dated Feb. 18, 1793, in answer to Vancouver's letter of Jan. 13th
'I-am glad that as you say in
is found in Id. xi. 112-13. In it the writer says
your letter of Jan. 13th of this year all the subjects of His Majesty under my
orders and residing in the regions of New Orleans (sic) of this America where
you have been have treated you with the greatest hospitality and friendship.'
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
520
all
regard.
The governor thus courteously tendered to Vancouver all the hospitalities that he had a right to offer,
or the navigator to expect; but the contrast was so
great between them and those previously tendered
by Cuadra in the absence of any responsible authorthat Vancouver was offended.
"On clue consideration of all these circumstances," he says, "I
declined any further correspondence with, or accept-
ity,
terey."
He
some
did,
live-stock
37
Arrillaga, Borrador dc Carta al Capitan Vancouver, Nov. 1793, M.S.
I have given the purport of this letter somewhat at length because Vancouver
misrepresents it by stating that there was no choice offered of a spot to
deposit the cargo, the place suggested being the slaughter-house in the midst
of putrid offal and inconvenient ou account of high-running surf; by omitting
to state that an English guard for the stores was permitted; and by other
Blotters of Arrillaga's
slight changes not favorable to the Spanish governor.
and translations of Vancouver's other letters inProv. St. Pap., MS., xi. 100-4.
38
In other parts of his narrative the author
Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 442.
treats Arrillaga very unjustly, accusing him of having misrepresented the
viceroy's orders, and making him responsible for matters over which he had
no control. In a letter of Feb. 28, 1794, the viceroy fully approves Arrillaga's
policy and orders a continuance of it, though he desires harmonious relations
with Vancouver. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 162-3.
521
'
"
TT
iT
1-
TJ
and be has warned the commandants accordingly. Id., xxi. 130. Nov. 14,
17C3, Arrillaga to Goycocchea of Santa Barbara, Vancouver is to be refused
supplies since he has declined them at Monterey. Prov. fiec., MS., i. 207.
RULE OF ARKILLAGA.
522
Juan Capistrano just before the departure of the vessels, too late to bring supplies from San Juan as he
wished, but in time to receive a handsome barrelorgan as a gift for his San Cdrlos church. Vancouver
left the port of San Diego December 9th to cross the
Pacific.
During this second visit to the coast he had
learned nothing respecting the Nootka question;
neither had he recovered his deserters, who had been
sent to San Bias as already related. 41
In March of
41
On
this
ii.
443-76.
MARITIME AFFAIRS.
this year
Don Juan
commander
fornian bay
523
San
Bias, and discoverer of the Calithat bears his name, died, and was suc-
at
Alava.
the coast, and besides his visit there is not much to be said of maritime affairs or foreign relations during the year 1794.
toward
foreign vessels.
cle
visit
Arrillaga' s
policy and
acts
all
42
June 11, 1794, viceroy to governor, approving the reception of Vancouver and orders given to commandants to prevent an examination of tho
country and the shipment of cattle to foreign establishments. Prov. St. Pap.
MS., xi. 177-8; but the day before he had forwarded a royal order of March
,
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
524
Vancouver came back across the Pacific and arrived at Nootka in September 1794. He found there
47
Alava's instructions
Alava, the successor of Cuadra.
had not however arrived, and after waiting till the
middle of October both commissioners went down to
Monterey, in the Princesa, Discovery, and Chatham,
48
The
arriving on the 2d, 6th, and 7th of November.
old slights were still weighing on the English com45
Kendrick, Correspondencia con el Gobernador Arrlllaga sobre cosas de
Nootka, 1794, MS; Cat-old, Carlo, sobre Nootka, 1794, MS. See also Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xii. 198-9, 209-13; xxi. 195. There had been some minor correspondence that lias not been mentioned about supplies, etc. for Nootka in 1791.
8ta. Barbara, MS., xi. 118; Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 1, 2, 45-6, 140.
46
See Hist. N. W. Coast, i. 300-1, this series. Dec. 10, 1794, governor to
viceroy asking that the immarried soldiers from Nootka be retained to fill
vacancies in California. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 32. Granted March 14, 1795.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 122-3. The Activa, Capt. Bertodano, arrived at
Monterey, Feb. 13, 1795, and sailed March 12th, having on board Pierce and
Alava, the English and Spanish commissioners for the 'disoccupation.' The
Princesa under Fidalgo left Monterey for San Bias April 8th. The San Carlos
under Saavedra arrived from Nootka May 12th, and sailed for San Bias in June.
Saavedra brought down 21 natives from Nootka who were baptized at San
Carlos as 17 others had been in November 1791. Gaceta de Mex., vii. 206;
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 80, 89; Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 37, 46; Taylor's Discoverers and Founders, No. 25, p. 141, No. 28, p. 177; Id., in Cal. Farmer, April
20, 1860. Taylor repeats a groundless story that the Nootka chief Maquinria
came down with a son and daughter; Gregorio and Jos6 Tapia, living at Santa
Cruz in 1854, being his grandsons.
47
May 10, 1794, viceroy to governor, Alava to sail in the Princcsa and to
receive all aid and attention in California. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 171. Aug.
20, 1794, this order communicated by governor to commandants. Prov. Rec.,
,
MS.,
iv.
117.
48
Nov. 3d, Argiiello to governor, announcing the Chatham arrival on
Nov. 2d and Nov. 7th, that of the Discovery on Nov. 5th; delivery of deserters; sending a courier to San Diego. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 144-7.
',<?
VANCOUVER'S THIRD
VISIT.
525
some
inferior establishment," Arguello was tempoporarily in command until the governor should arrive.
mandant.
for Alava,
who
confided the information that the Nootka question had been amicably adjusted at court, and that a
new commission had been issued relieving Vancouver.
Borica received similar information from the new
viceroy, Branciforte, with instructions to receive the
new commissioner. 60
Remaining
at
Monterey
till
December 2d Van-
'
port!'
50
May
16,
commissioner. Prov.
RULE OF ARBILLAGA.
526
sion
was made
Valley.
into
large
51
Monterey and Santa Cruz.
left
'
tions
still
52
port.
scientific researches,
much
51
Vancouver says that Swaine was sent with three boats to Santa Cruz
Nov. 27th for garden stuff, and was tolerably successful. The archives conNov. 25, 1794, governor
tain, however, several documents on the subject.
to padres, Vancouver having sent three boats instead of one the padres must
not visit them but send supplies by Indians and wagons. Prov. /tec., MS., vi.
142-3.
Nov. 25th, gov. to corporal at Sta. Cruz, Three boats will come for
supplies; don't let them land, for the padres will send Indians with the supplies. Id., v. 23. Nov. 29th, Corporal Sanchez to gov., he ordered the English
commander not to let any sailors go to the mission and obedience was promised.
The natives brought the supplies and the English departed in peace.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 43. Nov. 30th, Sal to gov., Nov. 2Gth, the corporal reported the English boats approaching, and Sal sent five men from San
Francisco, who returned saying that the foreigners had retired Nov. 28th
without disorder. The soldier who brought the news was put in irons for
VANCOUVER'S OBSERVATIONS.
less extensive in California
no further attention
here.
53
527
His
persistence
in ignoring
whom
discussion of the mission system, he approves, looking for gradual success in laying foundations for civil
society. For the friars personally he had nothing but
enthusiastic praise.
What was needed to stimulate true progress in
California was a friendly commercial intercourse with
foreigners, to create new wants, introduce new com53
Vancouver's atlas contains a carefully prepared map 011 a large scale,
better than any of earlier date, of the whole California coast, which I reproduce.
There are charts of Trinidad Bay, San Diego, and the entrance to San
Francisco, and seven views of points along the coast.
RULE OF ARRILLAGA.
528
1:24
121
1^'Z
119
120
Sn Antonio
iSn.
Buchcn
VANCOUVER'S MAP,
1794.
118
117
AN ENGLISH VIEW OF
CALIFORNIA.
520
least
54
tive, see
Voyage,
ii.
CHAPTER XXV.
RULE OF BORICA, FOREIGN RELATIONS, AND INDIAN AFFAIRS.
1794-1800.
DIEGO DE BORICA
"
his
Majesty
is
to ap-
Don
in
1
in
531
with
its
2
Letters of Borica in
1794 to various persons in Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xxi. 196, 198-205; xii. 174; Prov. Re<:., MS., iv. 115-16; vi.23.
There seems
to be little or no doubt about
14th as the date of taking possession; but the
llth, 12th,
day of arrival is given by Borica himself in different letters as
May
May
May
13th. May 31st, Lasuen from Santa Barbara congratulates the new governor. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 36.
July 31st, Commandant of San Diego
has received the announcement and proclaimed it in his district. Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xii. 20. Arrillaga to same effect Aug. 4th. Id., xxi. 196. Viceroy has received the news Aug. 5th. Id., xi. 190-1. Aug. 2d, Argiiello orders
Borica proclaimed as governor at San Jose". San Jos6, Arch., MS., iii. 23.
3
July 5, 1794, Revilla Gigedo announces the arrival of his successor. He
will be glad to keep up a private correspondence with Borica. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xi. 183. July 12th, Branciforte announces his accession. Id., xi. 189.
4
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 197; xiii. 55; xiv. 29; Prov. llec., MS., v. 71;
and
vi.
26;
St.
xvii. 2.
532
courage, and were made acquainted with the prospecdifficulties of the peninsula route in time of
All went on board
drought, the plan was changed.
the Saturnina July 20th, and four days later set sail
The winds and
for San Luis Bay far up the gulf.
other circumstances seem to have been unfavorable, for
on the 28th the governor decided to land at Santa
Ana and make his way to San Fernando and across
the frontier by land. 5 With the exception of some
correspondence about the furnishing of escorts and
animals by the different commandants along the way
we know nothing of the journey until he reached San
Juan Capistrano in the middle of October. 6
tive
Here he met
province; but
MS.,
vi. 134.
A CONVIVIAL RULER.
533
"Tovivirmucho
country immediately on his arrival.
and without care come to Monterey/' he tells them.
"This is a great country; climate healthful, between
cold and temperate; good bread, excellent meat,
tolerable fish; and bon humeur which is worth all the
rest.
Plenty to eat, but the most astounding is the
general fecundity, both of rationals and irrationals.
The climate
good that
like
is
so
This
is
534
Bias, and at
of 1794 work had been
going on for over a year on the San Francisco defences,
besides some slight preparations at Monterey and San
Diego. Details of progress at the different presidios
may be more appropriately given in connection with
local annals in another chapter, and it is only in a
12
general way that I propose to treat the subject here.
Viceroy Revilla Gigedo earnestly recommended
the fortification of the coast in his instructions of
1794 to his successor Branciforte, 13 who called upon
Colonel Costanso, the same who had visited California with the first expedition of 1769, for a report on
the subject.
Costanso's report was rendered October 17th of the same year, and was to the effect tnat
the difficulties in the way of adequate fortification
were insuperable.
autumn
faith in forts
In
this report,
however,
Jan. 15, 1792, V. R. to gov., Gen. Carcaba says that $5,200 is not
presidios.
enough, since Fages had estimated $12,000 for three presidios. The V. R.,
claims
that Fages' estimate was on the basis of 150 per cent advance
however,
on goods, or $5,200 without that advance; though Fages later raised the estimate to $12,000, but this had 110 approval of general and king. He therefore
refuses to give more than the $5,200 with $400 for package and freight. St.
Pap., Sac., MS., i. 46-7; Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 112. Some details about
the distribution of the amount among the presidios. Id., xi. 54, 57; xii. 57-5;
Prov. Rec.,
iv. 3, 4.
12
COAST DEFENCES.
535
and
forcements.
slight progress was being
the fortifications, the war in France was
made with
536
June a
on officers,
headed the
friars, soldiers,
and neophytes to
assist,
fornia.
18
16
Branciforte d Borica sobre fortcdecer las Baterias de San Francisco, MonteMS. On same date, July 25th, viceroy to governor, of same purport, mentioning the sending of an engineer, and also declaring it impossible
to fortify and defend the whole coast against superior forces. "In emergencies aid must be sought from Sonora. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 53-4.
The
actual force in California was 225 men; Arrillaga's plan called for 271; and
Borica's, 335. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xix. 3, 4.
Sept. 22, 1795, the
V. R. announces that the company of volunteers was inspected at Mexico on
Sept. llth by Col. Salcedo, and found in good condition. Prov. St. Pap.,
xiii. 83; Nov. llth, he speaks of the artillerymen, and says the royal treasury
at Vera Cruz pays the expense to the end of 1795. Id., xiii. 74; St. Pap., Sac.,
MS.,vii. 44-5.
17
June 22, 1793, viceroy's decree. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 129. Oct. 9th,
Arrillaga to commandant of Monterey, mentioning decree of June 19th. St.
Pap., Sac., MS., i. 113. Oct. 28th, Lasuen says the padres will contribute
what they can that is their prayers. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 36. Dec.
7th, decree has been published in Loreto. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 149.
March 4, 1794, Gov. to V. R. announces $740 as the amount. Id., xxi. 133;
xii. 93; Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 31; Gaceta de Mex., vi. 578.
June 26th, V. R.
declines with thanks in the king's name. Id., xii. 35; xi. 180, 182; Prov.
Rec., MS., viii. 144. Nov. llth, Gov. announces the restitution. Prov. Rec.,
MS.,iv. 120.
18
April
Pap., MS.,
4,
xiii.
THE
The
'PHCENIX,'
CAPTAIN MOORE.
537
spondence on subject. St. Pap., Sac., MS., v. 99-105. July 19th, Oct. 12th,
IGth, Gov. to commandants and padres. Prov. JRec., MS., iv. 30-1, 135, 137; vi.
151. Oct. 18th, Lasuen to gov. explaining the poverty of the padres, the great
services they are rendering the king, and their inability, with the best wishes,
to give anything but their prayers for the victory of Spanish arms. Arch. Sta
Bdrbara, MS., xii. 234; St. Pap. Sac., MS., ix. 88-93. March 12, 1796,
announcement of results, showing that San Francisco gave $707 ; Monterey
and San Jose, $554; Santa Barbara and Angeles, $9SO, and San Diego, $639.
St. Pap., Sac., MS., v. 98; viii. 75; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 153.
Jan. 17, 1797,
viceroy's thanks for aid, including the prayers. Arch. Sta Bdrbara, MS., xii.
Peace announced by V. E. Nov. 29, 1795,
234; Prov. Piec., MS., vi. 181.
and solemn mass of thanksgiving ordered. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 73.
Published by gov. Feb. 29, 1796. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 144. Original letter
of Lasuen asking padres to say mass at each mission. Doc. Hist. CaL, MS.,
iv. 55-7.
General amnesty and pardon on account of peace, and of marriage
of princesses. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 82; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 40.
19
Jan. 6, 1795, governor orders that even in the case of San Bias vessels,
the first persons landing must be closely examined to be sure they are really
Nov. 2d, Sal to comisionado
Spaniards. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 16-17.
of S. Jos6 urging strict compliance with the V. 11 's orders of July 25. N. Jos
Arch., MS., iv. 26. Nov. 14th, Goycoechea toBorica. No foreigners will be
allowed to visit the country on horseback or to get breeding animals. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., xiv. 29-30.
20
Portrait of Thomas Murr sent to viceroy (?). Prov. Rec. MS., viii. 166.
Sept. 5th, Goycoechea to Borica, Says the boy's name was Bostones and he
was of good parentage, a pilot and carpenter. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 6970. Capt. Matute is asked to carry the young Bostonian to San Bias. Id. xxi.
230. His name was Joseph O'Cain, an Irishman, and he went in the Aranzazu
This Englishman is a native
(perhaps in 1 796) Prov. Rec. MS. iv. 22-3, 30-1
of Ireland and his
parents live now in Boston.' Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil.,
,
'
538
next year. 23
vessels
made
their appearance on
the coast this year. The first was the English manof-war Providence, under Captain Broughton who had
visited California before with Vancouver. She anchxxi. 11.
There is a Jose Burling also mentioned as an Irishman who
arrived in or about this year. St. Pap., Sac., MS., xix. 8, 9. See also on the
visit of the Phoenix. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 17-68; xiv. 67; St. Pap.,
Another English vessel, the
Sac., MS., xvii. 1; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 22-3.
Resolution, Capt. Lochi (Locke?), was reported by Grajera of San Diego as
having touched at Todos Santos Bay in August. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii.
66-70.
*l
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 175. The only Spanish vessels of the year
seem to have been the Conception, Melendez, and the Aranzazu, Matute,
with the memorias.
22
Jan. 1796, viceroy to governor, no person from a foreign vessel to be
MS.,
7.
March
MS., iv. 61. June 18th, viceroy orders strict precautions. Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xiv. 151.
23
July 15, 1796, governor to commandant, private. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
14!).
Aug. 25th, Grajera to gov. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 115. Nov. 30th,
viceroy to gov. Id., xiv. 173. Oct. 19th, a courier arrived at Monterey from
San Diego, announcing that 18 sail had been sighted. St. Pap. Sac., MS., vi. 89.
Sac.,
THE
'OTTER,'
CAPTAIN DORR.
639
Washington signed by the Spanish consul at Charleston, she sailed on the Gth of November. Dorr asked
permission to land some English sailors who had
26
His resecretly boarded his vessel at Port Saxon.
he
five
men
was
but
landed
on the
refused,
quest
beach at night, and the next night five more and a
woman on the Cafmelo shore, forcing them from the
boat, they said, by the use of a pistol. Dorr's conduct
naturally seemed to the Spaniards ungrateful; but
his position was doubtless a difficult one, and the necessity of getting rid of his convict passengers was
urgent. Governor Borica regarded it as a dishonorable trick on the part of the Yankee; but he had to
24
Sept. 10, 1796, viceroy to Borica, approves of his having fired at the
boats, suspecting that the aim was to explore the salinas, and he will send a
vessel to prevent such attempts. St. Pap., Sac., MS., viii. 74. The Providence
fired a salute of 1 1 guns on entering and the battery responded. According
to Id., vi. 85-6, she sailed June 18th; but according to Prov. St. Pap., Ben.
Mil. MS. xxiii. 3, 5, it was July 8th. The instruments left were worth 250.
According to Id., kxiv. 6, the vessel appears to have been at San Francisco
on June 10th. Alberni is ordered not to let Broughtcn land. Orders were
sent to other ports not to permit a landing or to furnish any more supplies.
Prov. Hec., MS., iv. 07. Supplies furnished amounted to $308, the bill being
sent to Mexico. Id., iv. 206. The instruments were sent to San Bias. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., xxi. 212.
25
She is called by the Spaniards the Otter Boston, El otro Boston, and Loter
Boston; and their captain, Dow, Dour, Dor, Daur, Door, and De-re.
26
Herbert C. Dorr, son of this captain, a well known litterateur residing
in San Francisco, tells me that these men were convicts from Botany Bay,
and that he has often heard his father tell the story of this voyage and of his
,
540
troubles with these reckless men who used the Otter as a means of escape.
The Dorr family furnished several masters and owners of vessels engaged in
the fur- trade in northern waters, as will be seen in the Hist. N. W. Coast, this
series.
27
no
Nov.
5,
irregularities
'
xxiii. 11.
541
July
8,
MS.,
xxi. 150-3.
158 muskets, 142 swords, 96 lances value $2,650. Id., xxi. 194; Prov. St.
Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xxv. 1. Sept. 15, 1795, 170 cwt. powder sent. Prov.
Dec. 1796, Feb. 1797, 200 muskets, 200 pistols, 200
St. Pap., MS., xiii. 81.
cartridges, 200 musket-cases, 16,000 flints. Prov. /?ec.,MS., viii. 170, 173; iv.
157; vi. 58; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 223; xvi. 240; xvii. 146; xxi.' 253.
30
Dec.
Ctfrdoba, Informe al Vlrey solre dcfensas de California, 1796, MS.
27, 1796, viceroy to gov. has received Cordoba's plans of San Francisco, Monterey, and Santa Cruz, has ordered the fitting-out of two cruisers, and has
taken measures for the proper strengthening of San Francisco. St. Pap., Sac.,
MS., vii. 32-5. Jan. 20, 1797, Borica to V. R. Prov. fiec., MS. vi. 78.
Cordoba's first report was sent to Mexico by Borica with his communication
of Sept. 21st, enclosing five plans and approving Cordoba's suggestions. St.
Pap. Sac. MS. iv. 56-7. Borica's instructions to Cordoba for his southern trip,
He was to gather material for
Oct. 8, 1796. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 246-7.
,
542
at
ALARMING RUMORS.
643
During the months of July, August, and September all seems to have been quiet, 33 but in the middle
of October there came a report from the peninsular
mission of San Miguel that five, ten, or even sixteen
The
vessels had been seen making for the north.
of
was
a
the
ascertained
before
week
falsity
report
had passed, but not before it had been published with
all the precautionary orders of old throughout the
34
This emerprovince, and had been sent to Mexico.
elicited
from
Governor
Borica
peremptory ingency
structions which went all the rounds, to the effect
that in case he were taken prisoner by the English
no attention was to be paid to any orders purporting
to come from him, whatever their nature; but the
commandants were to go on in defence of California
35
as their duty and circumstances might dictate.
Families to be gradually removed to Angeles. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 40,
March 31st, Sal to B., all care taken. Provisions to be
43-5, 188-9.
destroyed and not allowed to fall into the hands of the foe. Id., xvi. 220.
March 31st, April Gth, May llth, Grajera to B., a sentinel on the beach at
San Juan Capistrano, Invalids of Angeles, San Gabriel, and Nietos rancho
ready. If the Presidio has to be abandoned, shall it be destroyed or not?
Id., xvi. 267-9, 211-12.
April 5th, Fidalgo toB. from San Bias. The Conception, Captain Manrique, and the Princa-a, Captain Caamauo, will protect
the California coast. Id.,\vii. 147. April 24th, B. to Goycoechea, Targetshooting every Sunday. Indians must be imbued with anti-English sentiments, taught that the foe are hostile to religion, violators of women. Prov.
Rec., MS., iv. 88.
April 23th, B. to commandants, economize, for the
supplies of 1798 cannot come. Id., iv. 158.
April 30th, Alberni to B.,
Indians refuse to go to Bodega from fear. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 152.
Will remain as a coastPrincesa
at
Sta
Barbara
with
May 25th,
supplies.
guard. Id., xxi. 261-2. June 8th, B. to commandants. If Presidio is abandoned, guns to be spiked and powder burned. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 254-5.
Finding of bodies at Pt Reyes in April. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 116.
Two years later it was learned that San Diego Bay had been surveyed by the
English in 1797 on a moonlight night. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS.,
xiii.
20.
33
Oct. 1st, Vallejo, writing from San Jose", mentions the arrival of an
English ship at Santa Cruz, Prov. St. Pop., MS., xv. 155, but nothing more
is heard of the matter.
34
Oct. 15th, Grajera to Borica. Oct. 20th, contradiction. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xvi. 190-1. Oct. 19th, B. to all, Spread the news in all directions d
Dec. 3d, 4th,
mata-caballo. Vigilancia!! Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 160; v. 259.
viceroy to B. He doubts the accuracy of the report, since the Conception
and Princesa came down the coast without seeing any vessels. Prov. St. ap.,
544
new
fright, also in 1799, resulting in the usual precautionary orders, and caused by the report of from fifteen
ments of
vessels Pro-o. /tec., MS.,iv. 90-1, 94, 105, 157, 1G2; vi. 52, 54, 56,
76, 87, 92-4, 104, 256; St. Pap., Sac., MS., viii. 76; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv.
52, 68, 113-14; xvi. 54, 62, 175, 192, 197; xvii. 1; xxi. 249, 253-5, 281.
37
xvii. 82. Nov. 13th,
Oct. 20, 1798, viceroy to gov. Prov. St. Pap.,
,
;
bishop to padres, and Lasuen's refusal. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., x. 67-72;
xii. 235-7; vi. 296-7.
Jan. 31st, Borica to V. R., sends 1,000 as a personal
contribution. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 118. Same date to commandants. Id., iv.
June 26, account of results. Settlers and Indians of the missions (per170.
:
MS
haps an error for Monterey including Borica's amount?) 1,853; San Francisco,
375; San Diego, 519; Catalan
242; Angeles,
175; Santa Barbara,
39; total,
3,460. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil,
volunteers,
257; artillery,
MS., xxvii. 7. Another account makes 1,853 the total. Prov. Itec., MS.,
vi. 128.
38
AMERICAN
SAILORS.
545
From 1797 to 1800 the military force and distribution remained practically the same as in 1796 after
the arrival of the Catalan volunteers and the artilIn April 1797 Borica asked for twenty-five
fill vacancies and for an increase
of thirty infantry and fifty cavalry, besides three warAt the beginning of 1799 the total expense
vessels.
of the military establishment as given by the governor, was 73,889 per year. In March Borica urged
an increase of $18,624 in the annual' expense, by the
addition of three captains and an adjutant inspector,
and the substitution of one hundred and five cavalry
for the Catalan volunteers. Nothing was accomplished,
39
In the
however, in these directions until after 1800.
mean time some slight progress was made on local
fortifications, and the engineer Cordoba, having completed his surveys and made a general map of California, had returned to Mexico in the autumn of
lery.
1798.
40
At
39
Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 86-8; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 180, 188-9.
Oct. 17, 1705, viceroy to Borica, speaks of Cordoba's appointment. He
Jan.
able, well behaved, and energetic. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 46.
1797, Cordoba at work on a map of California. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 78. Nov.
in
received
March
20, 1707, Borica forwards the map to the viceroy;
(or
Nov.) 1798. Id., vi. 62; viii. 189; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 3. Nov. 27,
in
sailed
October
He
Cordoba
Mexico.
ordered
to
R.
to
return
1797,
by V.
40
Wm.
American
42
pay
colonies.'
May
June 3d, Borica to viceroy. The Eliza had 12 guns; gave a draft on
Boston for $24. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 125-6. Aug. 3d, V. E, to B., Approves
his course; names John Kendrick as
supercargo, and says he wished to winter
at Monterey.
206-8.
I.
35
546
44
committing hostilities.
In the spring of 1800 there had come news of war
between Spain arid Russia. This brought out the
usual orders for precautionary measures and non-intercourse, but it failed to arouse even a ripple of excitement. An invasion from Kamchatka seems to have
had no terrors for the Californians after their success
45
in escaping from the fleets of Great Britain.
Precautions taken to guard against invasion by a
foreign foe having thus been narrated, it is necessary
to give some attention to the dangers that threatened
from within at the hands of the natives. Although
this subject of Indian affairs, in this as in most other
periods of California history, is prominent in the
archives, I do not deem it necessary to devote much
The Spaniards, few in number
space to it here.
and surrounded by savages of whose numbers and
disposition little
situated.
*Prov. Rec., MS., viii. 132; xii. 6; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 44; St. Pap.,
Sac., MS., ix. 12, 13. She arrived on the 25th and sailed Sept. 4th; she had 19
men and 10 guns; she asked aid later at San Bias, but was frightened away
by the approach of Spanish vessels, leaving her supplies, papers, captain, supercargo, and some sailors.
44
Nov. 30, 1800, governor to commandant. Prov. Pec., MS., xi. 146-7.
Gov. to viceroy. Prov. St. Pap,, MS., xviii. 67. Dec. 18th, V. R's orders to
look out for returning whalers. St. Pap., Sac., MS., ix. 50. The Conception
brought the memorius with nine padres to San Francisco in May 1799, being
kept in quarantine 13 days, and not leaving California until January 1800.
Coming back she arrived at Monterey in August 1800 with supplies, padres,
and children, convoyed by the armed Princesa, Capt. Vivero. They were
at Santa Barbara in September, and left San Diego in November. Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xviii. 9, 69; xxi. 30, 43-4, 48, 54; Prov. Rec., MS., ix. 12; xi. 84,
144;'*%. Pap., Sac., MS., iii. 20; vii. 76-7.
45
Dec. 21, 1799, viceroy to Borica. Newspapers announce war. St. Pap.,
Feb. 8, 1800, B. to commandants. War not certain;
Sac., MS., ix. 54.
but the province must be ready for an invasion from Kamchatka. Prov.
March 31st, declaration
St. Pap., MS., xviii. 23; Prov. Rcc., MS., x. 5.
of war known at Monterey.
Intercourse with Russia forbidden. Id., ix. 2, 7.
Oct. 9, 1802, mass ordered for peace. St. Pap. } Sac., MS., vii. 1.
INDIAN AFFAIRS.
547
xii. 33,
548
many
in danger. 48
49
preparations for hostilities that never occurred.
47
v. 227-8; iv. 35-6; vi. 48-50, 56, 146; Prov. St. Pap.,
82, 177-8, 215-16, 241-2, 275-6; xvi. 71.
According to Ca//<-ja,
Re&pueyta, MS., 12, the ranches of four men in the Monterey district were
MS.,
xiii.
MS.,
INDIAN AFFAIRS.
549
CHAPTER XXVI.
RULE OF BORICA EXPLORATIONS AND
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
1794-1800.
of
551
Amador 's
MS.,
xii.
28-9.
is
552
EXPLORATIONS AND
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
accompanied on his
trip
nacio Vallejo. 4
3
Sal, Informe que hace de losParages que se han reconocidoen la Alameda,
Dated San Francisco, Nov. 30th. Left San Francisco, Oct. 16th.
1795, MS.
St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 60-1. Danti, Diario de un Reconotimicnto de la Alameda, 1795, MS. Dated San Francisco, Dec. 2, 1795. It may be noted
that Macario Castro, of San Jos6, had a herd of mares at this time in the Alameda. Also that one of the northern streams visited was called San Juan de
la Cruz. Sal, Informe en el cual manifiexta lo que ha adquirido de varios sttc/etos
para comunicario al gobernador, 81 de Enero 1796, MS., contains the following geographical information about the great interior valley unintelligible for
the most part: About 15 leagues north from Santa Clara is the Rio del Pescadero where salmon are caught.
quarter of a league further the Rip Sun
Francisco Javier still larger. Two leagues beyond, the Rio San Miguel,
These three have no trees where they cross the tulan s
larger than either.
Five leagues farther is the Rio de la Pasion. Letween the last two
valley.
is an enclnal in that part of the Sierra Madre which stretches north and is
called the Sierra Nevada.
Keeping in the encinal and leaving the titlarks
The four rivers run from
to the left there is a region of fresh-water lakes.
east to west and empty into the ensenada of the port of San Francisco, tidewater running far up. The Sierra Madre is about eight leagues from Rio de
la Pasion. Before coming to the rivers, on the right is the Sierra of San Juan,
a short distance from the Sierra Nevada, and in sight from the presidio. The
four rivers were named by Captain Rivera in December 1776.
An Indian said his people traded with a nation of black Indians who had
padres. Another spoke of the Julpones, Quinenseat, Taunantoe, and Quisitoe
An Indian woman said
nations, the last bald from bathing in boiling lakes.
that five days beyond the rivers there were soldiers and padres. Lovers of
mystery will find food for reflection and theory in the preceding remarks.
4
SI'jar, Iteconocimiento de Sitiopa ra la Nuf-va Mision de San Miguel, 1 795, MS.
DatedAug. 27th, andaddressed toLasuen. See d&oSt.Pap., J/^s.,MS., ii. 56-7.
NEW
SITES IN
THE SOUTH.
553
The
sites ap-
5
Santa Maria, Renistro que hizo de los Parages entre San Gabriel y San
Buenaventura, 1795, MS. Dated Feb. 3, 1796. The padre visited in this
tour Caycgues rancheria, Simi Valley, Triunfo, Calabazas, Encino Valley
with rancherias of Quapa, Tacuenga, Tuyunga, and Mapipinga, La Zaiija,
head of Eio Santa Clara, and Mufin rancheria. The document is badly
written, and also I suspect badly copied, and the names may be inaccurate.
In some spots the pagans cultivated the land on their own account. Corporal
Verdngo owned La Zanja rancho. Governor's order of July 23d, in Prov. Rec.,
MS., iv. 19. In St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 55-6, it is stated that Santa Maria
made an unsuccessful survey.
6
Ortega, Diario que forma Felipe Maria de Ortega, Sargento de. la Compafiia de Santa Barbara en cumplimiento d la comision que obtuvo de D. Felipe
de Goycoechca safiendo con trr-x hombrcs d reconocer los xitios por el rumbo del
riorte en el dia 17 d las 8 de la mauana del mes de Junto, y es eomo sljne, 1795,
MS. The same diary includes an examination of the Mojonera region on
June 2Gth to 28th. Some explorations in 1798 will be given later in connection
with the foundation of Santa Lids.
7
July 23, 1795, governor's order. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 229-30. Aug. 14th
and 28th, Sept. 1st and 9th, communications of Mariner and G raj era. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., xiii. 19-20; St. Pap., Mis*., MS., 53-5.
8
Lcu> -.en, Inferine *obre Sitios para Nuevas Misiones, 1796, MS.; Borica,
Iiiforme de Nuevas Misiones, 26 deFeb., 1796, MS.
it
EXPLORATIONS AND
554
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
He
May
5,
all
was ready. 10
Brancifortet Autorizadon del Virrey para lafundacion de cinco nuevas misMS. Sept. 29th, guardian consents. Prov. St. Pap. , MS. xiv. 128-9.
Dec. 23, 1796, Borica to viceroy, St. Pap., Sac., MS., iv. 71-2. May
Lasuen says it will be hard for the
5, 1797, Lasuen to B., Id., vii. 28-31.
old missions to contribute for so many new ones at the same time; yet he will
do his best. San Carlos, Santa Clara, and San Francisco will be called upon
Liveto aid the two northern establishments and to lend Indians and tools.
stock must be given outright. Santa Cruz certainly and Soledad probably
,must be excused.
iones, 1790,
10
555
556
EXPLORATIONS AND
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
from the three northern missions for San Jos6 were 12 mules, 39 horses, 12
yoke of oxen, 242 sheep, and 60 pigs. Arch. Misiones, MS., i. 57.
12
See Chapter xxxi. of this volume. July 3, 1797, Corp. Miranda to commandant, says that on account of the danger, the padres wished to abandon
the mission, but he has dissuaded them. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 90. Aug.
Some gentiles want to come near the mission to
17, 1797, Amador to Borica.
live because the Sacalanes threaten to kill them for their friendship to the
Christians. Id. , xv. 1 73-4. April 6, 1798, Argiiello to B. Indians making arrows
to attack the mission. Reinforcements sent. The corporal has orders not to
force Indians to come to the mission. Id., xvii. 97. April 17th, Amador says
20 Indians consented to come and be made Christians. Id., xvii. 101. The
making of arrows seems to have been for hunting purposes. Id., xvii. 100.
June 6th, Gov. to Corporal Peralta ordering great caution and prudence, but
the Indians must be punished if fair words have no effect. Id., xvii. 1GG-7.
13
Sept. 27, 1797, Barcenilla writes to the commandant that the soldiers
will not lend a hand even in cases where the most barbarous Indian would not
refuse his aid.' Private Higuera does nothing but wag his tongue against such
as assist the padres. Corp. Miranda is much changed and will not work even
for pay. Miranda explained that the padres were angry because the soldiers
would not act as vaqueros. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 47-8. Details of the
trouble in Id., xvi. 35-8, 4G-7.
14
Soldiers of the guard before 1800, accordSt. Part. Miss., MS., ii. 122.
ing to >S'. Jos-', Lib. de Mlsion, MS., Juan Jos6 Higuera, Salvador Kigcera,
,
'
Juan Garcia, Cornelio Rosales, Rafael Galindo, Juan Jose Linares, Ramon
Linares, Francisco Mores, Jose Maria Castillo, Miguel Salazar, Hilario Miranda, and Hermenegildo Bojorges.
557
For the second mission Borica instructed the commandant of Monterey on May 18th to detail Cor15
Next day
poral Ballesteros and a guard of five men.
were issued Borica's instructions to the corporal, simievery respect to documents of the same class
It is to be noted,
already noted in past chapters.
the
that
matter
of
however,
furnishing escorts to the
friars is left more to the corporal's discretion than
lar in
15
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 144-5.
list of supplies furnished the
escolta is given as follows: 12 fan. maize, 4 fan. beans, 1 butt of fat, 1 barrel,
1 pot, 1 pan, 1 iron ladle, 1 metate, 1 eartherii
pan, 1 frying-pan, 2 knives, 5
axes, 3 hoes, 1 iron bar, 1 machete, G knives for cutting grass and tules, 10
2
No.
hides,
muskets, 1,000 cartridges,
14, 1,000 balls, 200 flints, 50 Ibs. powder, 1 pair of shackles, 2 fetters, 1 floor, 1 padlock, weights and measures.
List also in St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 51-2.
May 19th, Borica gives some general orders about the two new missions. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 137.
16
Borica, Instruction para el Comandante de la Escolta destinada d lafundacion de la Mision de San Juan Bautixta, 1797, MS.
17
Written also Poupeloutehun and Popelout. The 23 rancherias belonging to this mission were Onextaco, Absayruc, Motssmn, Trutca, Teboaltac,
EXPLORATIONS AND
558
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
Jose Manuel Martiarena and Pedro Adriano Martinez were the first ministers, both new arrivals of 1794
and 1797 respectively, the latter serving at San Juan
until the end of 1800, the former leaving the mission
in July 1799, and Jacinto Lopez coming in August
1800.
The first baptism took place on July llth, and
before the end of the year 85 had received the rite,
as had 641 before the end of 1800, 65 having died in
the mean time, and 516 remaining as neophytes. Livestock increased to 723 large animals and 2,080 small;
much the largest crop
agricultural products for 1800
that had been raised amounted to about 2,700 bush20
els.
mud-roofed wooden structure was the mission church before 1800.
Beyond the statistics given there is nothing to be
noted in the local annals of San Juan Bautista except
certain Indian troubles and the earthquake of 1800.
The Ansaimes, or Ansayames, were the natives who
caused most trouble.
They lived in the mountains
some twenty-five miles east of San Juan. In 1798
they are said to have surrounded the mission by night,
but were forced to retreat by certain prompt measures
of the governor not specified.
In November another
band known as the Osos killed eight rancheria Indians, and Sergeant Castro was sent to punish them.
They resisted and a fight occurred, in which the chief
Tatillosti was killed, another chief and a soldier were
wounded, and two gentiles were brought in to be
educated as interpreters. In 1799 the Ansaimes
again assumed a threatening attitude and killed five
Ballesteros,
559
brought
of the
rancherias.
21
Prov. Rec., MS., ix. 9-11; vi. 106-7; Bor,ica, Instruction al Sarqento
Castro sobre recorrer las Rancherias de Gentiles, 1799, MS., in Prov. St. Pap.,
xvii. 325-8.
Dated Monterey, June 7th. Castro, Diario de su Expedition d
las Rancherias, 1799, MS.
Dated June 29th. It seems that the Spaniards
were in the habit of going to the Ansaime country after tequesquite, or saltBesides those named in the text the Orestaco and Guapo rancheriaa
petre.
are mentioned. See also St. Pap., Sac., MS., viii. 80-1; Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xviii. l]3.
In 1800 the San Juan Indians sent 3 wagons, 9 yoke of oxen, 9
hoi*ses, and 15 Indians to Monterey when an attack from foreign vessels was
feared.
For this they were remunerated by order of the viceroy to encourage
zeal in like cases. Id., xix. 7.
22
Comandante Sal. to governor, Oct. 31, 1800, in St. Pap., Miss, and Colon,
MS., i. 40-2. Nov. 29th, governor acknowledges receipt. Prov. Rec., MS.,
xi. 147.
Dec. 5th, governor to viceroy. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi., 51. Feb.
This earthquake has been noticed also in
10th, V. R. to gov. Id., xviii. G9.
Randolph's Oration; Val'ejo, Hist. Gal, MS., i. 107; TuthilVs Hist. Cal, 116;
Trask, in Cal. Acad. Nat. Science, iii. 134. On Nov. 22d a shock was felt in
the extreme south. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 54.
23
There is much doubt about this aboriginal name. Different copyists
from Lasuen's original letters and entries in the mission-books make it: Vatica,
MS.
EXPLORATIONS AND
560
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
new
same
original; Vahiii,
vi.
vi. 94-6.
Miff net, Lib. de Mision,
MS.,
San
xii. GO.
561
August
Aug. 20th, Lasuen to governor in St. Pap. Sac. MS. vi. 93-4. Sept. 4th,
governor to viceroy. Id., viii. 4. Sept. 2d, Gov. to Lasuen. Prov. 7?.v., MS.,
vi. 196.
Horra seems to have been transferred subsequently to the Queretaro
college, for which the guardian thanks God in a letter to Lasuen, May 14,1799. Arch. 8ta Barbara, MS., xi. 280-1.
27
I.
36
EXPLORATION'S
562
St Ferdinand was Fernando III., King of Spain, who reigned from 1217
to 1251, under whose rule the crowns of Castile and Leon were united.
He
was canonized in 1671 by Clement X. Aug. 28th, Goycoechea to Borica anxv.
Lasuen's
for
nouncing
departure
Reyes' rancho. Prov. St. Pap,, MS.,
82. Sept. 8th, Lasuen's report of foundation. St. Pap., Sac., MS., xviii. 26-7;
Arch, tita Barbara, MS., vi. 24-5. Sept. 8th, certificate of Sergt. Olivera; he
calls the site Achoic. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 92; vi. 191, 196. Oct. 4th, Goycoechea to Borica, sends Olivera's diary. Guard-house and store-house finished.
Two houses begun, church soon to be begun. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 246-7;
Prov. Rec. MS. , iv. 92. Contributions from Santa Barbara, San Buenaventura, San Gabriel, and San Juan were 18 mules, 46 horses, 16 yoke of oxen,
310 cattle, 508 sheep. Arch. Misiones, MS., i. 202. The mission-books of San
Fernando I examined at the mission in 1874. They consisted of baptismal
,
register 1 vol., 1798-1852, 1st entry April 28, 1798, signed by Dumetz; marriage register, 1 vol. 1797-1847, first entry, Oct. 8, 1797; and the Libro de
Patentes y de Inventarios. In the legal difficulties that followed the death of
Andres Pico the books disappeared and could not be found by Mr Savage in
563
1797,
napa, Ganal, Mocoqtiil, and Cuami, in a little valley called Escha; Tagui, Gante,
Algualcapa, Capatay, Tacupin, Quguas, Calagua, Matagua, and Ata, in
another valley three leagues distant; Curila, Topame, Luque, Cupame,
Paume, and Pale", three leagues from former valley, and speaking language
San Juan; Palin, Pamame, Pamua, and Asichiqmes, lower down; Chacape
and Pamamelli in Santa Margarita Valley; Chumelle and Quesinille in Las
of
Flores.
30
Lasuen to Borica. Arch. Arzobispado, MS.,
MS.,vi. 201.
31
Prov. Rec., MS., v. 273-4.
i.
EXPLORATIONS AND
564
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
Saint Louis was Louis IX., king of France, who reigned from 1226 to
and earned his repiitation for piety both at home and in the crusades.
June 13th, Lasuen to Borica reporting the foundation. Arch. Ma L'drbara,
MS., vi. 25-7; xi. 11; Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 47-9. July 12th, B. to Lasuen.
Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 218-19. Aug. 1st, B. to viceroy. /(/., v. 279; vi. 98-9.
Contributions of Santa Barbara, San Gabriel, San Juan, San Diego, and San
Luis Hey: G4 horses, 28 yoke of oxen, 310 head of cattle, 508 sheep. Arch.
Mi,*' on f s, MS., i. 202.
33
The governor in a communication to Lasuen on the subject calls the absent missionary Juan Martinez, but there was no such padre in California.
Prov. 7iVt'., MS., vi. 222-3. Dec. 7, 1798, Borica also writes a letter of warning and advice to the friar. Id., 227-8.
1270,
A NEW PUEBLO.
565
new
missions.
34
Brancijorte, Informs del Real Tribunal sobre fundacion de un pueblo que
This report was prepared by Beltran on
llainard Branciforte, 1795, MS.
Nov. 17th, and approved by the tribunal Nov. 18th.
35
The order dated Dec. 15, 1795, and enclosing the auditor's report given
above is allnded to by Borica on June 1C. 1796. St. Pap., Miss, and Colon..
MS., i. 364.
sc
566
EXPLORATIONS AND
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
substance identical.
Three
sites
SITE
567
California for the purpose in view, since the peninsula afforded neither lands, timber, wood, nor water,
all
sitio
is
EXPLORATIONS AND
568
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
to the viceroy contained suggestions of similar purport, and asked for four classes of settlers first, robust
country people from cold or temperate climes; second,
:
render
ward
FOUNDING OF BRANCIFORTE.
569
43
April 29th, Borica to viceroy. Prov. Eec., MS., vi. 91-2. May 2d, B. to
commandant. Id., iv. 89-90. B. to comisionado S. Jose". Id., iv. 211-12.
May44 5th, Lasuen to B. St. Pap., Sac., MS., vii. 27-8.
They were Jose Antonio Robles, Fermin Cordero, Jose" Vicente Mojica
(or Morico), wife and five children, Jose" Maria Arceo, Jos Barbosa and wife,
Jose" Silvestre Machuca and wife, Jose" Acevedo, Jose" Miguel Uribcs, Jose"
The different lists of arrival, departure, and settlement
Agustiii Narvaez.
differ somewhat.
The first lacks the last four names and has Gallardo and
Guzman which never appear again. The nine colonists with their families,
17 persons, were of the vagabond and criminal class, but they differed from
the first settlers of the other pueblos in being for the most part so-called
Spaniards. They included 2 farmers, 2 tailors, 1 carpenter, 1 miner, 1 merchant, 1 engraver, and 1 with no trade. St. Pap. Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 3845; Prov. lice., vi. 92; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 223-4; xiii. 277-8; xvii. 31,
89-90; xxi. 256.
45
May 12, 1797. Borica to commandant. When the settlers go to Branci-
Cruz, Arch., MS., 67-8; Prov. Kec., MS., iv. 247; Sta Cruz, Peep, 3,
27th, Sal acting as secretary f6r Borica forwards blank-books, paper,
terials for making ink. Sta Cruz, Arch., MS., 69.
5.
May
and ma-
570
EXPLORATIONS AND
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
Nueva
Villa de Branci-
Cordoba to Borica. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 149; xxi. 265-6.
The irrigable lands were 1,300 x 1,500 varas; those depending on rain 2,000
to 3,000 varas.
Oct. 7th, Gov. to viceroy with estimate of cost. Prov. .Her.,
MS., vi. 56. Oct. 24th, to C6rdoba ordering suspension of woi'ks, though he
is to leave the mission mill in
good shape. Prov. St. Pap., xxi. 272. Aug.
22d, Borica orders a model fence to be erected at Branciforte. Id., xxi. 206.
'
'
PROGRESS AT BRANCIFORTE.
571
and $66 for the next three years, 48 besides the livestock and implements for which they were obliged
gradually to pay. They were thus enabled to live after
a fashion, and they never became noted for devotion
There was no change in the number
to hard work.
of regular pobladores down to 1800, though half a
dozen invalids and discharged soldiers were added to
49
the settlement, perhaps more, for the records on the
Corporal Moraga remained in
subject are meagre.
MS.,
iii.
6.
50
51
The work
EXPLORATIONS AND
572
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
San
Jan. 3, 1800, setJost, Arch., MS., iii. 59; Sta Cruz, Arch., MS., 18.
need of corn and beans. The comisionado of San Jose" to make a
contract with some person to furnish these supplies at the expense of the government. San Jos6 Arch., MS., iii. 55. Feb. 10th, Sal to Vallejo, at the end
of 1799 the settlers owed the treasury $558; the appropriation f^r loCO is
The delivery of
$540, so that receiving nothing they would still be in debt.
cigarritos and other articles not rations and tools has been suspended. Sta
Cruz, Arch., MS., 63. Oct. 9th, aid to be furnished to the padres if asked for.
Sta Cruz, Peep, 31. Dec. 5th, governor to viceroy, the Branciforte settlers
are a scandal to the country by their immorality, etc.
They detest their
exile, and render no service.
Daily complaints of disorders. Prov. St: Pap. ,
MS., xxi. 50-1. Dec. llth, death of Comandante Sal announced at Branciforte. Sta Cruz, Peep, 45.
The nine pobladores received in 18CO rations at
$60 each. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xxvi. 16.
^Branciforte, El Discre.torio de Son Fernando (d Virrcy sobre. el sitio de la
tlers in
Nueva
Villa,
in.
Prov.
lice.,
MS.,
vi. 70.
COMMUNICATION WITH
NEW
MEXICO.
573
was
in
in April
Lasuen answered,
53
April 29, 1795, Borica to viceroy. Prov. Her., MS., vi. 44. Dec. 14th,
Borica to Goycoechea. Id., iv. 41. 4G-7. Jan. ISth, Goycoechea to Borica.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 16, 17. Feb. IGth, Id. to Id., St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
iv. 74-7.
Sept. 28th, Borica orders the padres to use gentle measures with
the Tulare Indians so that there may be no difficulty on the proposed route.
Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 174. Sal's report of Jan. 31st, already alluded to, was
probably in answer to similar inquiries sent him by the governor.
^Borica, Informe sobre comunicacion con Nuevo Mexico, 1796, MS.
similar communication dated October 5th is given in Arch. Sta. Barbara,
MS.,
x. 73-6.
EXPLORATIONS AND
574
NEW
FOUNDATIONS.
it
natives so far
55
simply refused to urge the neophytes to undertake it.
Here, so far as the archives show, correspondence on
this matter ceases.
It is probable that more was
but
not
written,
likely that any actual expedition was
and
certain
that communication was not opened
made,
with New Mexico.
Neither was there anything
toward
accomplished
opening the Colorado River
route between California and Sonora, a subject slightly
56
agitated during this period.
55
Jan. 11, 1797, viceroy to Lasuen. Arch. Sta. Bdrlara, MS., x. 76-7.
April 25th, Lasuen to V. R,., Id., 77-83. Feb. 14, 1798, V. E. calls for Arrillaga's ideas on the project and the best "way to execute it. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS.,
xvii. 9.
56
April 16, 1795, Borica to viceroy, asks to have Fages send his papers
relating to his expedition to the Colorado. Prov. 7?ec., MS., vi. 44.
Sept. 4,
1797, Borica thinks no party of less than 35 can safely pass to Sonora. Id.,
vi. 53.
Dec. 22, 1797, refers to Arrillaga's report and schemes of Oct. 26,
1796; 1st, a presidio of 100 men at Sta Olaya with 20 at S. Felipe and 20 at
Sonoita; 2d, a presidio on California side at mouth of Colorado, to be crossed
in canoes.
Borica prefers the latter, and advises that all attention be given
at present to pacification of the Indians between Sta Catalina and the Colorado. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 65-6.
April 24, 1798, Amadorsays that the padre
of San Jose" went to the Colorado, and that the Indians fled, fearing enforced
baptism. Prov. St. Pap. MS. , xvii 123. Reference to the general topic in
,
90.
CHAPTER
XXVII.
MISSION PROGRESS.
1791-1800.
(575)
MISSION PROGRESS.
576
Christian missionaries.
old missions in 1790 had in round numbers 7,500 converts; in 1800 they had 10,700, a gain
of 3,200 for the decade, 320 a year on an average,
or about 30 a year for each mission.
During the
period the priests had baptized 12,300 natives, and
buried 8,300, leaving 800 to be regarded as approximately the number of deserters and apostates. Meanwhile in the seven new establishments baptisms had
been 3,800 and deaths 1,000, leaving 2,800 converts on
the rolls.
Thus for old and new missions together
efficient
The eleven
St.
STATISTICS.
we have
577
Wheat
yielded
or August 1796. Other priests wished to retire, but the guardian thought, as
they had been eager to come to California, it was best not to permit them to
leave without the most urgent reasons. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 56-7,
274; St. Pap., Sac., MS., xvii. 8; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 246; Prov. Rec.,
MS., vi. 163. The new-comers of 1796, arriving in June by the Aranzqzu,
were: Payeras, Jos6 Maria Fernandez, Peyri, Viader, and forte's. Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xiv. 139; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xxiv. 7; also Catalan
and Horra. In April 1797 the Conception is said to have brought 11 priests.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 145-6; xxi. 254; but there were really only 7:
The
Barccnilla, Carnicer, Gonzalez, Martinez, Merino, Uria, and Panella.
same vessel carried back to .San Bias in September, Garcia and Arenaza, who
were ill and had served out their term; and also the insane priests Jos6 Maria
Fernandez and Concepcion de Horra. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 94, 08, 192; Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xxi. 264; Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 57-8; St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
vi. 107-8.
On her next trip the Concepcion brought to Santa Barbara in May
1798 SciLm and Calzada, returning from a visit to Mexico, and also .the six
new friars: Barona, Faura, Carrr.nza, Abella, Martinez, and Vinales. Arch.
Arzobispado, MS., i. 47; Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 75-6; Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xvii. 19; xxi. 279; St. Pap., Sac., MS., viii. 13.
Manuel Fernandez and
Torrent retired this year, as did PP. Lr.ndaeta and Miguel temporarily. Arch.
Sta Barbara, xi. 60; St. Pap., Sac., MS., vi. 107. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii.
In 1797 Mcrclo, Jacinto Lopez, and Josd Uria arrived; while Espi,
2, 3.
Giribet, Merino, and Catalan, the last two afflicted with insanity, obtained
leave to retire, sailing in January 1800.
This last year of the decade Fustcr
and Mariner died; Landacta and Miguel came back; and Garcia and Iturrate
were added to the force, some of them apparently against their wishes. Prov.
Rc.c., MS., vi. 127-9, 243; ix. 12; xi. 144; xii. 1; Prcv. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 30,
44, 292; St. Pap., Sac., MS., vii. 77; Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., ix. 24; xi.
Cl-2; 281-2, 284.
3
The governor in a report of 1800 states that the number of deaths is almost double that of births. Bandim, Doc. Hist. Cal., MS., No. 3.
HIST. CAL., VOL.
I.
37
578
MISSION PROGRESS.
on an average
220, 260-3.
and Colon.,
VICEROY'S REPORT.
579
1793 an
in
historical, descriptive,
and
statistical
is
an
view
inter-
Dec. 16th,
20, 1797, Lasuen takes the
oath as yicario foraneo before P. Arenaza. June 19th, bishop reserves the
right of granting divorce and some other episcopal faculties. Arch. Sta BarDec. 18, 1796, Lasueii's circular to the padres. Id.,
bara, MS., xii. 192-8.
xi. 139-41.
March 20, 1797, Lasuen notifies Borica. Is only awaiting the
license and blessing of the guardian. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 45. March
22d, B. to Lasuen, will proclaim him juez vicario eclesiastico in the presidios. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 184-5.
June 20th, B. says the title of vicar
must be presented to the government. Id., vi. 192-3. It appears that casSept.
30,
1796, bishop to
March
powers were conferred by Lasuen on only seven friars. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 145-6.
7
Oct. 15, 1795, Lasuen 's patente de Comision del Santo Ofdo sent from
Mexico. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 56. Several edicts of 1795, 1797, and
ISQOinArch. Misiones, MS., i. 187-8,228; Doc. Hist. CaL, MS., iv. G7-8.
In offences of which the inquisition had cognizance the natives were not
directly subject to that tribunal but to the pro visor de Indias, who, with the
knowledge of the inquisition, acted as judge. Priv'deyios de Indies, MS., 6.
Some additional items on ecclesiastical matters are given later in this chapter.
8
Rewlla Gifledo, Carta sobre misiones de 27 de Diciembre de 1703, in Dice.
See also chap. xxiv. of this volume. Oct. 22,
Univ., v. 427-30; also MS., i.
1794, viceroy to governor, urging compliance with royal order of March 21,
1787, which required attention to mission welfare and reports every two or
three years on mission progress. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 203. July 28, 1795,
Branciforte sends Borica a copy of his predecessor's report of 1793 to serve as
a guide for new 'reports; and also calls for suggestions. St. Pap., Mis*, and
Jan. 2, 1795, Lasuen in a circular says the council of the
Col., MS., i. 1.
Indies have read the mission reports and thank un in king's name for progress
made, which is great compared with other missions with better advantages.
trcnse
Barbara, MS.,
ix.
MISSION PROGRESS.
580
something about
it."
11
Two special projects for the advancement of Californian interests were devised in Mexico during the
decade; and both, being opposed by the Franciscan
authorities, seem to have been given up at the end of
1797. The first was to establish a Carmelite monastery at San Francisco, which was to consist of twelve
9
Salazar, Condition Actual de Cal.. Informe General al Virey, 11 de
1796, MS.
lo
11
l!cvilla Gifjcdo,
Aug.
3,
Cartadel793, MS.,
Mayo
25.
Mil, xxiv.
7, 8.
PROJECTS DEFEATED.
581
12
perous.
This regulation
13
practically disregarded as before.
12
Respecting the
re-
Dec. 4, 1795, viceroy to governor, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 34;
Mugdrtecjui and Pena, Parecer sobre el Establecimiento de, un Convento en el
Puerto de San Francisco, 28 de Enero de 1797, MS. These padres declare that
aid from the Carmelites in founding new missions would be acceptable. Calleja, fiespuesta del Guardian al Virey sobre Proyectos de California, 1797,
MS. This report, dated Oct. 23d, is chiefly devoted to another subject, of
which more anon. It is noticeable that the guardian speaks very ironically
of the 'domesticated' gentiles whose services it was proposed to utilize in the
new establishments, greatly exaggerating the danger of the old missions and
pueblos from the natives, and implying without intending to do so that not
much had been effected by nearly 30 years of missionary work. Borica also
disapproved of the hacienda because there would be no market for produce.
Prov. Ilee., MS., vi. 61.
13
Hevilla Gigedo, Carta de 1793, 24, disapproves the reduction, among
other reasons because it would favor immorality on the part of the friars.
April 30, 179G, the guardian writes to Lasuen that the fiscal wants to know the
reasons for non-compliance with the reglamento; consequently all the documents on the subject are needed, only one or two being in the college archives.
Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 275-6. Nov. 16, 1797, Borica to viceroy, thinks
the matter should be settled, as there is a deficit of $52,142 in the mission
fund. He suggests that two padres be allowed to each mission, but that only
one sinodo of 400 be divided between them, since they now spend no more
than that on themselves. Prov. Rec. MS. vi. 60-1. Sept. 3, 1699, Padre Lull,
Exposition del Guardian sobre la reduction de Misioneros en California, 1799,
MS., presents the usual arguments against reducing the number of missionaries, and also opposes Borica s scheme of reducing the sinodo, not only because
it is contrary to the king's intentions, but because, while, as Borica says, the
,
MISSION PROGRESS.
582
tirement of
fri*ars
to
might grant
due and
certified
no unnecessary delays. 15
priests spend less than $400 on themselves they spend the remainder for
the natives, and this is practically the only way of obtaining necessary artiIn 1800, or perhaps later,
cles since there is no market for mission produce.
Lasuen in a letter to the guardian argues the same side of the case most
earnestly, speaks rather bitterly of any scheme to economize on the pay of
poor over-worked friars when the king is so liberal in other expenses, and repeats his old determination to retire if the change be insisted on. Lasuen, Correspondencia, MS., 329-33.
11
1793, a priest retired on a provisional license of the comandante at Mon1794, the 10 years of service to count
terey. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 33.
from the date of embarking from Spain. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., vi. 294Sent from Mex5. Royal orders referred to in my text dated Sept. 16, 1794.
ico June 8, 1795. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 124-5. Just before the receipt
of this order Borica refuses Danti's petition to retire until leave is obtained
from Mexieo. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 149. Dec. 9, 1797, viceroy to the guardian, friars must not go to Mexico to solicit license to retire to Spain. Arch.
two
xi. 59.
is
MISSIONARY ESCORTS.
583
Many
without
and the
superior
friars,
enforced,
cooled a
of such a
little,
rule.
cases when the return voyage was very long by no fault of the priests refused
to pay the full stipend as per royal order. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., ix. 41-5,
^o
o.
10
Sept 26, 1793, governor to viceroy asking for a friar for each presidio,
as the missionaries have too much to attend to. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 117.
June
181-2.
November
ix. 73.
MISSION PROGRESS.
584
soldiers,
17
dom and
dread of the terrible death-rate in the misAs we have seen, the soldiers of
the guard were not allowed to pursue runaways;
neither was the practice of sending neophytes after
them, approved by Fages, allowed during Borica's
rule.
Gentiles might be bribed to bring them in;
sion communities.
17
Borica, Instruction para la Escolta de San Juan Bautista, 1797, MS. This
document was ordered to be posted in every mission for the guidance of the
corporal. Sal, Instruction al Cabo de Sta Cruz, 1701, MS.; Farjes, Imtruc.
para la Escolta de Purisima, 1788, MS.; Id., Instruc. para S. Miguel, 1787,
MS. Prohibition of escorts for long distances, approved by king, Jan. 13,
1790. Fages, Papel de Puntos, MS., 155.
1794, soldiers to be alternated in
escolta and presidio service. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 8; Prov. Rec., MS.,
v. 48.
Muskets to be fired and reloaded once a week. Some complaint of
failure to keep watch at night.
No escorts for long distances. Arrillnga,
Papel de Puntos, MS., 196-7. May 15, 1795, escorts of padres must return
to mission same day. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 133.
June 3d, Borica to viceroy.
The padres
We
REGULATIONS.
make a wholesale
585
soldiers
was
collection of apostates,
MISSION PROGRESS.
586
still
20
S. Jost, Arch.,
KOREA'S CHARGES.
587
came
and they
will
vi.
197.
22
MS.
MISSION PROGRESS.
588
On August
31st the viceroy sent the representato Borica, who was ordered to investiBorica
gate and report on the truth of the charges.
to
instructions
the
private
accordingly despatched
tions of
Horra
commandants
four
tions
March
These
of Goycoechea and Sal, went
reply in
the
1799.
in his
21, 1799.
25
On Oct. 30, 1798, however, Borica in a letter to the viceroy expresses
his opinion that the best way to insure the advancement of the natives was
to form a reglamento for the whole mission routine, including instruction,
food, dress, dwellings, care of sick, labor, punishments, and amusements,
and to hold the j^resident responsible for exact compliance with the rules ;_ for
at present his authority is sometimes disregarded. Prov. Rvc., MS.,vi. 105-6.
20
Feb. G, 1800, guardian to president, in Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi.
284-7.
LASUEN'S REPORT.
less favorable to the friars.
27
And
589
finally president
but
27
Tapis and Cortes, Replica de los Ministros de Sta Barbara d la Respuesta
que dl6 el Comandante Goycoechea d las quince prcyuntas de Borica sobreabusos
de Misioneros, 1800, MS. Dated Oct. 30th. Other padres, not unlikely one
from each mission, sent in similar reports on the subject, but I have found
none of the documents except this.
28
Lasuen, Representation sobre los Puntos represent ados al Superior Gobierno
por el P. Fr. Antonio de la Conception (Horra) contra los misioneros de esta,
Nueva
California, 1800,
MISSION PROGRESS.
590
it.
29
tains
fish occasionally,
TREATMENT OF INDIANS.
591
<
592
MISSION PROGRESS.
ished.
CRUELTY TO NEOPHYTES.
593
the soldiers, except sometimes for absconding. Moreover the presidios had always been supplied with
servants of all kinds for no compensation save what
the employers chose to pay, and neither missions nor
natives had ever been benefited by this intercourse.
The aborigines did not like to work at the presidios,
where they were ill-treated and often cheated out of
their pay; yet most of the work on the presidios had
been done by laborers furnished from the missions.
"
The treatment shown to the Indians," says Padre
Concepcion, "is the most cruel I have ever read in
For the slightest things they receive heavy
history.
floggings, are shackled, and put in the stocks, and
treated with so much cruelty that they are kept whole
days without a drink of water." The commandants,
without expressing an opinion as to the propriety or
undue severity of the punishments inflicted, simply
specify those punishments, administered by the padres
will, as flogging, from fifteen to fifty lashes, or
sometimes a novenary of twenty-five lashes per day
a kind of
for nine days, stocks, shackles, the corma
hobble and imprisonment in some of the mission-
at
rooms, for neglect of work or religious duties, overstaying leave of absence, sexual offences, thefts, and
Rarely or for serious
quarrelling among themselves.
offences were the natives turned over to the military,
or assistance asked from the soldiers. The friars admitted all this, except that they denied that more than
80
twenty-five lashes were ever given, affirming moreover that only at Santa Barbara were women put in
the stocks, and that they were very rarely flogged,
"hey claimed that according to the laws they stood
in loco parentis to the natives, must necessarily restrain them by punishments, and inflicted none but
first offences,
The
and always
were
soldiers
30
Sept. 26th, 1796, Borica says to a padre that only 25 lashes may be
given; beyond this the matter belongs to royal jurisdiction. Prov. Rec., MS.,
vi. 174.
I.
38
MISSION PROGRESS.
594
See chapter xxxi. of this volume for the charge of cruelty at San Franwhich Borica believed to be well founded; also Prov. lice., MS., v. 266;
vi. 97-8, 115, 172, 170; Prov. St. Pap., MS.,.xvi. 88; Id., Ben. Mil, xxiv.
8-10.
Instructions of the viceroy in 1793 and 1797, in favor of kindness and
mercy to the Indians so far as justice and caution may allow. St. Pap., Miss.
and Col, MS., i. 23-4.
cisco,
595
details,
what
3?
Of the supplies furnished by missions to presidios the accounts preserved
are very meagre and fragmentary, some of them being presented with local
annals.
Perhaps an average of $1,200 per year for each mission during this
decade would be a fair estimate. This amount and the stipend of $800 for
each mission was all the revenue of the padres to support themselves and
So far as can be judged from the partial
keep their churches in order.
accounts of the procurador extant, the annual memorlas of supplies ordered
by the friars were fully equal to their credits. I think there was little
foundation for the charge that the padres were accumulating money either fit
the missions or in Mexico in these early years. Balance against the missions
Procurador's accounts in Sta Cruz, Parroquia, MS., 18.
Sept. 6, 1800, $11.
May 11, 179G, Salazar estimates the mission wealth, in buildings, etc., at
Dec. 1798, Borica
$800,000. Salazar, Condition actual de CaL, MS., 66-7.
to viceroy, he never interferes in mission finances, and is merely informed
at end of each year of produce existing. Both he and the commandants
believe the padres to have large surpluses at Mexico and in the coffers at
San Diego, San Juan, Capistrano, and San Gabriel. He advises investigation
in Mexico.
The president aids new missions abundantly. There are complaints of not following the tariff, but Borica expresses no opinion. Prov.
Rcc., MS., vi. 116-17.
Aug. 16, 1795, Lasuen to Borica, representing the
injustice of keeping grain at the same low prices as in years of plenty. Arch,
hta Barbara, MS., vi. 97-101. In 1793, Pedro A. de Anteparaluceta, canon
of Puebla, left a legacy of $500 to the California missions, $36 apiece with
$40 for Sta Barbara and Soledad, and $60 for Sta Cruz. Id. xi. 235. On
mission trade for this period see next chapter. Lists of increase in church
vestments, etc., 1794-5. St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 15-27, 78-9.
,
MISSION PROGRESS.
C9G
We
33
April 19 1805, viceroy to governor, the padres are cleared and are to
continue in the same course of zeal and brotherly love, etc. Commandants
;
ECCLESIASTICAL MATTERS.
597
projects of the would-be reformers meet with but little encouragement, and
the same may be said of the complaints of two other padres, Gili and Hubi,
who have spoken against the California missionaries. Mugdrteyui, Carta de
1794, MS.
April 30, 1791, the bishop of Sonora calls Lasuen 's attention to
the royal order of March 6, 1790, granting an ecclesiastical tax on all revenues, including those of missionaries; and asks him to collect 6 per cent, for
four years on the stipends of all the friars and all other revenues. Lasuen
replies that the California padres have no revenue, except the stipend of $400
each, given as alms, and even with that they have nothing to do except to
name the articles needed for the churches.
stndico at the college collected
the stipends and with them paid for the invoices. If the king wants to reduce
the stipend by a tax, let the matter be arranged at the college; Franciscan
friars have nothing to do or say about revenue matters.
He sends a sworn
statement, though regretting that his word does not suffice. Arch. Sta BarI hear no more of this matter.
bara, MS., x. 61-8.
Sept. 19, 17C9, Borica
says that a royal order decides that temporalities are to be incorporated in
MISSION PROGRESS.
598
86
on
up
37
March
tailor, must be
iv. 110.
Arreilano to
Itoman, the
MS.,
own
599
Some
to
liis
district.
given in connection
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 148, 296; Prov. St. 'Pop., MS., ix. 241; xv. 42-3,
48, 77-8; xvi. 98, 220; Id., Ben. Mil., MS., xxviii. 9; St. Pap. Miss., MS., ii.
S.
The bulls sent sold from 2 reals, or 25 cents,
65;
Jo(s6, Arch., MS., vi. 42.
to $2 each.
The different kinds were vivos, laticinios, composition, and
difuntos.
89
Prov.
St.
Pap., MS.,
ix.
194-5;
xiii.
79.
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
PUEBLO PROGRESS
THE
sketch,
missions, as
if
we regard
may
arid prosperous.
it.
It is not
to
claim
that
the
were as
officers
necessary
king's
devoted .to the welfare of the towns as the friars to
I
COO)
601
had been brought from abroad as settlers and had been paid wages and rations and otherwise aided for a term of years; while the increase
came from children who grew to manhood and from
soldiers who had served out their term of enlistment
and retired, often with pensions.
These, although
generally old men, were as a rule the most successful
The only industries of the settlers were
farmers.
They had 16,500 head
agriculture and stock-raising.
about
of cattle and horses,
1,000 sheep, and they
thirty families
year
penses were paid.
who were
soldiers,
in addition to its alcalde
1
Jos6,
small guard of
and each
and regidores had a comi-
See chapter xxix. of this volume for* Angeles; chapter xxxii. for San
and chapter xxvi. for Branciforte.
C02
sionado, generally corporal of the guard, who represented the governor and reported directly to the
commandant of the nearest presidio. Labor was
government.
Spanish visitor in 1792 stated in his narrative
under governmental protection and with somewhat extravagant emoluments for himself, was disapproved
by the king on Arrillaga's advice, as already noted,
after negotiations lasting from 1792 to 1794. 3 He villa
Gigedo in 1793 favored the settlement of some Spanish families at the missions, though he admitted the
great difficulty of finding families possessing the required moral qualifications.* Costanso in his report
of 1794 *ays: "The first thing to be thought of, in
my opinion, is to people the country. Presidios to
support missions are well enough for a time, but there
seems to be no end of them. Some missions have
been for a hundred years in charge of friars and presidial guards.
The remedy is to introduce gente de
razon among the natives from the beginning. Caliz
Sutily Mexicana, Viage, 162-3. Oct. 24, 1792, governor orders that no
quiet vecino is to be prevented from settling at the presidio of Monterey.
Prov. Jtec. MS. , ii. 156. Vancouver gives a rather superficial and inaccurate
account of the pueblos, which he did not visit. Voyage, ii. 495-6.
,
SPECIAL PROJECTS.
603
604
CONVICT SETTLERS.
605
We
in
lajara.
market.
Twelve
sailors
606
11
There was a royal order forbidding convicts from settling in pueblos
until their sentences were served out. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vi. 08.
Fages'
proposition in his Informe Gen, dc, Misiones, MS., 154. The three presidiarics
of 1791 were Ignacio Saenz, Rafael Pacheco, and Felipe Alvarez, sent up by
Romeu from Loreto. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxii. 15. Smith at San Francisco,
Id., x. 41.
12
The three of 1797 were Rafael Arriola, Tomas Escamilla, and Jos6
Franco. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 134. Correspondence on the 22 sent in
1798, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 249-50; xvii. 7, 88-9, 182; xxi. 275, 280,
285; Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 91-2, 101-2; St. Pap., Sac., viii. Jl-13, 68-9; ix.
Four or five lists are given, the following being the names Jose de los
75-0.
Reyes, Josd Maria Perez, Jose Vazquez, Juan Hernandez, Josd Velasquez, Cornclio Rocha, Josd Chavez, Jos6 Salazar, Antonio Ortega, Juan Lopez, Josd
Balderrama, Pedro Osorno, Jose" Calzado, Jose" Avila, Jos6 Hernandez, Jose"
Igadera, Jos6 Ramos, Jose Rosas, Jos6 Chavira, Casimiro Conejo, Pablo
Franco, Maria Petra Aranda, Jos6 Barcena, Felipe Hernandez, Rafael Gomez,
Juan Blanco, 26 in all, though the number is spoken of as from 17 to 24, and
22 are said to have landed. They arrived in August. The expense of sending
them was $405. There were 3 hatters, 3 miners, I shoemaker, 1 silversmith,
1 trader", 3 bakers, 1 tailor, 1 blanket-maker, 1 laborer, 1 overseer, 3 without
There were 4 Spaniards only. There were a saddler
trade, and 1 woman.
and 2 carpenters, not convicts, perhaps included in the list I have given.
Several friars also came on the same vessel. After the arrival of these convicts all persons not having passports were ordered to be arrested. Prov. Rec.,
MS., iv. 166. Feb. 26, 1799, Borica publishes a series of rules for the conduct of the convict workmen. They were subjected to strict surveillance and
allowed few privileges. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 243-4. August 1800, Hernandez allowed to earn wages by his trade as saddler. Prov. Rec. MS., ix. 13.
Nov. 1800, Jos6 Cris. Simental sentenced to 6 years as settler in California,
to be accompanied by his wife. St. Pap., Sac., MS., ix. 57-8; Prov. St. Pap.,
:
MS.,
13
xxi. 53-4.
left Mexico for San Bias and one died on the seaThere was a plan to send
said to have been $4,763.
Twenty-one children
voyage.
The expense
is
TENURE OF LANDS.
The tenure
607
is
The
king, however,
was actually
in possession of only
The general
establishment of Spanish settlements.
laws of Spain provided for such establishments, and
the assignment to each of lands to the extent of four
14
Meanwhile neither the missions,
square leagues.
nor the friars, nor the Franciscan order, nor the church
owned any lands whatever. The missionaries had the
use of such lands as they needed for their object,
which was to prepare the Indians to take possession as
individuals of the lands they now held as communities.
When this was accomplished, and the missions had
become pueblos, the houses of worship would naturally become the property of the church, and the friars
would move on to new spiritual conquests. Each
mission and each presidio was at the proper time to
become a pueblo; other pueblos were expected to be
GO boys and the same number of girls. Two of the girls were married before
the end of the year. St.- Pup-, Sac., MS., iv. 74; vii. 74-6; Prov. M. Pap.,
MS., xviii. 9, 18, 31; xxi. 34, 47; Id., Ben. Mil., MS., xxviii. 22; Prov. Rcc.,
MS., ix. 11, 12; Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xii. 307; Bustamante, Suplemento,
181; Azanza, Instruction, MS., 88-9.
14
Secopilacion de Indias, lib. iv. tit. v. ley. vi., x. I intentionally avoid
conditions and details in this chapter.
608
respectively.
cultivate,
PRIVATE RANCHOS.
609
visional
grants
to
affording presumption of a complete title; but the supreme court held that
Fages' written permit destroyed this presumption. The land commission had
already taken a similar view. Nieto vs. Carpenter, 21 Cal. 456.
18
Fages' report to Ugarte Nov. 20, 1784. Navarro 's opinion, Oct. 27, 1785.
St. Pap., Miss, and Colon. MS., i. 325-7- Ugarte's order June 21st. Id., i. 343.
HIST. CAL., VOL. I. 39
,
610
In 1789 a
series of instructions
mandants of presidios to grant lots and fields to soldiers and settlers desiring them wijLhiii the prescribed
four square leagues, 21 but there is no clear evidence
19
'
de la nueva
ii.
Villa,
192.
21
Nava's decree, dated Oct. 22, 1791, at Chihuahua, and approved provisionally by the viceroy before Jan. 19, 1793. St. Pap., Miss, and Colon., MS.,
i. 320-2, 341-2; Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xi. 27-8. This decree has been often
translated and referred to in legal reports, sometimes erroneously under the
date of March 22d. According to the Ordenanza de Intendentcs of 1786, the
royal intendentes had been intrusted with the distribution of royal lands;
but this order shows that the four leagues belonged to the pueblo and were
not included in the king's lands. Dwinelle's Colon. Hist. S. F., 34-5. In U. S.
'
Sup. Court Repts. 9 Wallace, 639, it is stated that the words the extent of
4 leagues measured from the centre of the plaza of the presidios in every
direction,' found in an order of Nava of June 21, 1791, and in other papers,
caused Los Angeles to claim before the land commission 16 square leagues
,
LAN]> GRANTS.
611
.of 4.
This would literally be 64 square leagues; but the original
'4 1. measured from the centre of the plaza, 2 in each direction,' might like
bhe corresponding definition in the Recopilacion de Indias be interpreted
It is a curious complication; but that an area
naturally 16 square leagues.
of 4 square leagues, either in square or rectangular form, was what was
intended, and in hundreds of cases actually surveyed for each Spanish pueblo,
khere can be, I suppose, no doubt.
1J2
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 45-7. This report was sent back to Borica
'or his opinion on
Aug. 25, 1794. Arrillaga recognizes the four-league limit
Jven in the case of missions.
23
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 132; xii. 189.
instead
."April
3,
MS.,
vi.
39-41.
C12
tails.
See chapters xxx. and xxxi. for lists of the rauchos with additional deBorica, whatever may have been his real motives, opposed even the
613
one hundred
men
raising cattle on ranchos which they occupied temporarily by permission of the authorities,
without any legal title, though some of them or their
children subsequently became owners of the land.
thirty
men were
enlisted and paid as sailors to serve in Calas laborers, and among the settlers at the
pueblos were persons of various trades, on which,
however' none seem to have depended for subsistThis was the condition of mechanical indusence.
Besides the repairs executed on
down
to 1790.
ry
rrns, implements, and articles of clothing, there
ere rude attempts at tanning and various other
ifornia
614
is
but vaguely
recorded.
Nov. 10, 1791, Sergt. Ortega wanted men to build a house, etc., at San
Gabriel; but the padres refused to furnish any even for wages. Prov. St. Pap.
MS., x. 4, 5. The gentiles, though lazy, offer themselves to work for a manta
and daily rations of meat and boiled maize. The best are chosen, who take
their blankets, lay down their arms, and go to work bringing building-materials. f$util y Mex., Viage, 164-5.
Great care taken in employing Indians,
and a. daily sum of money paid. Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 497. May 7, 1794,
governor to Sal, if padres want a gratuity for Indians above wages it must
be refused. At Sta Barbara they get 19 cents per day, and an almud of corn
per week. San Antonio Indians at the JRancho del Rey get a coton and manta
per month. Even if content with little they should be given all they deserve.
Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 147-8, 163. Dec. 1794, at San Diego Indians got one
real and rations. Prov. St.. Pap., MS., xii. 7.
Indians must be treated well
and work equally. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 15, 16. April, 1796, Indian laborers
not to be obtained without governor's permission. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv.
176.
1796, Sal sends 30 blankets to San Josd with which to hire 30 Indians.
They will be treated well. Any capitanejo helping to get them may be given
a gratification. Travelling expenses paid. Later some inralids are sent to
look after the 30; who were to be treated with alguna comiseracion. S. Jose,
27
615
MS.,
ii.
75.
xxi. 158.
Prov. St. Pa 2)., MS., xii. 193-4; xiii. 69, 123-4; xvi. 2; Prov. #ec.,MS.,
232; v. 5. The sailor sirvientes got $10 per month and 19 cents for rations.
slave is mentioned during the decade.
He was owned by Col. Alberni,
and \vas tried for robbery in 1798. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 102.
29
Their names were: Santiago Ruiz, Manuel D. Ruiz, Toribio Ruiz, Salvador Rivera, Joaquin Rivera, and Pedro Alcantara, masons; Mariano Tapia,
potter; Cay etano Lopez, mill-maker; Jose* A. Ramirez and Salvador Ye"jar, carpenters; MigUel Sangrador, tanner and shoemaker; Joaquin Avalos, tanner;
Mariano Tapinto and Joaquin Botello, tailors; Pedro Gonzalez Garcia, Jose*
Arroya, and-Jos^ F. Arriola, blacksmiths; Antonio Dom. Henricmez and Mari28
iv.
One
,
616
in the missions
some
and
presidios, or in
in the future
the
60, 107, 120-7; xiv. 6; xvi. 202, 213; xvii. 40, 135; xxi. 36-7, 44, 73-4, 89-90,
MS., i. 33.
Arzpbispado,
30
Dec. 21, 1792, Lasuen to Arrillaga, some of the artisans
show a
ten-.
617
Some white
bara, MS.,
31
ix.
175-80.
618
'
32
not enough as yet to avoid importation from Mexico.
and quantity to
Soap was made of suitable quality
33
after
coarse
needs
home
1798;
pottery was
supply
34
and
several
other
at
Francisco
San
places;
produced
and water-power flouring-mills were built at Santa
Cruz and San Luis Obispo, possibly also at San
Gabriel and San Jose, which with the tahonas worked
by horse or man power and the metates of the neo35
phyte women, supplied the province with flour.
Some details of these different branches of manufactures will be found in local annals of the different
36
Jose, 114.
36
See also general
.s'.s.,
AGRICULTURE.
619
Agricultural statistics are given elsewhere in chapters devoted to missions, pueblos, and to local progress; but it is well here to give the grand total of
There have been some interesting discusmodern times respecting the dates at which
ing probably grapes, were introduced from the peninsula by the earliest expeditions between 1769 and
1773; nearly all the varieties were in a flourishing
condition on a small scale before Junipero Serra's
death in 1784; and very few remained to be introduced
after 1800. 38
much
their subjects
to habits of industry and to precautions against possible famine in years of drought.
38
Information on these matters is very meagre and of a general nature.
Vallejo has heard from his father and others of the fundadores that vines
were brought up in 1709, and planted at San Diego. Vallejo, Doc. Hist. Cat.,
MS., xxxvi. 288. Palou, Vida de Junipero Serra, 199, 220, etc., mentions
Yield of Monterey
grapes, vegetables, fruits, etc., as flourishing in 1784.
garden sufficient to pay fora gardner in 1784. Prov. St. Pap., MS., v. 54. La.
Pe"rouse left the first potatoes in California in 1786.
There are some traditions of wild grapes found in the country near Sail Antonio, and improved by
cultivation. Gomez, Lo que sale, MS., 105-6.
Pages' garden in 1783-91 with
200 fruit-trees, vines, etc. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 167. Vancouver names
many kinds of fruit raised in 1792. Wine manufactured in the southern
missions in 1797-8. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xii. 66, 70, 1798. The culture
of vines and olives must be encouraged. Prov. JRec., MS., iv. 106.
620
flax
it
in California.
42
39
xiv. 77.
42
Nov.
St.
Pap., MS.,
STOCK-RAISING.
621
The
in the year
17945 when
247-53.
1785, other orders of the audiencia published. Id., v. 250-1.
Sept. 13, 1785, Jose" de Galvez to Fages on aiding the enterprise. St. Pap.
Sac., MS., iv. 35.
Sept. 6, 1793, viceroy orders flax-culture to be promoted
in all the missions. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 263-4.
Sept. 7th, guardian
also recommends the matter, saying that a wild flax is found on the California coast. Id., xii. 14,15.
two
Aug. 13, 1794,
fanegas of hemp-seed sent
to Lasuen. Id. , xi. 267-8.
Instructions for hemp-culture. Instruments sent
1795. St. Pap., Sac., MS., xv. 15-17; Dept. St. Pap., S. Jose, MS.,i. 53-6;
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 140. See chapter xxxii. for experiments at San Jose\
May 21, 1796, flax and hemp to be free of duty, and implements free from
Dec. 19,
taxes. Gaceta de Mex., viii. 95-8; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 194.
1796, Borica to V. E,. , 30 fanegas of seed harvested. Missions as a rule will not
fee able to raise hemp.
No success yet in working the material. St. Pap. ,
Sac., MS., iv. 70.
Hemp exported in 1796-7 of no use. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
272.
1798, samples sent to Mexico and approved. Id., vi. 103; viii. 189-90.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 272, 287. May 3, 1798, hemp sent to P. Viader
to try experiments in spinning. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 213.
1799, 25 arrobaa
of hemp sent to Mexico. Price $350. Prospects favorable. Prov. St. Pap. ,
MS., xviii. 83-4; xvii. 213. Culture must be introduced at Branciforte. Id.,
xvii. 314-15.
San Carlos using hemp for ordinary cloth for neophytes.
Prov. Rec., vi. 117. 1800, crops not good. Id., ix. 15; S. Jose Arch., MS.,
iii. 70.
Arrangements in Mexico to continue to encourage the new industry
and to send Joaquin Sanchez to California. S. Jose", Arch., MS., v. 20; St.
Pap., Miss, and Col, MS., i. 55-7; St. Pap., Sac., MS., ix. 102-4. By
these arrangements the memoria ships were to take flax and hemp in good
condition and pay for it in cash. Sanchez did not sail for California. Guerra,
Doc. Hist. Gal., MS., iii. 176-9. Vague indications that cotton was also
iii.
tried.
iv.
108;
vi.
209;
ix.
6.
622
the ranches at a time when the missions had no livestock to sell, the government was not disposed to
abandon them later; and indeed it was claimed that
only by means of the rancho del rey and of the fixed
tariffs of prices were the friars kept from maintaining
an oppressive monopoly. 43
In 1796-7 Borica made a special effort to promote
the raising of sheep in connection with the manufacture of cloth.
Statistical reports do not show that
the increase in the mission flocks was much greater
in those than other years, though it was uniformly
rapid; while in the pueblos, to which Borica gave his
attention more particularly, very little was accom44
The Californian cattle were very prolific,
plished.
under
the early regulations forbidding the
and,
of
cows, multiplied with wonderful rapidslaughter
The pueblos were not allowed to let their large
ity.
stock increase beyond fifty head to each settler; the
rancheros had no very large herds before 1800; and
in the missions during the last decade efforts were
directed rather to restrict than encourage further
increase; yet in spite of all restrictions, and of the
ravages of bears, wolves, and Indians, and of the
constantly increasing slaughter for meat and tallow,
cattle were becoming too numerous for the needs of
43
Prov. St. Pap., MS. x. 91; xii. 30, 97; xvi. 92; xvii. 14-16; Id:, Ben.
Mil., xiii. 1-7; xvii. 1; xviii. 4, 5; xxv. 2-4; Prov. Rec., MS., i. 208; iv. 16,
117, 134, 255-6, 273, 285; v. 64, 68, 85, 269; vi. 100, 104, 109; St. Pap., Mis*.,
MS., i. 73-4; St. Pap., Miss, and Col., MS., i. 68-78. See also chapters xxx.
and xxxii. for local items respecting the rancho del rey. 1795, cattle lost on
the road were charged to the consumption of the troops.
1790, 4,000 cattle
belonging to the real hacienda, from which many private persons were supThere seem to have
1795, each soldier might have two milch cows.
plied.
been some sheep on the rancho. After 1797 an account was made of the
hides, which before had been left to the soldiers.
"Efforts at Sta Barbara. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 66. Rancheros must keep
sheep or live in the pueblos. Id., iv. 86. Introduced at Angeles, S. Jos6,
and San Francisco. Id., vi. 79. Every settler should have at least 11 sheep,
for which they may pay in grain. Id., iv. 147.
Breeding-sheep to be purchased and sent to Monterey. Id. , iv. 62. Six hundred and fourteen sheep
at 7 reals, wethers $2, received from San Diego. St. Pap., Sac., MS., vi. 6.
Wool at S. Gabriel 20 reals per arroba. Id., vi. G. Two hundred sheep distributed at Angeles August 1796. Id., vi. 1. Every settler at San Jos6 must
keep 3 sheep for every larger animal. Dept. St. Pap., S. Jose., MS., i. 73-4.
The breed at San Francisco was merino, and better than elsewhere. Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xv. 8,9.
623
Mules
demands
45
del rey.^
45
The
1791, mission stock should be reduced to prevent dispersion.
Indians eat too much meat. Missions not allowed to buy animals from the
troops. The raising of horses and mules should be promoted. Yearly slaughter
for meat ordered.
Fages to Romeu, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 150, 157, 170.
1792, no more fat to be shipped from San Bias, and 200 cows to be killed
each year. It is better to make monthly distributions of meat. Arrillaga, in
Vancouver took some cattle away
Id., xi. 37-8; Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 156.
for Botany Bay and the Sandwich Islands. Vancouver's Voy., ii. 99; Prov.
St. Pap., MS., xxi. 122.
Mules promise better.
1794, no market for horses.
Pueblo stock much exposed to Indians. Soldiers allowed only three or four
cows. King's stock not much affected by the removal of females. Adobe
houses built for soldiers guarding stock, in place of huts of hides. Arrillaga,
Papel de Puntes, MS., 189-91. 1795, rancheros have but little stock and it
must not increase. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 269, 219, 224-5. 1796, wild
beasts troublesome, preventing the increase of tithes.
A lion attacked a corsoldier, and Indian woman at Rancheria Nueva. Prov. Rec. MS. ix.
iv. 63.
rral,
1797, no settler to have over 50 head of large stock, for each of
which three head of small stock must be kept. Id., iv. 204, 284; Dept. St.
Pap., S. /bsd,.MS., i. 73-4. Two reals to be paid on each head of cattle
killed. S. Jose, Arch., MS., v. 31.
Tithe cattle to be branded with royal
rancho brand applied crosswise to prevent confusion. Id., v. 31. Over 12,000
horses on the Monterey ranchos in 1800 (evidently an error). Arrillaga, Estado
de 1800-1, MS., in Bandini, Doc. Hist. Gal., 3, 4.
,
CHAPTER XXIX.
INDUSTRIES AND INSTITUTIONS.
1791-1800.
COMMERCE
OTTER-SKINS
PROJECTS or MAR-
CALIFORNIA had as yet no commerce. Not a tradingvessel proper touched on the coast before 1800, though
there had been some little exchange of goods for meat
and vegetables on several occasions between the Californians and such vessels as arrived for purposes other
than commercial. " It is sad to not see a single shipowner on the Pacific coast," wrote Costanso in 1794;
no trade in the South Sea, and therefore no revenue,
a lack of population, and great expense to the crown.
The Ccidiz merchants from mistaken motives stifled
the coast trade in its infancy.
grand commerce
TRADE WITH TH
TRANSPORTS.
G25
sel
The
had departed.
meat
to
San
HIST.
CAJ,.,
VOL.
I.
40
C2<3
Within the
Prov.
St.
Pap., MS.,
xiii.
COMMERCIAL PROJECTS.
627
MS.,
i.
249.
St.
Pap., MS.,
xiii, 12.
G23
in'K-f.n
-!.
!,, ^li
__
l __ j__
.
___ i.* __
tfii,"yr
___i
___ 11
___
j.
tftorv _____
_i
__
___ i
_ j
per
MIL, MS., xxii. 2. 1796, cojinillos, saddle-pads, 50 cents a pair. Prov. Rec.,
MS., vi. 160. Wheat, $3 per fanega. Dept. St. Pap., S. Jose, MS., i. 69.
Freight on grain from Angeles to Sta Barbara 7 reals. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
82-3.
1797, wool 18 reals per arroba (9 cents per pound). Id., iv. 91; $3
at Monterey. Df.pt. St. Pap., S. Jose, MS., i. 78; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 214.
Lambs offered, 7 reals; asked by padres, $1. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 86.
1798, tiles 820 per thousand. Id., xvii. 97.
Bulls, $4. Id., xvii. 103. Calves,
84; cows, $5. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 102, 105.
1799, blankets 84. 50; brandy,
$1.07 per cuartillo; figs, 30 cents per pound; olive-oil, 40 cents per pound.
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 110; vi. 233. Chickens, 50 cents per dozen. 8. Jos-;
Arch., MS., vi. 41. June 26, 1799, Borica favors reduction in price of horses
from 89 to 87; mares, 84 to 83; and colts, 85 to 83.50. Other tariff prices fair
enough. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 126-7. Soap, 15 cakes for 81. Tithe wheat
may be sold for 13 reals for cash or on 4 months' time. S. Jose, Arch., MS., vi.
43, 41.
PROVINCIAL FINANCE.
The matters
620
630
for reports, etc., to aid Romeu in his investigation of presidial accounts. Id.,
ix. 313-19.
Sept. 26, 1790, Revilla Gigedo's letter to court recommending the
appointment of Carcaba as habilitado general, and explaining the desirability of the new office. Estudillo, Doc. Hist. Gal., MS., i. 8, 9. May 14, 1791,
royal order creating the office. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xxv. 2. Oct.
3, 1791, viceroy communicates royal approval of Carcaba's appointment to
governor. Prov. St. Pop., MS., x. 130-7. Sept. 20th, habilitado's deficits
to be charged to the company pro rata, and he is to live on 25 cts per clay under
property also being sold. Id. x. 76. Some clerical fees had to be
paid from California on statements of account. Id., xii. 105. Damaged effects
charged to the factor; expenses to company. Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 158, Jan.
4, 1793.
Sending of supplies suspended until accounts are cleared up. Prov.
St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xx. 4. Jan. 23, 1794, habilitado general, his appointment, accounts, etc. Nueva Espaila, Acuerdos, MS., 40-3. May 12th, gov.
complains to V. R. of lack of system in the accounts. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xxi. 138-40.
1794, Col. Alberni was refused 50 arrobas of flour, because it
could be bought in California. St. Pap., Sac., MS., ix. 41-2. Articles of luxury not to be included in memorias. Balances in coin, one fourth in 'small
change. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 124-5; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 182-3. Dec.
1795, 10 per cent advance to be charged on goods distributed to Indians. Id.
The habilitados had to send with their memorias an account of the condition
of arms, dress, and other kinds of property. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 91.
Jan. 1, 1795, Borica to Carcaba, complaining of the inefficiency of his officers
especially as habilitados.
Grajera is named as an exception. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xxi. 213-14. April, $6,000 in silver coin sent to California. Prov. St.
Ben.
xxi.
10.
Mil., MS.,
Pap.,
Report of Feb. 19, 1795, on the accounts of
the expedition of 1769-74. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 5-9. Habilitado general considered as agent and apoderado of the California Indians. Prov. Rec.
MS., vi. 2. Company accounts must bear the signature of commandant and
alferez besides that of the habilitado. St. Pap. Sac., MS., vii. 40.
1797,
precautions against counterfeit money, with indications that some of it was
in circulation in California. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 154; vi. 78; Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xvi. 245. March 19, 1797, Borica asks for a release of habilitados from
some duties, and the appointment of administrators. Prov. Rec., MS., vi.
83-4.
Gov. still at work on the accounts of 1781-92. Id. Carcaba succeeded
by Columna. Guerra, Doc. Hint. Cal., MS., iii. 168-9; Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xvii. 209, 322-3; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 112; viii. 224.
Arrears of pay at San
Diego. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 34, 60-3.
arrest, his
HABILITADOS.
631
632
of the stipends, nothing in particular is known pertaining directly to this epoch but Revilla Gigedo in his report of 1793 represents the fund as rapidly running to
decay, and predicts that the royal treasury will have
12
to make new sacrifices in behalf of the missions.
The Californians were free from alcabalas, or excise
;
15
12
1703-4, $230.
li
See chapter xxvii. also local items in chapters xxx.-xxxii. this volume.
13
1794, tithes paid into real caja de Rosario. Prov. &t. Pap., MS., xii.
;
REVENUES.
633
The
commandant
634
in the
sent to
jurisdictions, the accounts being
for transmission to Mexico; until in 1799
gildo Sal, as habilitado
Monterey
Hermeneof Monterey, was formally
The
this decade
vi.
120-1.
MILITARY FORCE.
635
MS.,
vi. 47.
636
retentions.
22
22
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 63, 223; xv. 50. The other military 'funds'
were the fondo de gratification, an allowance of $10 for each man in the
companies per year for miscellaneous company expenses; the fondo de invdlidos, a small discount on soldiers' wages, 8 maravedis on a dollar, for the
payment of pensions; and the fondo de montepio, a discount of officers' pay
for similar purposes.
Feb. 1795, the king ordered $5 per month as alms
paid to the old carpenter Lorenzo Esparza. Prov. St. Pap. lien. Mil. MS. xx v.
10.
This sum was paid to Esparza until his death. April 1795, 70 persons in
the four presidios entitled to retirement but no recruits to replace them.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 221-2. Dec. 6, 1796, royal order regulating details of pensions. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 151-2.
Oct. 1797, invalids declining
to live in the pueblos must stand guard at the presidios. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xvi. 86-7, 184; xv. 99-100; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 159-60. Oct. 1798, retired
officers who held government positions get no half-pay. Prov. Re.c., MS., vi.
,
104.
23
1795, Sergt. Ruiz reports that the soldiers at San Buenaventura have to
be treated with severity. Their insubordination has reached such a point
that they have to be threatened with kicks. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 45.
But Ruiz was arrested for offensive language to private Lugo. Id., xiii. 14.
Albino Tobar sent out of the country for bad conduct. Prov. Rec., MS., v.
62.
Two soldiers given two hours of extra guard duty per day, wearing
their cueras, for eight days, having allowed some Indian prisoners to escape.
Prov. St. Pap., MS. xvi. 173.
24
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 108-9. A captain also proposed for Santa
Barbara in 1799. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 121.
25
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 200; xiv. 58; xxi. 190.
2fi
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 28, 143; xvii. 98. S. Jost, Arch., MS., ii. 79;
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 8; v. 24.
GOVERNMENT.
637
23
plated.
mended
27
in
March
1796,
55, 222.
033
circuit
inconvenience of
all this
tion in military and political rule was greatly facilitated by that already existing in mission affairs.
Borica made a full report in favor of the change in
September, declaring that the interests of both parts
of the province could not be properly attended to by
a governor at Monterey, favoring in connection with
the change a transfer of the capital of the peninsula
from Loreto to the frontier, expressing the greatest
confidence in Arrillaga's ability, and suggesting an
increase of his salary.
No one had anything to say
in opposition to the separation, which we shall see
was accomplished during the next decade. 30
On the administration of justice, we learn that in
1794 Ignacio Rochin was shot for murder at Santa
Barbara, on a sentence coming from the audiencia of
31
soldier was sentenced to ten years
Guadalajara.
labor
at
San
Bias for incest in 1799, while his
public
and
daughter
accomplice was condemned to seclusion
for two years. 32
There were six or seven cases of
murder among the natives, the culprits being condemned by the viceroy to terms of four to eight years
of presidio work or imprisonment together with flog-
33
gings.
30
March 7, 1796,
March 21st, viceroy
32
Pap., Sac., MS., i. 122; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 109; viii. 187.
1796, four natives for murder of another, four years of prison with 50 to
100 lashes. Prov. Rec. MS. iv. 43-4, 84. 1797, Indian who undertook to punish
his wife and through ignorance 'overdid it,' four years on
public works. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., xv. 277.
1799, wife-murderer at Santa Barbara, eight years of
hard labor in chains. I append some minor cases of interest: 1800, Rafael
Gomez, apparently for lying, condemned by P. Catala, commissioned by
Lasuen, to sweep the church daily and attend mass, besides asking a padre's
pardon, being put in irons to await the governor's approval of this sentence.
St.
33
San
Jos&, Arch.,
MS.,
iii.
55-7.
1799,
CRIMINAL RECORD.
639
Buenaventura.
in charge of the
seen to commit a crimen
ncfando by two Indian girls, who reported the matter.
Criminal proceedings were at once instituted by
order of Comandante Goycoechea, Alferez Pablo Cota
being prosecuting attorney, the cadet Ignacio Martinez acting as clerk, the soldier Jose Maria Dominguez as interpreter, and the retired sergeant Jose
Maria Ortega as defender of the accused. Rosas
made a confession, pleading only that he was tempted
by El Demonio. Cota demanded the death penalty,
animals at
La Mesa, he was
Hey prosecuted
for assault,
xvi. 251-2.
640
shot after receiving from Father Tapia the last comforts of religion and reciting the service in a firm
On a burning heap of wood near at hand the
voice.
was
carried out,
fitted
settlers
who were
binage and
Concu-
34
Rosas, Causa Criminal, MS., 1800-1. Certificate of execution. Prov. St.
Pap., Ben. Mil., xxviii. 17. Goycoechea begs the governor for a postponement on account of a prevailing illness which renders it difficult to spare
a man. Id., xxix. 4. Burial. Sta. Barbara, Lib. Mision, MS., 23. Aug.
11, 1804, governor says a mule is to be given to the owner of the one
burned. Prov. Rec., MS., xi. 102. The author of Romero, Memorias, ISIS.,
was present at the execution. He says the boy's body was merely passed
through the flames as a formality of purification; while the mule was entirely
consumed.
35
Shortcomings of Alvitre and Avila. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xiv.
6; Prov. St. Pap., MS., ix. 215-16; x. 101. Navarre exiled from Los Angeles
San Jos6, and relapsing, to San Francisco. Id., x. 1GO-1. 1793, Higuera
Men in such cases to be handcuffed; women must not go
living improperly.
to the pueblo when their husbands were absent; men and women who go to
the mission without leave to sleep to be put in the stock. St. Pap., Sn.c.,
MS., iii. 2. 1795, Goycoechea to Borica, 'Como solo se castiga a los hombres
to
amancebados, que se ha de hacer con las mugeres que hacen gala de ello?'
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 33. Borica replies warnings, threats, exposure
to husbands, and finally seclusion in respectable houses with hard work.
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 38.
1797, concubinage strictly forbidden. St. Pap.,
Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 300.
1798, adulterers to be warned and then punished.
The governor will decide about the women. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 277.
30
lashes
a
for
man
who abused Indian women. Id., v. 114. Adultery
1799,
case at San Miguel. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 250.
Ruiz found in bed with
his corporal's wife at San Diego.
Put in irons and the woman sent to Los
Angeles. Id., xvii. 253. Investigation of the case of an Indian woman at
San Juan Capistrano who gave birth to a dog. Id., xvii. 239; Prov. Rec. MS.,
v. 280-7.
SPIRITUOUS LIQUORS.
641
who
of
key, or other alcoholic liquor, the name being common to all) was free, and
therefore other ways must be devised to stop drunkenness. Prov. St. Pap. ,
th<
Mi
MS., xviii. 309; xvii. 209; Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 104. 1799, some wine made at
SOI
southern missions, and soon brandy enough will be produced for moderate consumption. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 130. Padres receive from San Bias the mescal
they need. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 78-9, 195. Sept. 3, 1799, Borica prohibits
ailing mescal. Dept. St. Pap., San Jose,, MS., i. 96. Aug. 29, Borica asks that
Eighteen barrels of
ily two barrels of mescal be imported for each mission.
goardiente from Baja California imported this year. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 130.
37
Miscellaneous communications, nothing important. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
; San Jose, Arch., MS., ii. 78;iv. 23; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 127; St. Pap.,
fiss. and Colon., MS., i. 360. 1798, Borica granted the petition of citizens of
Jose to be allowed to pl&ymcditta on Sundays in the guard-house. Dept. St..
L
I.
41
642
came
and sources of
December the
Rec. ,
ionado of San Jos6 for habitual gambling at his house. Id., iv. 293-4. Porrazo, tururu, malilla, and cientos may be played Sundays, if stakes are not
over $1, and the sexes arc kept separate. Id., iv. 294. Children gambled for
buttons, some of them cutting off the buttons from their clothing. Prominent men often looked on and made bets on the children's game of tdnyano.
1781, alcalde of San Jos6 unable to write. Pico, Doc. Hist. Cal, MS., i.
1785, only 14 out of 50 of the Monterey company could write. Prov. St.
Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., vii. 1. 1786, seven out of 30 at San Francisco. Id.,
vii. 2.
1794, not a man
1791, two out of 28 at San Francisco. Id., xv. 3.
at San Francisco can write. The commandant asks that one be sent from Santa
Barbara. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 41.
1800, many soldiers acting as corporals could not be promoted because they could not read. Amador Mem.,
MS., 219.
39
Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., vi. 293-4; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv., 60;
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 128.
Dcpt. St. Pap., S. Jose, MS., i. 45; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 219.
13.
EDUCATION.
643
their labors.
Corporal Manuel Boronda, serving also
as carpenter, taught the children of San Francisco
gratuitously; the soldier and carpenter Jose Rodriguez did the same at Monterey, and Borica continued
to interest himself greatly in the schools, requiring
frequent reports to be sent him with copybooks for
examination. 42
50.
42
Feb. 18, 1796, 27 children attending Lasso's school at San Jose": four pay
nothing, and the rest two and one half reals per month. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xiv. 101.
Feb. 20th, Borica to Lasso, urges great care. His pay will be adhouse to
vanced from the tobacco revenue and collected from the settlers.
be furnished for L. and family. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 181. Feb. 25th, children
attending Santa Barbara school, 32. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 101. May 6th,
Borica speaks of Boronda and Rodriguez teaching at San Francisco and Monterey, Lasso at San Jose", a teacher at Santa Barbara at $125 per year, and
Vargas at San Diego at $100. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 338-9. Sept. 20th, San
Diego school has 22 pupils. Prov. St. Pap., Presidios, MS., i. 64. Governor
orders reports, copybooks, etc., to be sent him every two, three, or six months.
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 50; St. Pap. Sac., MS., vi. 7.
644
we know
43
Prov.
little
or nothing. 44
St. Pap., MS., xvi. 41, 168-9; xxi. 262-3; Prov. Rec., MS., v.
Randolph, Oration, speaks of copybooks sent from Santa Barbara, Feb. 11, 1797, still preserved in the archives, the samples being scripture texts in a fair round hand.
44
Dec. 1798, Vargas transferred to Sta Bdrbara. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
Borica complains that few pupils attend at San Diego. Parents must
109.
be stimulated. Id., v. 263. 1801, complaints of children growing up in
ignorance, and of great need of teachers. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xviii. 54-5;
xxi. 65.
Says Judge SepiUveda: 'They could learn very little in those days;
schools were few, books rare, and the pursuits of the people required not a
very extensive book-learning. When any writing was needed they could
easily apply to the few who were the depositaries of legal form or epistolary
ability.' Scpulveda, Hist. Mem., MS., 3, 4.
Many mission libraries had
Palou's Life of Serra and perhaps one or two other historical works before
besides
a
few
A few French books were given to
1800,
theological books.
Borica by Capt. Dorr's French pilot in 1797. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 76-7.
101,
108.
CHAPTER XXX.
LOCAL EVENTS AND PROGRESS-SOUTHERN DISTRICT.
1791-1800.
1
For annals of San Diego from 1780 to 1790, which I here continue to 1800,
see chap, xxii., this volume.
2
Jose" de Zuniga enlisted as a soldado distmguido October 18, 1772; went
through the grades from corporal to alferez in 1778-9; was made lieutenant,
(64,5)
C46
his arrival at
San Diego.
all
April 21, 1780; commandant of San Diego, Sept.- 8, 1781; habilitado, Oct. 19,
Before coming to California he had seen much service in Indian cam1781.
paigns in Sonora and Chihuahua. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xiv. 9; xvi.
1.
In 1790 he was granted leave of absence on petition of his mother to visit
Mexico and attend to a legacy; but seems not to have left his post. He showed
much attention to Vancouver, who named Ft Zufiiga on the lower coast in
his honor, and who speaks of shoals in San Diego Bay called on a Spanish
chartof 1782 Barros de Zooniga' (Bajios de Zuniga). See Pantoja's map, p. 456,
this vol.
Vancouver's Voy., ii. 470, 473, 482. Letter of viceroy announcing
his appointment as captain of Tucson dated May 29, 1792. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xxi. 75. By a letter of May 30, 1810, it appears that he still held the
same position, and had been made lieutenant- colonel. Prov. St. Pap., Ben.
'
MS., xliv. 1.
Antonio Grajera enlisted as a private Aug.
Mil.,
3
'.below
ii.
470-1,478.
647
648
and later, the escorts and families are credited to the missions instead of the
List of rank and file
presidio as before and as in other parts of the country.
of the presidial company in 1798, in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xvii.
14-16.
9
Prov.
St.
649
$1,000 to $3,000 in its favor. The situado, or allowance, for the volunteers and artillery was not included
in the amounts above mentioned.
Supplies to the
amount of about $15,000 per year were sent to California for them, and San Diego received not quite one
11
third.
There are no records of the annual supplies
obtained from missions, but during the last three years
of the decade the presidio was indebted to the missions about $10,000.
"The Presidio of St Diego," says Vancouver, who
visited it in November 1793, "seemed to be the least
of the Spanish establishments. It is irregularly built,
on very uneven ground, which makes it liable to some
inconveniences, without the obvious appearance of any
object for selecting such a spot. With little difficulty
10
5.
Company accounts
1796-7, 100 at 25 cents for vivos; 100 at 25 cents for difuntos; 50, lacticinio;
2 or 3 composition. Prov. St. Pap., Ben., MS., i. 12. Net revenue of San
Diego post-office for 1794, $71; for 1796, $95. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS.,
xxi. 2; xxiii. 8.
Accounts of presidio with missions 1797-1800. Id., xxxiii.
13; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 265; xvii. 195.
650
MAP
PRESIDIO BUILDINGS.
it
651
652
presidio.
committed being
li
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 69, 165; xiv. 168; xvii. 9, 10; xxi. 212, 216-17,
Water had to
248; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 20-1; v. 238, 272, 278; vi. 46, 79.
be carried from the presidio, where a well long abandoned was reopened.
One hundred and three planks, 22 feet long, were among the timber shipped
from Monterey.
few industrial items are as follows: For a time after
May 1793 there was no armorer, the old one having left after a service of 20
In 1795 the missions of this district
years. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 56-8.
were requested to send each four or five Indians to the presidio to learn stonecutting and bricklaying. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 235-6. Jan. 1796, a weaver was
to go to San Diego to teach. Id., v. 78.
The comandante tried to induce
Spanish youth to learn trades, but without success, some of them deeming
the request an insult. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiv. 16. The forge and carpenter
shop did $93 worth of work for soldiers and missions in 1797; but as expenses,
including two apprentices, were $163, the king's exchequer was not perceptibly
benefited.
15
MS.
FOREIGN
VISITS.
G53
eight
men
in April 1797. 16
and all possible preparations were made by GraGreat reliance was placed on the battery at
jera.
Point Guijarros; but Grajera was also careful to
obtain instructions respecting what was to be done
nent,
destruction. 18
18
Prop. Rec., MS., v. 227-S; iv. 88; vi. 50; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii.
215-10; xvi. 249.
17
Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 46976.
18
Prov. Kec., MS., v. 254-5; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxL 197, 211-12, 267-9.
654
Prov. Rec., MS., v. 283, 285; vi. Ill; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 197Their names were
202.
Katt, Barnaby Jan, John Stephens, and Gabriel Boisse.
The captors of a Spanish vessel in 1709 claimed that some of
their men, being on the coast in 1797, as part of the crew of two (English)
ships had entered San Diego and made soundings by moonlight. Prov.
Wm.
St.
MS.,
21
Hilario Torrens thus he signed his name, but by his companions it was
more frequently written Torrente or Torrent, to say nothing of several other
variations was a native of Catalonia, where he was for a long time predicaHe came to California in 1786
dor, for three years guardian, and also vicar.
with the highest recommendations from his college for talent, experience, and
circunstancias. Serving at San Diego from November 1786 to November 1798,
he had but slight opportunity to distinguish himself save by a faithful performance of his missionary duties. His license to retire was signed by the
viceroy March 17, 1798. He sailed in the Princesa on Nov. 8th, and May 14,
1799, the guardian wrote that he had died in a convulsion. Arch. Sta. Barbara,
MS., xi. 281 xii. 26-7; Prov. St. Pap., xvi. 187. Of Juan Mariner still less is
known. He came to California in 1785, served at San Diego from November
of that year, made a trip with Grijalva in July 1795 to explore for the new
mission site of San Luis Rey. He died Jan 29, 1800, and was buried in the
presbytery by Padre Faura on Jan. 30th. Finally April 26, 1804, his remains
were removed and placed, together with those of Jaume and Figuer, in a sepulchre constructed for the purpose under the small arch between the two
altars of the new church. San Dkfjo t Lib. de Mis-ion, MS., 81, 89.
;
655
-Sept. 30, 1798, Lasuen to Borica. Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 51. July
Lujan instructed to report confidentially on the treatment of the
natives. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 247. July 17, 1797, Grajera explains his
treatment of the natives. Does not allow them to have much intercourse with
those of other missions, to prevent illicit intercourse. Id., xvi. 172.
179G,
padres to depose misbehaving alcaldes and appoint others. Prov. Rcc., MS.,
Jaime Samop and Antonio Pellau -were alcaldes in 1799. Arch.
vi. 178-9.
Arzobisbado, MS., i. 220. Three neophyte stowaways were found on the
Concejicion eight days out of port in 1794.
They did it, they said, in sport,
and were sent back from San Bias. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 210-17; Prov.
Rec., MS., v. 226; xi. 209.
Again in 1798 a runaway neophyte was sent
back from Tepic. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 289. In the mission registers
appear the names of 'fathers Cayetano Pallas, Mariano Apolinario, Jose
Conanse, and liamon Lopez, Dominicans from the peninsula who officiated
here at different times; also presbyters Loesa and Jimenez, chaplains of San
Bias vessels, and a dozen Franciscans from different missions. San Diego, Lib.
de Mislon, MS.
23
Lasuen confirmed 656 persons between 1790 and 1793. S. Diego, Lib. de
Mision, 45.
14, 1799,
656
than
in
therefore
other
establishments,
somewhat
less
Christianity
a burden to them.
being
Mean-
657
Juan
29
MS.,
28, 39-40.
xii. 17.
I.
42
658
30
structure rose slowly but steadily for nine years.
a
Mariano Mendoza, weaver, was sent from Monterey in the summer of 1796 to teach the natives. If
he neglected his business, he should be chained at
for he was under contract with the O
night,
governO
loom was set up
ment at thirty dollars a month.
with other necessar}^ apparatus of a rude nature,
with which by the aid of natives coarse fabrics and
blankets were woven.
Early in 1797 the friars were
notified that if they wished the services of Mendoza
'
for a longer time they must pay his wages but they
thought his instructions not worth the money, especially now that they had learned all he knew, and the
weaving industry had been successfully established.
Besides home manufactures San Juan supplied from
its large flocks quantities of wool for experiments at
;
other establishments. 31
of 1793, noted
water-side, in a
very pleasantly
30
St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 26.
mason sent up by Arrillaga, who reports
to the viceroy Jan. 11, 1799. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 15. Lasuen in report of
1799-1800 says the church has been building four years. Arch. Sta Barbara,
MS., xii. 128. Date of beginning, S. Jium Cap., Lib. de Mlslon, MS., 26.
Dec. 1797, church of masonry with arches being built 53 x 10 varas. St. Pap.,
MS.,
vi.
ix. 5; St.
Id.,
LOS ANGELES.
659
by rugged dreary mountains, where the vegetawas not sufficient to hide the naked rocks. The
buildings of the mission were of brick and stone, and
in their vicinity the soil seemed to be of uncommon
and striking fertility. The landing on the beach in
the cove seemed to be good." 32 In the fear of English invasion which agitated the whole country in
1797 a sentinel was posted on the beach at San Juan
to watch for suspicious vessels, since it was not doubted
that England had her eyes upon the cove anchorage.
Whether a four-pounder was mounted here as recomsides
tion
appear.
The
murder of
his
November
22,
Wancmtver'a Voyage,
ii.
467.
much nearer the shore than it really is, but it could hardly have been
moved before 1797 when the new church was begun, and certainly not later.
sion
The
authorities de-
660
of weaving.
Crops in 1800 were 4,600 bushels, the
been 7,800 in 1796, and the smallest
having
largest
Seven eighths of the entire harvest
2,700 in 1797.
was usually maize, though the inhabitants offered in
1800 to contract for the supply of 3,400 bushels of
wheat per year at $1.66 a bushel for the San Bias
market. 34
MAP
34
From 9
to 12 pobladores in 1793.
Expense of pay and rations $1,528.
Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., iii. 16. List of 42 names of male settlers in
1799. St. Pap., Miss., MS., iii. 9, 10.
Two hundred sheep distributed in
August, 1796. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 74; vi. 79; St. Pap., Sac., MS., vi. 1.
1796, Borica orders that land be given to heads of families who have none,
bub they must cultivate it. Prov. /?., MS., iv. 44-5. 1795, correspondence
and orders requiring seeded lands to be fenced. In one case a willow fence
is mentioned. Prov. Itec., MS., iv. 12, 16, 17, 29. Prov. St.
Pap., MS., xiv. 77.
The same year especial effort was made by the governor through Commandant
to
the
in
settlers to raise good crops
view of the general
Goycoechea
encourage
Prov.
St.
GG1
The
drought. Id., xix. 38-40; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 15. Proposal to furnish wheat
San Bias market. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xviii. 50. 1787, grain sold to
Santa Barbara, $358. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., ix. 4. Each settler
must give annually two fanegas of maize or wheat for a fondo de proprias to
be spent for the good of the community. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 98-9.
35
Arrillaga reported that Los Angeles was in quiet in 1792, but certain
unruly persons were ordered to leave, and though they did not go, the warning proved effective. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 188. Oct. 11, 1795, Borica to
comandante, if the comisionado is not active enough he must be removed.
Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 29-30. Alvarado comisionado 1795-6. Id., iv. 39;
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 234; Id., Ben. Mil., xv. 7.
1796, Francisco Avila
drowned in the tulares. Suspicions of murder proved groundless. Prov. Rec,
MS., iv. 66, 71. Dec. 7, 1797, the settlers Avila and Arellano must be
chastised and turned out if they continue to disturb the pueblo. Id., iv.
93-4.
179S, allusions to speedy completion of a jail. Prov. Rec., iv. 108.
Padre Salazar relates that when he was here in 1795 a man who had 1,000
mares and cattle in proportion came to San Gabriel to beg cloth for a shirt,
for none could be had at pueblo or presidio. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS.,
for the
ii.
77.
30
Feb. 24, 1795, Goycoechea's report to Borica in Prov. St. Pap., Ben.
The
7, 8.
April, 1795, Borica to viceroy. Prov. Rec., vi, 40-].
former important report seems not to have been seen by either writers or
lawyers in the past.
Mil., xxii.
GG2
by Figueroa in 1834.
The third was the famous San Pedro, or Dominguez.
O
rancho, occupied by Juan Jose Dominguez with about
'
'
Land
sq. leagues.
Cases.
and
heir of
Juan
EARLY LAND-GRANTS.
6G3
<lc
MMon, MS.,
29.
The Simi Rancho, according to. Peg. Brands, MS., 33, and Hoffman's
Cases, was granted by Borica in 1795, being regranted, or at least
petitioned for, in 1821, and also by Alvarado in 1842.
According to Reg.
Brandt, MS., 32, El Refugio was granted by Borica, therefore before 1800,
to Capt. Ortega, therefore before 1798 when Ortega died.
I think there is
room for doubt about one or both of these grants. Respecting both it may be
said that Borica does not seem to have favored such grants.
As to Simi,
when an exploring party visited the valley in August 1795 they did not mention any rancho as they did Reyes' and Verdugo's; and not only this but in
41
Land
April 1796 Borica expressly refused to grant Pico (no given name) permission
to leave the pueblo and settle on a rancho.
As to El Refugio, we know that
Ortega in 179G M~as in trouble about a deficit in his Loreto accounts, Prov.
Pec., MS., iv. G8, 72, 81-2, 86; his son Jos6 Maria wished to take a land-grant
on which to work and pay his father's indebtedness, and although Borica
advised him against the scheme, still a grant was ordered to be made to him
The author of Los Angiies, Hist.,
of the Zanja de Cota lands if unoccupied.
His
8, 9, thinks that Santiago de Santa Ana was one of these early grants.
reasons are: A popular belief that this was one of the oldest ranches; testimony
in the district court that the original occupant was Grijalva; the probability
that the grant to Yorba in 1810 was a regrant to Grijalva's son-in-law; and
finally a recognition by the court of the Peraltas' claims as descendants of the
This is an ingenious but probably erroneous argument.
original occupant.
Lieut. Grijalva was a pensioner of the San Diego company after 1796 as was
Sergt. Yorba, his son-in-la.w^ after 1798; but Grijalva, dying at San Diego in
1806, named no land in his will though he did name cattle; and moreover he
refused to give his daughters anything, on the ground that they had been provided for at their marriage one with Yorba in 1782 and the other with
Peralta in 1785. Peralta's claims resulted from the fact that Arrillaga's grant
of July 1, 1810, was to Yorba and Peralta in company.
In his petition of
Nov. 24, 1809, Yorba says nothing of any previous occupancy by himself or
others. Reg. Brands, MS., 34.
664
Oramas served here in 17 92-3 42 Juan Martin in 1794-6; Juan Lope Cortes in 1796-8; and
Pedro de San Jose Estevan to 1800 and later, so that
the mission had always three padres.
They baptized
Cristobal
1,267 natives, but they buried 1,1 24,* so that the community was increased only from 1,040 to 1,140, standIn large
ing now third instead of second in the list.
stock San Gabriel stood fourth, with a gain from 4,220
to 7,090 head; while in sheep it was second to San
Juan only, its flocks having increased from 6,000 to
In agricultural products San Gabriel was a
12,360.
tie with San Buenaventura in 1800, with a crop of
9,400 bushels, the smallest having been 3,600 in 1793,
and the average about 6,400.
Jose Maria Verdugo, owner of a rancho in the
vicinity, was corporal of the mission guard much of
the time down to 1798, and his successor was Pedro*
Poyorena. Jose Miguel Flores, a discharged soldier,
was majordomo down to his death in 179G. 4 *
stone church was half finished in 1794, but in 1800
it had not
There is no record
yet been completed.
of manufacturing industries save that a little cotton
obtained from San Bias was woven; but I suppose
that a beginning of weaving woollen stuffs or of some
42
but
San
little
buried.
having disappeared.
665
command
45
Church-building. St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 5, 29, 100, 110. Cotton-weavii. 6, 100; Arch. Arzo'ivpado, MS., i. 30-2.
July, 1706, 200 arrobas
Due mission
of wool can be had at 20 reals. St. Pap., Sc., MS., vi. 6.
from presidio of San Diego, 1797, $2,881. Prow. St. Pep., MS., xvi. 205. For
Due from Santa Barbara, 1797, $3,311. Id.,
1798,
2,597. M-, xvi. 195.
xvii. 78-81.
Two runaway neophytes from San Gabriel brought in by the
Papagos to Tucson. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 58.
ing. Id.,
4J
Pablo Antonio Cota was born in 174-1, and enlisted in 1768, coming to
He seems to have
California probably in 17G9, and certainly before 1774.
commanded the guard at San Buenaventura from its foundation in 1782 until
He subsequently
1787, when he was removed on complaint of the padres.
commanded at Purisima until replaced by Corporal Ortega in September
1788.
During this time he was engaged in one or two minor explorations
and Indian campaigns. His commission as alfdrez was signed in Mexico Jan.
who
666
7
The total white populacreased from 200 to 370.*
tion of this district, including Los Angeles and the
ranchos, was 675, and neophytes, including San
Gabriel and San Fernando, numbered almost 4,000.
Having no fort,** Santa Bdrbara obtained no part of
the reinforcement of artillerymen and infantry sent
to California in 1796, and was garrisoned by cuera
Company rosters in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xiii.-xxvi. St.
Pap., Sac., MS., i.-iii. List of about 100 persons in 1797 who have comList of 14
plied with religious obligations. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 89-93.
young men fit for military service, but whose parents need their care. Id.
Full list of officers and men in 1798. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil.,
xv. 102-4.
MS., xvii. 20-1. Four foundlings came here to live in 1800. Id., xxviii. By
Borica's order each mission escolta was reduced by one man in 1795. Prov.
Rec., MS., iv. 25; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 171.
48
One brass 6-pounder and three smaller iron pieces at the presidio with
four iron guns at the three coast missions were the armament in 1798. Prov.
St. Pap., Ben. MIL, MS., xvii. 5.
Paper supplied to school and collected
again for cartridges. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 32.
49
Company accounts in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xv. xvii.-viii. xxi.
xxiii. xxviii. St. Pap., Sac., MS., ii. iv. The memorias of supplies were from
$13,000 to $17,000. Account of 1794, credit, $39,737; debit, $38,634. Prov.
St. Pap., Presid., MS., i. 3.
Id. for 1797, cr., $42,377; dr., $43,095. St. Pap.,
Id. for 1798, cr., $40,520; dr., $40,658. Prov. St. Pap. Ben.
Sac., MS., ii. 68.
Total receipts of supplies in 1795, including $6,830
Mil., MS., xvii. 9-11.
from missions, $22,057. Id., xxi. 9. Waste in last memoria 1796, $690.
Prov. Kec., MS., iv. 80. Mission supplies in 1797, $4,623; in 1798, $756.
Prov. St. Pap., Ben. MIL, MS., xvii. 10, 11. Inventory of goods on hand.
;
Dec. 31, 1798, $9,758. Id., xvii. 9. Accountof 1799, cr., $45,728; dr., $46,148.
Prov. St. Pap., Ben., MS., ii. 18,19. Postal revenue from $56 to $105.
Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xxi. 6, 9; xxiii. 8; xxv. 14; St. Pap., Sac.,
MS., vi. 61. Tithes collected from $200 to $800 per year, the expense of collecting being from 15 to 20 per cent. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xix. 4;
xxi. 6; Prov. Rtc., MS., iv. 45-6; vi. 2; Dapt. St. Pap., MS., x.%3, 4; St. Pap.,
In 1792-3, the papal bulls sold amounted to $62. Prov.
Sac., MS., i. 124.
St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xxi. 6.
From 1790 to 1795, only $8 out of $1,177
worth sent. Id., xiii. 4; xxi. 9. In 1797, $87 worth sold, and those remaining ordered burned. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 87. It seems that this sale was a
special one of bulls of the holy crusade. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 79-80.
SANTA BARBARA.
667
Romeu
STA INES
/X^n^ionO.^
^f^^a^r^Jo^^.^
MAP
-^
far
plain
668
fifteen laborers
for six
ical industries
St.
gratification
51
cows.
Why
Rec.,
MS.,
iv.
66, 86.
SANTA BARBARA.
669
c"5
'
'
52
Prov. Pec. MS. iv. 99. July 21 1796, Borica to Goycoechea. The sons
of soldiers and settlers must be urged to learn weaving, tailoring, and pottery.
Id. iv. 72-3.
bricklayer, a carpenter, and a violinista in the company in
Timber for oars sent to San Diego. Id., iv. 88.
1798. Id., iv. 95.
53
Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 4516, 493, 497, 500. The English navigator was
surprised at the failure of the Spaniards to fortify so strong and important a
He mentions two brass nine-pounders before the presidio entrance.
position.
** Sta
Bdrbara, Lib. de Mixion, MS., 29; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 5, 7; Prov.
,
St.
Pap.. MS.,
xii.
92;
xiii.
1,2.
65
See
Prov.
St.
9.
MS.,
670
68
In May the Princesa arrived off the
doing more.
mouth of the Rio Purisima and landed thirty of her
which had come over from Manila to make observations and if necessary convoy the San Bias vessels
southward. 60 On February 3, 1798, occurred the
death of the old pioneer of 1769, Brevet Captain Jose
Francisco Ortega, former commandant of Santa Barbara and for several years living as a retired pensioner
in this vicinity. He left many sons and daughters, and
many
of his grandchildren
still live
in California. 61
The death
CAPTAIN ORTEGA.
671
672
62
and was succeeded
pioneer of 1771, died in 1793
de
Jose
Estevan
Miguel had served since
Tapis.
by
in
was
succeeded
and
1798
1790,
by Juan Lope Cortes.
force
natives
were baptized,
this
1,237
missionary
[By
634 were buried, and the number of neophytes was
increased from 438 to 864 in the ten years. 63 Meanwhile horses and cattle had multiplied from 296 to
Juan Capistrano Maria Hermogenes, Maria Antonio de Jesus, and Josd Maria
Martin. San Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS., 12, 14, 17, 19, 27, 50; Loreto, Lib.
Mision, MS., 198; Taylor's Discoverers and Founders, ii. No. 27.
62
Antonio Paterna was a native of Seville, and served 20 years in the
He left his college in
Sierra Gorda missions before coming to California.
October 1770; sailed from San Bias in the San Antonio Jan. 21, 1771; arrived
at San Diego March 12th, at Monterey May 21st, and back at Sail Diego
July 14th. He was supernumerary at San Gabriel until May 1772, and minister until September 1777.
During this time he was acting president in
1772-3 until Palou's arrival. He was minister at San Luis Obispo from 1777
to 178G; and at Santa Barbara from its foundation, Dec. 4, 178G, until his
death on Feb. 13, 1793. Sta Barbara, Lib. de Mision, MS., 44-5; Arch. Sta
Barbara, MS., vii. 5, G; xi. 221. He had been a zealous and faithful worker.
His body was buried in the mission church on Feb. 14th. Whether it was
subsequently transferred to the new church does not appear from the records.
c3
The discrepancy of about 200 may result from the baptism of certain
natives who were allowed to remain in their rancherias and not included on
the mission registers. There was some correspondence in 1796 about the rancherias of the channel, and their willingness to become Christians if not comBorica
pelled to leave their lands and fisheries and live at the missions.
favored allowing them to remain and adding an extra friar to Sauta Barbara
and Purisima to attend to their instruction, houses or stations being established
at suitable points. St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 92-8; Prov. Itec., MS., iv. 55-6.
In August 1797, 300 natives near the presidio were given over to Lasuen for
baptism on condition of not leaving their rancheria. Id., iv. 92; vi. 54-5.
According to a report of Goycoechea, March 12, 1796, the rancherias from San
Buenaventura to Purisima were as follows: Sisolopoat San Buenaventura; El
Rincon, 5 leagues; La Carpinteria, 11.; El Paredon, 1^1.; Montecito, 1J1.;
Yuctu, at presidio, 1^1.; Sacpili, 2-^1.; Alcas; Gelijec; Geloo; Miguigui, 31.,
Casil, 3 1. ; Quemada, 1 1.; Gaviota, 31.; El Bulito Estait. 21.; Sta Texas (?),
Total number
21.; El Cojo Sisilopo, 11.; Espada, 11.; Pedernales, 1^1.
of gentiles, 1783. 8t. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 94.
Najalayegua, Matita, and
Somes are also named.
61
Weather reports at Santa Barbara. Much complaint in 1795, 1797, and
1800. Prov. St. Pap., MS., vii. 65; x. 117; Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xii. 62;
St. Pap., Sac., MS., vi. 100-1; St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 103-6; Prov. St. Pap.,
tie ii. Mil., MS., xvii. 22; Prov. l\e,c., MS., xi. 136.
According to accounts in
Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., ii. 133-9; ix. 476-83, 494-6, the mission had in
1800 a credit balance in Mexico of $528; a draft from the habilitado for
$1,267; 8309 in money at the mission; $1,061 due from presidio; and 416 due
from private individuals; total, $3,581 in addition to buildings, etc. Supplies
furnished to presidio from 1793 to 1800, $5,179.
Otter-skins sent to Mexico,
full account of mission supplies purchased in Mexico is given in
$1,624.
Santa Barbara, Memorias de los Efcctos remitidos d la Minion para los ailos
673
Much
progress was made in mission buildings durIn 1791 a guard-house and three
ing this decade.
tool-houses were added; in 1792 two large stone
corrals.
In 1793-4 a new church of adobes, tiled and
plastered, 28 x 135 feet, with a sacristy 15x28 feet, and
a brick portico in front, was erected; and in 1794 the
improvements were a granary and spinnery on stone
foundations, a cemetery enclosure 48 x 135 feet, and a
In 1795 a corridor with tile roof and
sheep-corral.
brick pillars was added on the side of the square next
the presidio, and another to the spinnery; four new
rooms for the friars were completed; and beams of
178G hasta 1S10, MS. These supplies were purchased by the padres with their
salaries and with the products of sales of produce.
They consist of implements, groceries, church vestments, and vessels, clothing, etc. The total
amount for this decade was $10,500, of which $8,000 was paid by the sinoilt)*,
and the rest by drafts from the habilitado. In 1800, as I have said, the mission was $528 ahead; but before it owed from $100 to $2.000.
"Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., v. 26-30, 39, 42-5, 49, 53, 58, 61-2; ii. 99,
138-40; St. Pap., Miss., MS., i. 117; ii. 71, 79.
00
Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., ii. 96-7, 129, 137-8. Before October, 165
and
nafjuas of home manufacture had been distributed, 800 yds. of cotton
HIST. OAL., VOL.
I.
674
SAN BUENAVENTURA.
not yet
but
built,
it
675
this time
and
retire,
t/
to the stranger's c.ire, and were positive he would never return. On arrival
the surf prevented landing at the first attempt, and the padre was not a little
frightened as he had not his prayer-book with him. When the natives brought
the book his courage returned and he laughed at his former fears as the sailors
had laughed before. On landing finally, the natives crowded round their
padre to welcome him home and receive his blessing. Vancouver was deeper
impressed with the missionary's piety and the earnest devotion of his neophytes. He noted that the natives were always addressed in their own language, and there is other evidence of this. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 71.
t9
St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 5, 24, 29, 71, 100. In 1791 there were two bells
here belonging to Santa Barbara, which the friars refused to give up. Prov.
In San Buenaventura, Memorias de Efectos remitidos
St. Pap., MS., x. 171.
d la ATision, 1790-1810, MS., we have the mission accounts of supplies from
Mexico, but not so complete nor so clearly stated as in the case of Santa
Barbara. The mission was from $200 to $1,200 in debt during this decade,
but cleared itself early in the next. Due mission from the presidio in 1797,
$1,012. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 78-81.
70
Prov. Pec., MS., iv. 35-6.
71
Francisco Jose" de Arroita came from Spain to Mexico in 1785, was
appointed to California in April 1786, and came to his post with a reputation
from the guardian of being, like his companions, a good man, though somewhat lively (vivo) and without much experience. He served at San Luis
Obispo from April to December 1787, and at Purisima from its establishment
till
sailed for
San
Bias.
676
i.
59.
CHAPTER XXXI.
LOCAL EVENTS AND PROGRESS MONTEREY DISTRICT.
1791-1800.
THE presidial cavalry company of Monterey contained from sixty-two to eighty-five men, including
two officers, six non-commissioned officers, a surgeon,
a phlebotomist, two or three mechanics, fifty privates,
and from two to twenty-four pensioners. After 1796
there were also stationed here seven artillerymen and
twenty Catalan volunteers of Alberni's company, increasing the total force to about one hundred and ten,
who with their families constituted a population de
razon in the jurisdiction of about four hundred, or four
hundred and ninety including Branciforte and Santa
Cruz. About thirty of the cavalrymen were stationed
at the six missions subject to Monterey
San Carlos,
San Miguel, Soledad, San Antonio, San Luis Obispo,
and San Juan Bautista, in which the total population
of christianized natives was four thousand. 1
J
See company rolls in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xiii. 9; xiv. 2;
xvii. 6; xviii. 1; xx. 1; xxi. 2, 11; xxii. 5; xxiii. 2; xxvi. 3, 4, 15; xxvii. 4;
St. Pap., Sac., MS., i. 10-13; iii. 14; iv. 20.
Missions included in the juris-
diction. Sal's report of 1798, in Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 63.
White population in 1800, 518; Indian population, 3,949. St. Pap., Miss., MS., iii. 15.
1677J
678
Diego Gonzalez kept his place on the rolls as nomMonterey company until August
1792, although he had long been absent; and his successor was Leon Parrilla, who held the place until
September 1795, although from incompetency, illand partial insanity he never exercised any
2
health,
authority.
March
179G.
Then
until his
Twelve
Prov.
MS.
with a pension from July 1, 1795. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 213; xiii.
123, 270; Id., Ben. Mil., MS., xxi. 4.
3
1792.
Ortega did not, however, leave Monterey until
Argiiello in
1794 was administrator of tobacco revenues and had a kind of supervision
over all presidio accounts.
Sal in 1799 was called administrador general
de real hacienda for
California. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 136-7; xvii.
list
May
New
MS.,
iv. 176.
HERMENEGILDO
SAL.
679
May 1777, and the next year obtained his appointment as guarda-almacen,
which position he held until February 1782, when he was called to Monterey
to settle the accounts of the defunct store-keeper. Prov. Rec., MS., i. 69, 119;
ii. 75; San Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS., 6.
May 19, 1782, he was made
sergeant of the Santa Barbara Company, and in August received his commission as alfe"rez of Monterey, dated May 29th.
His commission as lieutenant
was dated April 27, 1795, and was received in August or September. Prov.
St. Pap., MS., iii. 209; Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 65; iv. 232; St. Pap., Sac., MS.,
iii. 1, 2, 55.
He was at Monterey from 1782 to 1791, and from 1794 to 1800,
being habilitado from 1782 to 1787 and from 1797 to 1800, and commandant
from 1785 to 1787 and 1796 to 1800. He was at San Francisco as habilitado
and acting commandant from 1791 to 1794. In addition to his other duties
Sal acted as governor's secretary during a large part of Borica's administraHe was present at the founding of Santa Cruz in 1791 and at the conIn 1795 he accompanied Danti in a search
secration of its church in 1794-.
for mission sites.
Don Hermencgildo had a good education for his time,
wrote a fine hand, and was probably the best accountant and the clearest
headed business man in California. Only once was fault found with his
accounts, and an investigation showed that instead of his owing the company
$3,000 as was charged, the company was in debt to him. He was a hasty,
quick-tempered man, prone as a commander to order severe penalties for
offences against his strict discipline, and then to countermand the order when
his anger had passed away.
Stung by the taunts of an anonymous letter
he once made a personal attack upon Capt. Nicolas Soler, accusing him of an
intrigue with his wife. Sal married at San Francisco on May 10, 1777, Maria
Jos<5 Ame'zquita, San Francisco, Lib. de Minion, MS., 10, 55, 72, by whom he
had several children, some of whom died in infancy. Vancouver, who speaks
in the highest terms of Sal and his wife, was also delighted with the decorous
behavior of their two daughters and son, and the attention that had evidently
been paid to their education. Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 8. One daughter,
Rafaela, was the first wife of Luis Antonio Argiiello and died at San Francisco Feb. 6, 1814, as shown by the mission records.
Another, Josefa, was
the wife of Sergt. Roca who commanded the artillery at San Diego, and was
left a widow in 1814. S. Diego, Lib. de Mision, MS., 94.
third, unmarried,
was the guest of R. C. Hopkins of San Francisco in 1863, and died before
tion.
680
The
given as $2,362. Id., xxi. 125. Jan. 23, 1794, viceroy approves account
of .$2,609. Id., xi. 159.
Oct. 31, 1795, Argiiello to habilitado general, $1,600
in effects received in 1792
given to persons who worked on presidio to end
of 1792.
These were 3 sergeants, 9 corporals, and 103 soldiers, whose
gratuity amounts to $1,181. Prov. St. Pap., Presul., MS., ii. 2, 3. Dec. 1795,
v'3,122 paid over for building expenses. St. Pap., Sac., MS., vii. 41; Pr<,v.
March 12, 1795, Borica to viceroy, the buildings would
Keel, MS., iv. 182.
have cost very heavily had it not been for the convenient' supply of stone,
The other presidios have not such advantages. St.
lime, sand, and timber.
i3
AFFAIRS AT MONTEREY.
681
did some
damage in October 1792. Vancouver deand gives a view of the presidio as it appeared
in 1792.
It was like that of San Francisco 8 except
that the enclosure was complete. There was a circular
block-house at each corner raised a little above the
top of the wall; there were two or three small doors
besides the main gate -way, and the commandant's
house had boarded floors. He is in error when he
states that the square was 300 x 250 yards, and that
the structure had not undergone the slightest change
scribes
See next chapter for plan and description of San Francisco Presidio.
Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 43-4: View of presidio, ii. 440; view of scene in
Vancouver deemed the site chosen by no means the
Salinas Valley, iii. 334.
There was low marshy ground between the square
best in the vicinity.
and the beach.
10
Aug. 6-9, 1791, instructions addressed to Argiiello about building the
church. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 42. March 1, 1792, viceroy orders work
suspended until further orders. St. Pap., Sac., MS., iv. 1. April 4th, viceroy
sends a plan for church, made by the directors of the academy of architecture
of San Carlos, Mexico. Id., i. 112.
Fages says he followed such a plan, but
Vanthis must have been an earlier one. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 191.
The cost was $1,500,
couver's picture represents the church as completed.
which was refunded to the company by the government. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
206; St. Pap., Sac., MS., vii. 58; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvl. 227. Had it
been built by day-laborers in the usual way the expense would have been at
It was done by troops, sailors, Indians, and
least $5,000, as Borioa believed.
8
682
increase
the cost of
prospective repairs.
at the time of Vancouver's first visit consisted of
seven small guns planted outside the presidio walls
without breastwork or protection from the weather.
At the same time Bodega y Cuadra left some material, and men were set at work on a battery to be
erected on a neighboring eminence.
Accordingly on
Vancouver's return in 1793 he found the guns mounted
on a " sorry kind of barbet battery, consisting chiefly
of a few logs of wood, irregularly placed; behind which
those cannon, about eleven in number, are opposed to
the anchorage, with very little protection in the front,
and on their rear and flanks intirely open and exposed."
This work cost $450, and, while it might serve to prevent a foe from cutting out vessels at anchor, was
entirely useless, as Cordoba reported in 1796, for the
It does not appear that anydefence of the port.
12
its improvement before 1800.
for
was
done
thing
Connected with
this presidio was the main establishdel rey, located where now stands
'
'
xviii. 11.
-
1G2.
MS.,
xvii. 11.
683
re-
14
grants.
In the early part of the decade industrial operawere confined for the most part to the labors of
carpenters, bricklayers, and masons on the presidio
buildings; but later, a tailor, saddler, and one or more
tions
13
In 1798 the change was" still more marked, when there are said to have
been 7,491 horses and 1,200 cattle. This result was attributed to droughts,
thefts, export of females to Baja California, ravages of bears and wolves, foundation of the branch at San Francisco, and the lack of a market for horses.
Scrgt. Macario Castro had charge of the rancho as majordomo, with six soldiers. Gov. to viceroy, Dec. 3, 1798. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 104, 109. Accounts
of the rancho in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xiii. 1, 4; xviii. 1, 2, 7;
xxiii. 3; xxtf. 2, 3; xxviii. 4.
Two hundred fat cattle to be killed annually;
no tallow to come from San Bias; Sta Barbara to be supplied 1792. Prov.
Cattle very numerous in 1794. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii.
Rec., MS., ii. 156.
189-91. Bears very numerous and troublesome in 1792, doing great harm
both to live-stock and to gardens. Prov. Rec., MS., ii. 159. Sheep-raising fos-
,.
684
cers.
15
by the
increased
St.
Pap., MS.,
MINOR HAPPENINGS.
685
the
18
try.
16
Monterey presidial accounts in Prov. St. Pap., Ben. MIL, MS., xiii. 2,
20; xiv. 4, 8; xvi. 5; xvii. 8,9; xviii. 1,5-7,8-11; xix. 7-9; xxiii. 7-9, 11;
xxiv. 17; xxv. 3-5, 8-9, 11-13; xxvi. 5-7; xxvii. 1, 5,6; xxviii. 6, 8, 9,20;
xxxiii. 13, 14; St. Pap., Sac., MS., i. 1-4; ii. 36, 64; v. 71; vi. 118-20; vii.
59, 81-8? ix. 48; Prov. St. Pap., Ben., MS., i. 13; ii. 17, 18; Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xvii. 8, 11, 36-43, 68; xxi. 120; and Perez Fernandez, Cuenta General
de la Habilitacion de Monterey, 1796, MS., which is a very complete report
rendered on turning over the company accounts to Sal. In 1793 the governor pointed out an error in the treasury accounts of about $30,000. The
The baltotals of the habilitado's accounts varied from 60,000 to $85,000.
ance due the treasury or the company was usually only a few hundred dollars.
The company applied to its use the proceeds of tithes, postage, and tobacco,
and paid the amounts by drafts in Mexico, which were charged on the next
memoria. The habilitado's commission in 1796 was $2,780. Debt of company in 1796, $9,788. In 1799 a robbery of $800 from the warehouse is noted.
The/oncZode retencion amounted in 1799 to $3,037 after $587 had been paid
This fund was due to 36 men, or not quite $100 to each.
out.
17
686
fornia.
687
'
117.
688
bear.
21
At San Antonio
in neophyte, population
Cattle and
Clara, San Diego, and San Gabriel.
horses had decreased from 2,232 to 2,217, having
been as low as 1,175 in 1795. Small stock had increased only from 1,984 to 2,075; but 240 goats had
Crops were 1,700 bushels in
disappeared altogether.
in
1799
and 420 bushels in 1795
bushels
1800, 4,200
22
the
and
the
extremes,
average 2,200 bushels.
being
In 1787 the San Antonio church was mentioned as
one of the best in California; in 1793 a block eighty
varas long and one vara thick was built for friars'
houses, church, and storehouse; and in 1797 the church
The huts
is mentioned as of adobes with tile roof.
of the neophytes were of a more substantial character
than at San Carlos. 23 The two venerable founders
Pieras and Sitjar served together until 1794, when
21
Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 20-7. Estanislao was freed by an order of
Arrillaga dated Loreto, Sept. 13, 1792.
22
Wheat was the leading crop, barley and corn varying greatly, but the
latter generally in excess.
1794-6 were very hard years. In 1795-6 the
Indians killed a good deal of stock, and Lasuen favored severe measures, to
dispel the Indians' prevalent idea that Spanish forbearance proceeded from
weakness. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xii. 04-5. Supplies to the presidio in
Hard times
1795-6,
1,490 and $483. Pro?-. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 203, 206.
in respect of church vestments in 1795-1800. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xii.
C2
"' 64
23
Pages, Informe Gen., MS., 146; Si Pap., Miss., MS., i. 121; ii. 120-1;
Report inProv. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 65. The exact meaning of the report of 1793 is not clear. In 1794 an adobe room 14 x 9 varas, and a tileroofed pozolera, or porridge -room, were completed.
Sal's
689
his place
At San
24
Miguel Pieras was a native of the island of Mallorca; was appointed to
the California missions in August 1770; left the college in October; sailed
from San Bias in January 1771; arrived at San Diego March 12th, and at
Monterey May 21st. His only service as regular minister was at San Antonio where he served from the foundation July 14, 1772, to April or May 1794.
His last signature in the mission-books was April 27th. His license from
the viceroy was dated Jan. 10th, and that of the governor on May 31st. I
have found nothing in the records bearing upon his character. For his handwriting and autograph see San Antonio, Doc. Sueltos, MS., 18, 22.
25
Nothing is known of Padre Benito Catalan beyond the fact that he
served at San Antonio, was one of the unfortunate padres afflicted with insanity, Lasuen, in Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 56, and sailed from San Diego
on the Conception in January 1800.
26
Miguel Giribet came to California in 1785 where he served two years at
San Francisco and 12 at San Luis Obispo. It is noticeable that President
Lasuen in a letter of Aug. 13, 1799, to Borica, credits Giribet with only 12
years of service in California. He was zealous and successful, but as was so
frequently the case his health was unequal to his task. His last signature on
the San Luis books was on Oct. 2, 1799.
His license from the governor was
dated Aug. 22d, and he sailed from San Diego on Jan. 16, 1800. He died in
1804 at the college. Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., xi. 60-1, 283, 294; Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 56; S. Francisco, Lib. de Mision, MS.; S. Luis Obispo, Lib.
de Mision, MS.
27
Bartolomd Gili came to California in 1791, and served irregularly, as
supernumerary for the most part, at San Antonio, Soledad, and San Luis,
from 1791 to 1794. He was one of the few black sheep in the missionary fold.
He asked leave to retire in 1793 on a plea of ill-health, but his request was
denied until a full report could be rendered respecting the peculiar nature of
his illness and his immoral excesses for a period of five years. The full results
of the investigation are not known; but Gili sailed as chaplain of the Conception in August 1 794.
HIST. CAL., VOL.
I.
4A
690
28
water-power
barley was raised at this mission.
mill was finished early in 1798; a miller, smith, and
carpenter of the king's artisan instructors were sent
here in 1794; and a small quantity of cotton from
San Bias was woven on the mission looms. 29 The
church, of adobes with tile roof, was built before
1793, in which year a portico was added to the front.
In 1794 the ministers' house, work-room, barrack,
and guard-house were completed. The native huts
here were well built and afforded sufficient protection
fire.
30
by what seems
Four
parties,
CENTRAL DISTRICT.
MAP
or MONTEREY.
691
CHAPTER
XXXII.
SAN FRANCISCO OFFICIALS MILITARY FORCE POPULATION FINANCE PRESIDIO BUILDINGS PLAN CASTILLO DE SAN JOAQUIN AT FORT POINT
C6RDOBA's REPORT RAVAGES OF ELEMENTS REPAIRS BATTERY OF
YERBABUENA AT BLACKPOINT VANCOUVER'S VISITS CAPTAIN BROWNMINES DISCOVERED ALBERNI'S COMPANY WRECK OF THE SAN CARLOS
THE ELIZA RANCHO DEL REY MISSION VERSUS PRESIDIO
INDIAN AFFAIRS RUNAWAY NEOPHYTES AMADOR'S CAMPAIGNS
PADRE'S CRUELTY SAN FRANCISCO MISSION FATHERS CAMBON, ESPI,
DANTI, GARCIA, AND FERNANDEZ BUILDINGS, STATISTICS, INDUSTRIES
PUEBLO OF SAN JOSE INHABITANTS AND OFFICIALS STATISTICS HEMP
CULTURE LOCAL EVENTS PROPOSED REMOVAL BOUNDARY DISPUTE
SANTA CLARA PENA AND NOBOA POPULATION, AGRICULTURE, BUILDINGS, AND MANUFACTURES.
'
'
THE
'
'
1
These brief statements are made from a careful study of the Go distinct
references to different archives which are before me, but which it would serve
no good purpose to print. About the date of Argiiello's return there is some
confusion.
May 2, 1795, viceroy's order tLat Argiiello rejoin his company.
Prov.
St.
Pap., MS.,
PRESIDIAL COMPANY.
693
tenant-colonel Pedro de Alberni, captain of the Catalan volunteers, by reason of his superior rank in the
army, was commandant of the military post from
April 1796. The alferez of the presidial company
was Ramon Lasso de la Vega until the end of 1791,
MS.,
vii.
694
March 4,
was
left
MS.,
xi.
1792.
51-2, 56;
Nov.
1,
xii. 42.
PRESIDIO BUILDINGS.
695
1792.
and
clothing, of stones
dwellings.
and mud.
The other
C06
whose
sides
enclosed
by a
cattle.
Above this wall the thatched roofs of their
low small houses just made their appearance." One
"
side was
very indifferently fenced in by a few bushes
here and there, fastened to stakes in the ground."
The wall was " about fourteen feet high, and five feet
in breadth, and was first formed by uprights and horizontal rafters of large timber, between which dried
sods and moistened earth were pressed as close and
hard as possible, after which the whole wr as cased with
the earth made into a sort of mud plaster, which gave
it the appearance of durability."
The church had
been whitewashed and was neat in comparison to the
The floor in the commandant's house was the
rest.
native soil raised about three feet above the original
level.
The windows were mere holes in the thick
5
without
walls,
glass.
In 1793-4 complaints and calls for aid continued,
but attention was given almost exclusively to new
fortifications on the shore to the neglect of the presidio
5
Vancouver's Voyage, ii. 7-9. There is a communication from Sal to
Arrillaga dated Nov. 29th, stating that work on the building was finished,
tile roofs on the church, warehouses, and nine new houses for soldiers; but
this does not agree with the other records, and I am at a loss to know why
such a letter was written. St. Pap. , Sac. , MS. , i. 118. August 20, 1 793, the governor informs the viceroy of the bad condition of the buildings, although
$1,400 have been spent on repairs since the foundation. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xxi. 114-15.
Dec. 29th, Sal to Borica, the $1,200 gratuity for the troops for
building the presidio not yet received; nor are there any lists. Hints that
the other presidios get $4,000. Id., xi. 54, 57.
PROGRESS IN BUILDINGS.
697
site
1800.
Still
fortifications.
6
Aug. 8, 1794,- Perez Fernandez and others state that nothing has been
done, and the soldiers are overburdened with work. The buildings should be
solidly constructed to avoid later repairs, and he and the commandant will
guarantee to complete the work economically and well if a few mechanics can
be furnished. St. Pap., Sac., MS., v. 108-10. Arrillaga informs Borica of the
needs of San Francisco in 1794. Papel de Pantos, MS., 192. Jan. 31, 1794,
commandant to governor; house of 2d officer in a bad state; adobes and tiles
melting away; will try to save the timbers. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 66.
Feb. 1, 1794, rain came near spoiling the powder, but hides "and tiles were
arranged to save it. Id., xii. 56.
7
Nov. 1, 1794, commandant to governor. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 35-6.
Dec. 3, Borica's reply. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 28, 54-5. June 27, 1795, B. to
viceroy, old buildings ready to fall; total expenses since 1776, $8,188; presiDec. 4, 1795, V.
dio, 2,889 varas from fort ; new one, 481 varas. Id., vi. 51.
R. to B., advises that the new structures be not undertaken, but wants addixiii.
Jan.
tional information. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
32-6.
22, 1796, a heavy
gale did much damage to church and one house. Prov. St. Pap. Ben. Mil.
calls
for a report from
v.
June
B.
xxiii.
Prov.
81.
6, 7;
Rec., MS.,
16,
MS.,
Alberni. Prov. St. Pep., Ben. Mil., MS., xxiv. 7. June 30th, Alberni toB.,
he disapproves the removal, because the San Joaquin hill has no water and
is less sheltered; but the coming rains will bring the old buildings down, and
a new presidio should be begun. C6rdoba agrees with Alberni. St. Pap., Sac.,
MS., iv. 36-7. July 20, 1797, Argiiello to B. The old complaints. Nothing
done yet. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 11, 12. Aug. 8, Id. to Id. Warehouses
badly built and in great danger from fire. Id., xvi. 39. Aug. 19, B. orders
Argiiello to have warehouses of stone or adobe built. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 267.
In January 1800 a huricane tore off several roofs; $1.799 were spent in repairs
during the year; and complaints continued. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xviii. 24-7;
,
xxi. 31.
8
One hundred and ninety-two dollars spent on quarters for volunteers.
Expenditure approved by viceroy Feb. 28, 1798. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xviL
10, 11.
698
deemed best
9
699
the port
700
treasury.
The
was fired; the guns were badly mounted and for the
most part worn out, only two of the thirteen twentyfour pounders being serviceable or capable of sending
a ball across the entrance of the port.
The w hole
work, protected by an adobe wall with one gate, was
commanded by a hill in the rear, and the garrison of
T
10
Jan. 30, 1794, Sal to governor, has begun to fell timber; guns on the
esplanade. Prov. tit. Pap., MS., xii. 47-51. Jan. 31st, 6 guns in the battery
The padres endeavored to obtain an extra
facing the harbor. Id., xii. C7.
blanket and pair of breeches for each neophyte laborer per month but failed;
1,500 adobes being made daily.
April 30th, a sergeant and four soldiers in
charge of the laborers. Id., xii. 74. Twenty-two Indians ran away in April.
Id., xii. 53. June 9th, viceroy acknowledges receipt of advices on measures
taken to complete the provisional esplanade. Id., xi. 174. Jan. 10th, viceJune 12th, governor's
roy's orders to use fascines and reduce expenses.
condestable, carpenter, and two sawyers
reply. Id., xxi. 143-4; xii. 120.
sent from San Bias, and a bricklayer and tile-maker were also retained. The
r
Dec. 1st, comtroops did most of the w ork. Arrillaga, in Id., xii. 191-2.
xii. 31.
'
701
xvii.
8.
St.
Pap.,
xiv. 119.
Dec. 6th, Borica to V. R., announces damages caused by
rains. St. Pap., Sac., MS., iv. 69.
Dec. 27th, V. R. to B., will send the
needed armament of heavy guns; meanwhile let guns be taken from other
where
are
less
needed.
Id.
, vii.
32-5; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi.
they
places
251. Jan. 30, 1797, Habilitado Carrillo asks for reimbursement of $468
spent on casemate, etc. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 69. March 26th, C6rdoba
wants 11 24-pounders; smaller guns of no use here. Prov. Rcc., MS., vi.
86.
April 4th, B. forwards V. R. 's orders for repairs, etc. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xxi. 251-2; Prov. Rcc., MS., v. 103. April 30th, work on fort not yet
begun. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 148. June, fort repaired, with 6 guns in
front and 3 on each side. Id., xxi. 264. Oct. 24th, 24 sailors left on the
San Carlos for Sr.n Bias. Prov. Bee., MS., vi. Feb. 1, 1798, B. asks the
V. R. for a new fort on the other shore, an increase of armament to 26 24an increase of 128 infantry and 19 gunners in the garrisons, and a
Cndcrs,
t with a patron and 10 sailors. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 69.
March 15, 1799,
another appeal for a boat. Id., vi. 120. December 31, 1798, there were 3
iron 24-pounders, 1 iron 12-pouivder, and 8 brass 8-pounelers. Prov. St. Pap.,
Ben. Mil., MS., xvii. 7. Expenses of the year for repairs $661. Id., xvii. 13.
March 2, 17C9, B. informs V. R. that a rainstorm caused the walls of the fort
to fall, also the new casemate wall, and the barracks are threatened. Prov.
Meanwhile
Rec., MS., vi. 119. July 15th, V. R. will attend to the matter.
let the works be repaired with adobes, fascines, and earth. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xvii. 341. In January 1800 a hurricane broke the flag-staff which fell
on the barracks of the garrison and smashed some tiles. Id., xxiii. 24; xxi. 31.
702
of a foreigner to
The battery
as
it
4,
1797.
is first
On
MAP OF SAN
MAP
FRANCISCO.
703
LOCAL EVENT
704
SAN
HOOT,
Fi.'A.V
<
decide,
mention here
As Vancouver
(inlx-r
l,uwn vvliidi
,-i.t,
IK-
supposed
|,<-
1.
li'-rds
in
on
flu-
distance.
planted
Af'l.cr
where Uie
lier-e,
ili/alioii
<-i\
;i
\v;is
<.v-
;md
I,
IK;
ju;il sli<ol,iii;^
now
he
s(,;ind
contact \vilh ( 'onini;ind;ml, S;il ;ind
rnli-rl.-iiucd ;il,
he presidio, where he wile of |)on
recived
him u
Hermonegildo
decently dressed, seated
Ona ni;ii, pl;iced OH a Small stjunre wooden
]>|jiiioj-ni r.-iised 1,hf-ee or Coin- inehes from i,lie ground,
nearly in Ironl, of !,he door, \\ il,h <,\vo d.-ui^hters ;ind a
dil-ion
llx- hills
cj|,y
inlo
<';iine
I,
I,
'
receive
\i
ii
riirn he
most kindly
:IIM|
wafl
JMK!
l);i.n!,]'.
i\v
\,.,
<re;ii<-d
;ill
lh;il,
invil.ed
(,o
1,
falhers
l.y
w;is
l,o
he mission
I
jjiii(l;jc<
on
s<u-n
Ix;
;i
he
peninsula, mm-h n)or<- lh;in il, w.-is prn<leiil, l,o l<-1, him
,-md ihoii^h .^re;illy
snrpii:cd ;\i, Uie we;i!
ind poverl-y of i,h<;
Sp;inish esl,al>lishmen<> ;in<l the
l;iek of "those ;irtiel<-s which ;doiie e;m render- l,lu;
en!,i;ilx of life
of heiliIi:
lied," yet for the
c,-|p;il>|e
see,
<
I'-
kindness
words of
the people
The Spaniards
IK;
had nothing
their wont
at
his
and
he
plaerd everything
disposal,
interpreted
then- oilers somewhat too literally, makiii" a, \i.,il, to
hui,
praise.
as
is
"
Santa
('lara
thai
f~*>
made no survey
.'I
IH-J
sidio.
ler
was
all'orded
him
for ohiainiii^-
Kvery la<-ili<,y
wood, water, and supplies, though the earls plaeed at
the, di;
poi.il ion of the sailors were found to he a more
clumsy ;md useless rontrix aiiee on land than the rude
vi
FOILI-:I<;\
705
for
Gfh Sal
on the
the. for
fhe.^e
facts
with
his
that
opinion
reported
era, ft meant mischief, though
jretendin^ to he hound
i
for Noo<,ka.
In
he
l-'arallones, a.nd
f.hrec
I7^:>
mii;es
San
railed
'r
,
th<
'-tive
..nd M peranxa.
ihridora., liuei;
of them was expectx;d to y ie.Jd 'jold, a nd the others
silver or quicksilver,
Specimens of the 01
/ l-'ernandex to the governor, hut Mont
experts failed to discover metal fttcept in
The eomin;/ of Alherni and his. company of
men.
volunteers was the event of I7'JO, hut heyond a, hare
One
'
loiihlin;/
-'-/',;
V',y"j<-..
left
the-
no
reenforcomei,
t.racc
in
local ai
San
the population of
POT
ii
'
I'ni't.lj":
voy-
Mill''.
"M;.n:h
i
(\c,l.
ft..
Hit.h.
iiS,
Bept, 30tL
'..
Pap.,
'<"..,
M
8t.
17'
ii
i'"i>
19
''"
,
-n
I.
45
UJajforiMMW-y-
706
16
strictions.
19
There were two topics of local interest at San Franwhich affected the mission not
These were the establishment
The royal
of the rancho del rey, and Indian affairs.
rancho had been founded here in 1777, with 115 head
of cattle, which were pastured on the hills about the
presidio.
16
men had
707
20
ravages of wild beasts, so that in 1791 they numbered
over 1,200.
At the end of March of this year the
plished in
cattle being
at Buriburi
Net proceeds of sales, $91. Id. Sales in 1791, $81. Id., xv.
of cattle at transfer on March 31, 1791, 1,215 head. St. Pap.,
Miss, and Colon., MS., i. 68. The rancho was moved by order of Fages,
Id., or by order of commandant general at request of padres. Prov. 8t. Pap.,
MS., xvii. 14-16. Statistical reports show that the soldiers had from 96 to
147 cattle down to 1797 and then the number increased to 500 or 600, not
including the king's cattle. In 1793 the number was 115, and the names of
MS.,
5.
xiii.
6, 7.
Number
14 owners, 23 credited to Juan Bernal being the largest number, are given
from an old inventory in II'alley's Centennial Year Book of Alameda Count//,
There is quite a mass of information from the archives given in this
27.
work, but there are nearly as many blunders as words in the translation,
copying, and printing. In 1794, 75 cattle for food were sent up from Monterey. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xii. 30.
22
Borica to commandants April 30, 1796, Aug. 15, Sept. 1, 1797. Prov.
Rec., MS., v, 85, 269; iv. 255-6.
Argiiello to B. Sept. 29th. Prov. St. Pap.,
MS., xvi. 92.
708
23
natural and legal rights.
Borica, being called upon
asked
an
for
explanation,
Argliello for a report in
eleven
the
which
question were, clearly
governor's
answered. According to this report the mission was
in no respect injured by the king's cattle at Buriburi,
feeding on the hills westward to the Canada de San
Feb. 5, 1798, guardian to viceroy, in Prov. St. Pap. y MS., xvii. 14-16.
Horses were kept 10 leagues distant; sheep under a salaried man six leagues
away; and the oxen not actually at work were also pastured at a long distance.
24
But according to Prov. Rec., MS., v. 103, Argiiello himself had received
a provisional grant of El Pilar in 1797.
25
June 14, 1798, Borica to Argiiello. St. Pap., Miss, and Colon, MS., i.
68-70. Argiiello, Informe sobre el Rancho del Rey y su wfluencia y rclacion con
la Mision de San Francisco, 24 de Julio 1798, MS.
Salazar speaks of S. Pedro
or Punta de Almejas. Arch. Sta Barbara, ii. 75.
26
March 13, 1799, Viceroy Azanza to Borica. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii.
220.
June 5th, to commandant. Prov. Rcc., MS., iv. 298. Dec. 31st, number of cattle in the rancho, 879. Net yield from sales, $179. Prov. St. Pap.,
Ben. Mil, MS., xxviii. 5.
INDIAN AFFAIRS.
709
faithful before.
old
In
In February 1793 a
war on
all
vi. 37.
28
March 3, May 3, May 29, 1795, commandant to Borica. June 23d, B. to
viceroy. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii. 241-2, 275-6; Prov. Rec., MS., v. 50, 56;
I suppose the Sacalanes lived in what is now Alameda County,
vi. 48-50.
somewhere between Oakland and Mission San Jose". The messengers are
said to have travelled two nights and one day before reaching the rancherias.
Borica says the Chimenes did the killing and lived 30 leagues from Bodega
on the coast. Subsequent expeditions show, however, that the Sacalanes,
the guilty parties, did not at any rate live north of the bay. The commandant
charges Danti with having at first pronounced the story of the survivors a lie,
and with attempting later to keep it from the knowledge of the officers.
July 6th, Borica to friars, regrets that they continue sending Indians to the
other side of the bay. It must be stopped. Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 146. Sept.
18th, V. R. approves B.'s policy of avoiding war. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xiii.
82.
710
29
name
Baja California
'of
xiii.
01;
MS.,
AMADOU'S EXPEDITION.
natives killed.
711
The Cuchillones
31
los fjentiles
perteneciente al asunto, 1796, MS.; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 170-8; xvi.
The diary is dated San
38-9, 70-1, 88, 90; Prov. Eec., MS., v. 206-7.
Jose, July 19th, and the papers include: July Gth, Argiiello to Borica; July
8th, Amador to B.; July 10th, B. to A.; July 19th, A. to B..; July 21st, B.
to A.
Christians not to be punished, but gentiles kept at work on presidio;
July 26th, receipt of Espi and Landaeta for 79 returned neophytes. Returning natives have never been punished. July 30th, Argiiello to B., has given
neophytes and will try the gentiles.
up the
s2
Argiiello, Relation de lo que dedararon los Gentiles Sacalanes, 1797, MS.;
'
work.
712
34
No further troubles occurred
ages of an epidemic.
at San Francisco, but the Sacalanes~and other gentiles
continued their hostile influence at San Jose mission,
several times requiring the presence of Amador, who
in April 1800 made another raid, killing a chief, capturing twenty fugitives, and breaking all the bows
and arrows of the foe. 35
Something remains to be said of San Francisco Mis-
sion,
where we
left
in charge as
ferent dates. 37
34
July 1, 1798, Borica to viceroy, in Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 97-8; Lasucn,
Representation, 1801, MS., in Arch. Sta Barbara, ii. 202-5.
35
Amador, Salida contra Indios Gentiles, 1SOO, MS. Also on slight previous
troubles at San Jose". Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvi. 173-4; xvii. 97, 100-1, 106-7.
36
Pedro Benito Cambon, a native of Santiago in Galicia, Spain, was ordered
served there until April 1772. He then spent several years at Velicata in
Baja California for the benefit of his health, and to look after Franciscan
He went to San Francisco in Oct. 1770, but was absent from Oct.
property.
1779 until May 1782, during which time he made a trip from San Bias to
Manila as chaplain of the San Curios, devoting his pay to the purchase of supplies for his neophytes, and also founded San Buenaventura in March 1782.
He was a zealous and able man, but his health repeatedly broke clown, and
finally in November 1791, at the request of Lasuen, and on a certificate signed
by three surgeons, he was permitted to depart without waiting for the viceHis last signature on the mission -books was on Sept. 10th. S.
roy's license.
years
chaplain with the expedition of Martinez, which touched on the California
MISSION STATISTICS.
713
115.
Josd Maria Fernandez left his college in February and arrived at San
Francisco in September 1796, serving until May 1797 as minister, receiving
his license in July, and leaving California a little later. He was a very kindhearted man, and as we have seen Borica gave him great credit for having
secured better treatment for the natives at San Francisco; but a blow on
the head accidentally received affected his health and especially his mind to
such an extent as to incapacitate him for missionary labor. San Francisco, Lib.
de Mixion, MS.; Arch. Ma Barbara, xi. 57-8; Prov. Bee., MS. vi. 98.
38
May 28, 1791, Fages informed Romeu that the padres of San Francisco
had formed a new establishment seven leagues away, where they kept most
of their neophytes. Prov. St. Pap., MS., x. 149; but we hear no more of the
subject. The controversies between mission and presidio about pasturage, and
the alleged inferiority of San Francisco cattle, have been already noticed. In
Prov. Bee., MS., vi. 79, it is stated that sheep-raising was introduced in
1796, but no special increase appears in the statistics for that year.
May 19,
1797, Argiiello says the San Francisco sheep being of Merino stock may be a
He wanted to buy 100, but Landaeta refused to
little better than elsewhere.
sell. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv. 8, 9.
714
39
5,800 bushels in 1796; the smallest 1,200 in 1792,
and the average 3,600 bushels. The mission buildings were described by Vancouver as forming two
sides of a square, without any apparent intention of
completing the quadrangle, the architecture and material being as at the presidio, but the apartments
At this time
larger, better constructed, and cleaner.
all roofs were of thatch, and the dwellings of the Indians were huts of willow poles, basket-work of twigs,
and thatch of grass and tules, about twelve feet high,
six or seven feet in diameter, and "abominably infested with every kind of filth and nastiriess."
In
houses
were
which
number
nineteen
adobe
1793
built,
was subsequently increased until in 1798 there were
enough for most of the married neophytes. In 1794
a new storehouse 150 feet long was built and roofed
with tiles as were some of the old buildings, and half
a league of ditch was dug round the potrero and fields.
In 1795 another adobe building 180 feet long was
erected; and tile roofs were completed for all the
structures, including the church, about which from the
laying of the corner-stone in 1782 nothing more is
recorded down to 1800. 40 At the time of Vancouver's
39
Where the cultivated fields were situated at this time does not appear.
In 1795 supplies furnished to the presidio amounted to $2,831. Prov. Y?ec.,
MS., v. 26. In January 1795 cold weather prevented the padres from saying mass. Id., v. 40-1. From 1797 to 1800 regular weather reports were
rendered at the end of each year. 1797 was cold, windy, and foggy. St. Pap.,
In 1798 the summer began with 'terrible and continuSac., MS., vi. 100.
ous wind' and fog, and the winter with frost, heavy rains, and roof-damaging
winds. Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., xvii. 22-3. In 1799 little rain,
heavy north winds, and much frost. Id., xxvii. 2. 1800, heavy rains, some
frost,
40
a suplemento de
iglesia,
a temporary
affair.
ANNALS OF SAN
715
JOSfi.
to come to San Francisco to learn to make pot53-4; v. 78, 206; vi. 230. Some cotton from San
Bias was woven before 1797. St. Pap., Miss., MS., ii. 100.' In 1798 the mission contracted to furnish tiles to the presidio at $20 per thousand. Prov. St.
tery. Prov. Rec.,
MS.,
iv.
716
PRIVATE RANCHOS.
717
44
These figures include wheat, corn,
1,800 in 1799.
and beans, but not hemp, the culture of which was
introduced into California in 1795, San Jose being
selected as the place for the experiment, and Ignacio
Vallejo as the man to superintend it. Small crops of
this staple were raised nearly every year during the
last half of the decade.
Some rude machinery was
constructed for its preparation, and several small lots
of the prepared fibre were sent to Monterey for ship-
ment
to
San
Bias.
45
Jan. 15, 1795, Borica urges increased attention to agriculture and promises preference in the purchase of supplies. Dept. St. Pap., S. Jose, MS., i.
March 29, 1796, Borica is glad to know the reservoir is finished and
45-G.
he offers a premium of $25 to the man who shall raise the biggest crop. Prov.
Rec., MS., iv. 186.
Sept. 1796, Borica congratulates San Jose on her wheat
In May he had soundly rated the comisionado for not planting more
crop.
corn. Id., iv. 188-9, 196, 202.
May 2, 1796, 10 sacks seed-corn gent from
Monterey. 8. Jose, Arch., MS., ii. 87. Sept. 15, 1797, complaints of bad
quality of San Jose" flour. Id., v. 32. May 30, 1798, Borica orders the settlers
to enclose their fields. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 272, 293. -Aug. 31, 1799, Vallejo
to B., very poor wheat crops caused by chahuiste. Asks for time to pay
loans and tithes. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xv'ii. 229.
45
Dec. 23, 1795, Borica to Moraga ordering him to afford Vallejo aid in the
way of grain with which to pay native laborers. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 241.
Dec. 4th, Argiiello to Moraga, transcribes B.'s note of Dec. 1st, with viceroy's
order of Aug. 26th, in reply to Borica's of Feb. 1st, with instructions on preparation of hemp, and promise of instruments. S. Jose, Arch., MS., iv. 28.
Lands of Linares taken and others given him. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 177-80.
July 3, 1796, B. regrets loss of first crop; but five fanegas of seed were saved.
Id., iv. 192, 199. August 13th, B. to Vallejo, carpenter B<jar to make machinGrain to be sown for rations of native laborers. Id., iv. 197. About 30
ery.
fauegas of seed harvested in 1796-7. Twenty-five arrobas (625 lb?.) sent to
San Bias in 1798. Id., vi. 103; St. Pap., Sac., MS., iv. 70. Numerous minor
communications on the subject during 1797, showing great interest on the
part of Borica and even the V. R. Prov. St. Pop.-,. MS., xv. Seven bales
shipped in September 1800. Crop in 1800-1 not good. Prov. Rec., MS., iv.
15; S. Jose, Arch.,
40
MS.,
iii.
Application and grant recorded in Prov. Rec., MS., v. 103; but in 1798 Argiiello himself names El Pilar as belonging to the mission. Argiiello, Informe
sobre Rancho del Rey, MS. In his report of 1794 Arrillaga says that the settlers
of San Jose formerly did not possess their lands in property, and the land annually assigned them by the comisiouado was not properly cultivated because liable
next year to fall into the hands of another. The comisionado was therefore or-
718
we have
tures.
48
The
showed a
settlers
in 1792,
finally set
when
49
Sept. 25, 1797, reference to a bridge over the creek. Prov. Itec., MS.,
April 3, 1799, if the people want a chapel they may use the community grain to build it. Id., iv. 292.
48
Jan. 1795, Borica urges the people to tan hides and make saddles, boots,
and shoes, etc. which will be purchased at fair prices if of good quality. He
will have no idleness. Prov. Itec., MS., iv. 220.
Leocadio Martinez, carpenOct. '28, 1798,
ter, was exiled here in 1796. San Jose, Arch., MS., ii. 79.
Larios and Balesteros allowed to build a water-mill. Prov. Rcc., MS., iv.
283.
July 1799, reference to Villavicencio's weavery at San Jose". Id., iv.
300.
"ArriUaga, Papel de Puntos, MS., 188. Sept. 30, 1800, Castro to Sal, with
certificate of alcalde and Ramon Lasso.
Oct. 2d, Sal to Arrillaga transmitDec. 13th, governor's orders to Sal and Alberni. Prov.
ting the complaint.
iv. 257.
St.
Pap., MS.,
PUEBLO VS MISSION.
719
break occurred. 50
MS.,
directed the people to build across the river. Id., xvii. 241. No date, Jose"
settlers did not desire the removal. Id., xvii. 241.
720
721
was not
fulfilled;
I.
46
72-2
on inventories, tithes, loan of seed, and moral supervision. San Jose, Arch.,
MS., vi. 40. August 22, 1800, Sol to comisionado. No one from Branciforte
Alcalde has been instructed about those who beat
to sow grain at San Jose".
children.
Comisionado to look after crops which are being neglected. Mules
won't sell at any price. If Larios will not pay tithes he must not sow. San
Oct. 4th, patrol after 11 p. M. to prevent disorders
Jose, Arch., MS., iii. 68.
and fires and arrest any one abroad without cause. A scouting party to be
the
for
Oct. 7th, if Heredia refuses to aid in
country. /(/. iii. 65.
organized
repairs to the depdsito, give him 40 days to leave the jurisdiction with all his
family and belongings. Id., iii. 64. Only those duly registered as vecinos can
sow without special license. Id., iii. 58. Oct. 15th, petitions can be sent only
through the comisionado. Id., iii. 48. Oct. 25th, if Hernandez is found with
a knife he is to get 50 lashes; neither must he get drunk nor create scandal.
,
Id.,
iii.
36
71.
Tomas de
In 1795 he received some votes for guardian of the college, and was
subsequently elected, since he held the position in 1798. He was also sindic
P. Pena was
of the college from 1800 to Feb. 9, 1806, the date of his death.
an able and successful missionary, but hot-tempered and occasionally harsh
He was accused before 1790 of having
in his treatment of the neophytes.
caused the death of two boys by his blows; but after a full investigation the
charge was proven false, the Indian witnesses confessing that they had testified falsely, and some evidence being adduced to show that Commandant
Gonzalez, whom the padre had reproved for his immorality, had used his
The formal decision was not reached
influence in favor of the accusation.
until 1795, after the padre had retired to Mexico; but he interceded with
tiago.
723
stay in California was a prey to that peculiar hypochondria which affected so many of the early missionIt
aries, amounting at the last almost to insanity.
is possible that in his case this condition was aggravated by serious but unfounded charges of having
two Indian boys by ill-treatment. The sucthe ministry were Magin Catala, 57 and
Manuel Fernandez, but the latter served only a year,
being accused of excessive severity toward the natives,
and then came Jose Viader. For three decades I
shall have no further changes in ministers to record
at Santa Clara.
In 1800 this mission had a larger neophyte population than any other in California, showing a gain from
927 to 1,247, baptisms having numbered 2,288, and
killed
cessors in
the authorities in behalf of his Indian accusers, who were released after publicly apologizing to the ministers for their attempt to bring dishonor on the
President Lasuen in May 1794 spoke of his condition as being pitiaorder.
ble, for he had became emaciated, talked to himself, appeared constantly
afraid, and showed other symptoms which caused fears that he might lose
Pena had a patent as president in case of accident to Lasuen.
his reason.
See Arch. Sta. Barbara, MS., x. 150, 289; xi. 52, 220, 240; xii. 436; Sta
Clara, Lib. de Mision, MS.; Sta Cruz, Lib. de Mision, MS,, 10; Arch. Arzobispado, MS., i. 39; Prov. Rec., MS., iii. 33-5; iv. 234; Prov. St. Pap., Ben.
J/V/., MS., xix. 6; andPe?la, Cargo de Homicidio contra el Padre Tomds de la
Pena, 1786-95, MS. Of Diego de Noboa nothing is known save that he arrived at San Francisco from Mexico on June 2, 1783, remained unattached at
San Francisco and Santa Clara until June 1784, when he became minister of
the latter mission and continued to serve there until he sailed with his associate
'
724
58
Pap., MS.,
61
x. 150.
Aug.
17, 1796,
SANTA CLARA.
725
62
Besides enlarging the church, a trench was dug in 1795, half a league
ii. 78, 122.
long, nine feet wide, and five feet deep. St. Pap., Miss., MS.,
Adobe houses for neophytes. Id., ii. 16, 123. In 1798 they seem to have had
Guardxvii. 59-60.
tile roofs.
Argiiello's report in Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
house finished in 1796. Prov. Rec., MS., v. 92. Vancouver was shown by
Peua a ponderous black stone which was to be used for building and for mill
stones as soon as any one could be found capable of working it. Voyage, ii. 35.
Arch. Sta Barbara, MS., ii. 72-3; St. Pap., Sac., MS., ii. 9, 10; Prov.
St. Pap., MS., xxi. 128-9.
Aug. 1797, rastrasmade at San Jose" for grinding
wheat. Prov. Pec., MS., iv. 253. April 18, 1796, Borica orders Vallejo to
seek suitable stones for a mill; but on May 2d he was directed to suspend the
work. Id.,
vi.
187-8.
CHAPTEE
XXXIII.
END OF A DECADE AND CENTURY BOKICA'S POLICY AND CHARACTER INDUSTRIAL REVIVAL FRUITLESS EFFORTS GOVERNOR'S RELATIONS WITH
FRIARS, SOLDIERS, NEOPHYTES, AND SETTLERS EFFORTS FOR PROMOTION A KNIGHT OF SANTIAGO FAMILY RELATIONS LEAVE OF ABSENCE,
DEPARTURE,' AND DEATH ARRILLAGA AND ALBERNI IN COMMAND LIST
OF SECONDARY AUTHORITIES ON EARLY CALIFORNIA HISTORY LIST OF
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA FROM 1769 TO 1800.
and
727
I have already noted Borica's arrival with his family at Loreto, and in the autumn of 1794, at Monterey.
Fortunately a quantity of his private letters or blotters of the same, were left in California and have been
Lasuen
728
Prov. Rec.,
xiv. 29; xvii. 2.
v. 71; vi. 26; Prov. St. Pap., MS., xi. 197; xiii. 55;
Previous to his appointment as governor lie had been adjutant-inspector in Chihuahua, his pay in that position running to May 13,
1794.
5
MS.,
729
known
8
The document
September.
that
at
Loreto, should
Arrillaga, remaining
provided
be governor ad interim, while Alberni, presumably by
virtue of his seniority of military rank over Arrillaga,
was to take the position of comandante de arrnas for
Alta California. It was the governor's intention to
depart in October, but he was delayed by new orders
from Mexico until the beginning of the next year.
in California in
The viceroy instructed hind, owing to the hostile attitude of British vessels in the Pacific, not to avail
himself of his leave of absence " until the aspect of
9
things should change."
The 3d of January 1800 Borica announced his intention to depart on the 12th or 15th, and the commandants were notified to publish the accession of
7
St. Pap., Sac., MS., vi. 84-5; Prov. St. Pap., Ben. Mil, MS., xxiii. 3.
April 1, 1799, Borica to viceroy, in Prov. Rec., MS., vi. 123-4. Sept.
19th, B. to Arrillaga, Alberni, and the commandants. Prov. St. Pap., MS.,
xvii. 318; Id., Ben. Mil., xxiv. 12; Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 174-5.
Nov. 8th,
Arrillaga's reply. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xvii. 291.
9
to
Borica.
xvii.
Prov.
St.
Dec.
344.
Pap., MS.,
July 6, 1799, viceroy
31st, the V. R. ordered him to use his own discretion as to the need of his
8
presence in California. St. Pap., Sac., MS., iv., 73; but this communication
could not have been received before B. 's departure, and possibly "the preceding
730
10
On the 16th of the same
Arrillaga and Alberni.
month he sailed on the Concepcion from San Diego
with his family, Captain Grajera, and four retiring
Grajera, as we have seen, died two days out
padres.
from port; of Colonel Borica after his departure we
know only by a brief note in a subsequent communication of the viceroy that he died at Durango July
11
19, 1800.
January 16th, the date of Borica's defrom
California, may be regarded as the day
parture
when Arrillaga's third term of rule ad interim began.
There were no events connected with his rule for the
rest of 1800 that require mention here.
tolerably complete and accurate sketch of the northern establishments; and the instructions left by Viceroy Azanza to his successor in 1800 contain frequent
allusions to Californian affairs and have already been
12
It will have been noticed
cited on special topics.
that my foot-notes form an index of authorities on
each succesive phase of the historic record that is
of original authorities in manuscript and print but I
;
10
Jan. 3, 1800, Borica to commandants. Prov. Rec., MS., iv. 114. March
Goycoechea to Arrillaga. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xviii. 23-4. March 8th,
Arrillaga and Alberni ordered to be recognized by Sal. S. Jose, Arch., MS.,
5th,
iii.
51.
11
Departure on the Concepcion. Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 30; Prov. Rec.,
He seems to have gone to San Diego by land after Jan. 3d, or
xii. 1.
at least such had been his plan in September, when Sal had sent an order to
San Jose" for pack-animals for the governor's journey. S. Jose Arch., vi. 43.
Notice of Borica's death in V. R.'s communicatioji of August 14th. 8t. Pap.,
In a letter of Padre Cortes
Sac., MS., ix. 70; Vireyes, Instructiones, 201.
from Mexico dated April 1st, the V. R. is said to have advised the king to
continue Borica in office in California for five years longer. Arch. Sta BarThere is a vague reference to a settler who was severely
bara, MS., xii. 307.
punished for an attempt to take Borica's life. Gov. to V. R., Dec. 5, 1800.
Prov. St. Pap., MS., xxi. 50.
12
California, in Viagero (El) Universal, 6 Notkia del Mundo Anttguo y
Nmvo. Obra recopilada de los mejores viageros por D. P. E. P. Madrid,
See also an article on California in Cancelada, Tele1799, torn. xxvi. 1-189.
grafo Mex., 99-103.
MS.,
SECONDARY AUTHORITIES.
731
this
13
with a
13
Alvarado, Hist. CaL, MS.; Bartlett's Person. Nar.; Browne's Lower
CaL; Bustamante, Suplemento; Cal., Past, Present, etc.; Capron's Hist. Cal.;
Farnham's Life in Cal.; Forbes' Hist. CaL; Frignet, La Californie; Hartmann, Californien; Hayes' Emigrant Notes; Hayes' Mission Books; Haye*'
Scrap-books; llittell's Hist. S. Francisco; Hughes' CaL; Humboldt, EssaiPoL;
Gleeson's Hist. Cath. Ch.; Greenhow's Or. and CaL; Lasstpas, Baja CaL;
Life of St. Francis; Lorenzana, in Cortes, Hist.; Los Angeles, Hist.; Mayer
MSS.; Mofras, Exploration; Morse's Illust. Sketches; Payno, in Revista Cientijica; Randolph's Oration; Ryan, in Golden Era; Shea's Cath. Missions;
Shuck's Cal. Scrap-book; Soidv's Annals of S. F.; Sutil y Mcxkana, Viage;
Baylor, in Farmer, and Bulletin; Taylor's JJiscov. and Founders; Taylor's
Odds and Ends; Tuthill's Hist. CaL; Vallejo's Hist. CaL, MS.; Vischer's
Missions of CaL Also 40 or 50 county histories published within the past
ten years; and numerous newspaper articles, especially in S. F. Bulletin,
There is hardly a paper in the state
Call, and Alta, and Sacramento Union.
that has not published some valuable matter with much of no value.
732
hence there
no doubt that
my list contains a
certain
well be doubted
if so complete a list of the earliest inhabitants can be
formed for any other state of the United States or
Mexico.
attempts at chronology are limited to
the separation of the names into four classes, putting
number of
is
Yet
repetitions.
it
may
My
in the records.
Ramon,
padre.
4
2
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
Al vires, Claudio, servant. 2
Al vires, Juan, soldier. 3
Al vires, Bate" van. 4
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso,
Alviso.
Armenta,
2
Francisco, settler.
Domingo,
soldier. 2
Ignacio, soldier.
4
Javier, settler.
Jose" Antonio, child.*
4
Amador,
Amador,
Amador,
Amador,
Amador,
Amador,
1
Pedro, soldier.
Jos< Sinforoso, child. 3
Jos6 Fructuoso. 3
Juan Pablo. 3
Jose"
Maria, child.*
Marcos Antonio,
child.*
2
Amarrillas, Juan Angel, soldier.
2
Jose"
child.
Gabriei,
Amezqnita,
2
Amezquita, Juan Antonio, soldier.
Jose"
Avila,
Avila,
Avila,
Avila,
Avila,
Avila,
Avila,
Avila,
Francisco.*
Adanto,
Antonio Ignacio. 4
4
Cornelio, settler.
4
Ignacio.
convict.*
Jose",
Jose Antonio,
Maria.*
,-
1
Arce, Jos6 G.
1
Arce, Sebastian.
2
Arce, Joaquin, child.
Arces, Jose", settler.*
2
Archuleta, Josd Ignacio, servant.
2
Archuleta, Jose" Norberto, child.
2
Archuleta, Miguel Ger6nimo, child.
Archuleta, Gregorio, soldier.*
Arellanes, Teodoro.*
2
Arellano, Man. J. R., soldier.
3
Arenaza, Pascual M., padre.
Argiielles, Francisco, artilleryman.*
4
Argiiello, Francisco Rafael, child.
settler.
Avila, Miguel.*
4
Avila, Santa Ana, soldier.
4
Avis, Fructuoso, soldier.
Jose", soldier.
4
Bacilio, Antonio, Cat. vol.
*
Antonio, Jose" Crispin, child.
Antonio, Macedonio, soldier.*
Argiiello,
Argiiello,
Argiiello,
Argiiello,
child. 4
Anastasio.*
Ayala,
Ayala,
Ayala,
Ayala,
Ayala,
2
Arvallo, Feliciano, settler.
1
Avalos, Nicolas.
4
Avalos, Joaquin, tanner.
j^vila, Jos(S
4
Ame'isquita, Serafin, settler.
4
Ma., soldier.
2
Amezquita, Manuel Dom., settler.
Amezquita, Florentine, settler.*
4
Amezquita, Gregorio, settler.
Ame"zquita, Francisco Ma., settler.*
733
1769-1800.
1
Badiola, Manuel Antonio.
4
Balderrama, convict.
3
Ballesteros, Juan, soldier.
3
Ballesteros, Juan Antonio, child.
4
Ballesteros, Javier Antonio, child.
4
Banderas, Jose" F. de la Cruz.
child. 4
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
734
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Eernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
Bernal,
1
Francisco, servant.
2
Jose" Dionisio, soldier.
Juan Francisco, soldier. 2
Manuel Ramon,
soldier. 2
3
Apolinario, child.
3
Juan, child.
settler. 3
Ramon,
Bruno, child.
4
Joaquin, soldier.
Jose" Agustin, child. 4
Campa y
4
Jose", settler.
2
Blanco, Miguel.
2
Bojorges, Jose" Ramon, soldier.
2
Bojorges, Hermenegildo, child.
2
Bojorges, Pedro Antonio, soldier.
4
Bojorges, Francisco H., soldier.
1
Bonnel, Ramon, Cat. vol.
4
Borica, Diego de, governor.
3
Manuel, soldier.
4
Brito, Mariano, artilleryman.
Buelna,
Buelna,
Buelna,
Buelna,
Buelna,
Buelna,
Eusebio
Jose"
Eusebio
Bumbau,
soldier. 2
J. J., child. 4
Raim,
Camacho,
Canizares,
Jose", piloto.
4
Casillas,
child. 3
Jos6 Maria, child. 4
1
Bulferig, Geronimo, Cat. vol.
Jose"
4
Casasallas, Simon, Cat. vol.
2
Antonio, soldier.
Ramon,
Briones,
Briones,
Briones,
Briones,
Briones,
Briones,
Briones,
Briones,
Bernardo,
1769-1800.
Juan Manuel. 1
3
Castafieda, Jose".
Castaneda,
3
Ruiz, soldier.
Jose"
1
Castelo, Agustin, soldier.
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro.
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Castro,
Antonio, soldier.
2
Ignacio, soldier.
2
Joaquin, soldier.
Jose", servant.
Isidro. 2
Jose"
Jose"
3
Macario, soldier.
Simon J. N., child. 3
Mariano soldier. 3
Mariano de la Cruz,
;
child. 3
Agapito, settler.
4
Francisco, settler.
Jose" Joaquin, settler. 4
Jose" S. T., child. 4
4
Simeon, settler.
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
1
Cordero,
Cordero,
Cordero,
Cordero,
Cordero,
Cordero,
Cordero,
Mariano Antonio,
soldier.
Manuel, soldier.
4
Jose"Dom., child.
Miguel E.,
Da vila,
child. 4
4
Pedro, settler.
4
Cordoba, Alberto, engineer.
4
Manuel, carpenter.
1
Dominguez, Juan Jose", soldier.
2
Dominguez, Jose Dolores, soldier.
3
Dominguez, Jose Antonio, child.
3
Dominguez, Jose" Ma. D., child.
4
Dominguez, Cristobal, soldier.
4
Dominguez, Jose" Autonio, child.
4
Dominguez, Jose" Asuncion, child.
4
Dominguez, Jose Francisco, child.
4
Dominguez, Remesio, settler.
1
Duarte, Ale jo Antonio, soldier.
Duarte,
Duarte,
Duarte,
Duarte,
Duarte,
2
Jose" E., child.
4
Fermin, settler.
735
17G9-1SOO.
Juan
Jose",
servant. 4
4
Leandro, soldier.
4
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
736
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Felix,
Antonio Rafael,
child. 4
3
Victorino, soldier.
Fernando de la T., child. 4
Jose", child.*
17G9-1SOQ.
Gamez, Teodoro,
soldier.*
4
Gili,
Bartolome padre.
,
Jose"
Gonoj)ra,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Josc$
Antonio, child.
4
Ma., soldier.
Antonio Alejo.,
soldier. 1
Inocencio, sailor.
2
Cirilo, servant.
Ramon. 2
Nicolds, soldier.'
3
Alejandro, soldier
2
Bernardo, soldier.'
2
Diego, lieutenant.
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Gonzalez,
Felipe, soldier.
3
Eusebio, child.
Jos.!
Tomas,
soldier. 3
Francisco, padre.
Cat. vol. 4
Jose",
Man.
4
Ciriaco, child.
4
Juan, soldier.
4
Pedro, mechanic.
4
Rafael, child.'
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Higuera,
Juan
rs:
Jose", soldier.
Juan
3
Jose", child.
Salvador, soldier.
3
Tiburcio, child.
Tiburcio Javier, child. 4
Hilario. 4
Jose"
1,
soldier. 4
Jose"
2,
soldier. 4
Antonio. 4
Jos6 Joaquiu. 4
Jose"
Manuel,
soldier. 4
2
Jose, servant.
Horchaga, Manuel,
2
Julian, soldier.
Juan
Jose".
2
Joaquin, soldier.
4
Gregorio Ignacio Ma., child.
Nicolas Antonio. 4
4
Salvador, soldier.
3
Horchaga, Jos6 Hilario, child.
3
Horchaga, Jos6 Manuel, child.
2
Grijalva, Jiian Pablo, sergeant.
Guerrero,
Guerrero,
Guerrero,
Guerrero,
Guerrero,
Guerrero,
1769-1800.
soldier. 3
3
Mateo, artilleryman.
3
Guevara, Jose soldier.
4
Guevara, Jose" Canute, child.
Guevara, Jose" Sebastian, child. 4
Guevara, Sebastian, Cat. vol. 4
Guevara, Jose Francisco, child. 4
2
Gutierrez, Ignacio Ma., soldier.
1
2
Ibarra, Francisco, servant.
3
Ibarra, Andres Dolores, child.
3
Ibarra, Gil Maria, child.
3
Ibarra, Jos6 Desiderio, child.
3
Ibarra, Juan Antonio, soldier.
3
Ibarra, Ramon, soldier.
4
Ibarra, Albino, soldier.
4
Ibarra, Antonio, child.
4
Ibarra, Calixto Jose" Antonio, child.
4
Igadera, Jose", convict.
4
Igareda, Josd Gordiano, settler.
4
liiiquez, Juan, Cat. vol.
2
Higuera, Jose Manuel, soldier.
I.
47
Lasso de
la
Vega, Ramon,
alfe"rez.
738
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
2
Leal, Isidro Jose", servant.
2
Leiva, Anastasio, soldier.
3
Leiva, Agnstin, soldier.
3
Leiva, Jose" Andre's, child.
1
Leiva, Jose" Antonio Ma., soldier.
3
Leiva, Juan, soldier.
3
Leiva, Miguel, soldier.
4
Leiva, Jose" Antonio.
4
Leiva, Jose" Rafael, child.
4
Leiva, Manuel Ramon, child.
4
Leiva, Rufino, soldier.
2
Leon, Jose" Ma., soldier.
2
Leon, Jos6 Manuel, soldier.
3
Lima, Jose", soldier.
2
2
Llepis, Jose" Mariano, servant.
2
17G9-1800.
3
Manrique, Sebastian,
2
Maiiriquez, Luis, soldier.
Manzana, Miguel A., Cat. vol.
4
Marin, Antonio, Cat. vol.
Marine" y Salvatierra J. artilleryman. 4
,
3
Mariner, Juan, padre.
2
Mario, Tomds, soldier.
2
Marquez, Francisco Rafael, soldier.
4
Medina,
Jose", artilleryman.
2
Mejia, Pedro.
3
Mejia, Francisco Javier, soldier.
3
Mejia, Juan, soldier.
3
Melecio, Jose", soldier.
Mendoza,
Mcndoza,
Mendoza,
Mendoza,
Mendoza,
Manuel,
soldier.
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
4
1769-1800.
739
1
Olivas, Cosine.
4
Olivas, Jose" Herculano, child.
Olivas, Josd Ldzaro Ma., child.*
4
Olivas, Jos< Nicolas, child.
4
Olivas, Pablo, settler.
1
Olivera, Jos6 Ignacio, soldier.
1
Olivera, Juan Maria, soldier.
1
Olivera, Ignacio, servant.
2
Olivera, Antonio Lucas Ma., child.
3
4
Olivera, Diego Ant. de la Luz, child.
Mojica, Vicente, settler.
3
1
Olivera, Jose" Desiderio, child.
Molas, Jose", Cat. vol.
3
2
Olivera, Jose", soldier.
Molina, Joaquin, settler.
3
2
Olivera, Jose" Leonardo M., child.
Molina, Pedro, soldier.
3
4
Olivera, Jose" Ma. Matias, child.
Monreal, Jose" Antonio Nicolas, child.
Monroy,
Jose", soldier.
Jose"
Joaquin,
alfe"rez.
3
Gabriel, soldier.
S.-,
soldier. 4
4
Felipe Santiago, smith.
3
Felipe, settler.
3
Jose, settler.
Juan Francisco, child. 4
Manuel,
soldier. 4
1
Morillo, Jose Julian, soldier.
Moumarus, Luis, Cat. vol. 1
3
Muiioz, Manuel, mechanic.
1
Mugartegui, Pablo, padre. 1
Murguia, Jose Ant., padre.
2
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ortega,
Ma., soldier.
2
Juan, soldier.
Juan Cap. Ant. M. H., child. 2
3
Jos< Ma. Martin, child.
Jose"
Juan Cap
child. 3
3
Miguel, servant.
Francisco. 4
740
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
Pajarrales, settler.
4
Palafox, Jose, Cat. vol.
.P.alomares, Josd Cristobal, soldier.*
1769-1800.
4
Parrilla, Leon, lieutenant.
2
Patron, Antonio Jose", soldier.
3
Parra, Jose", soldier.
4
Peralta, Juan.
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
2
Rodriguez,
Rodriguez,
Rodriguez,
Rodriguez,
child. 3
4
Key, Cristobal, Cat. vol.
4
Key, Jose", Cat. vol.
4
Rey, Juan del, soldier.
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Romero,
Feliciano, soldier.
2
Julian, soldier.
Juan
Jose", soldier.
Rodriguez,
Rodriguez,
Rodriguez,
4
Manuel, cadet.
4
Jose"
child. 3
Jose"
Domingo,
Jose"
3
Estdvan, soldier.
child. 3
Pedro, soldier.
Ant. Estdvan, child. 4
Josd Gregorio, child. 4
Jose"
Man. Secundino,
Juan Ma., soldier. 3
Jose"
child. 4
Luis, soldier.
4
Rafael, Cat. vol.
1
Bernardo, muleteer.
3
Cayetano, child.
Silverio Antonio Juan, child. 4
2
Rivera, Tadeo, soldier.
4
Rivera, Joaquin, stone-cutter.
4
Rivera, Salvador, stone-cutter.
Rivera y Moncada, Fernando, captain. 1
3
Roberto, Justo, soldier.
3
Roberto, Matias, child.
llobles,
Matias, servant.
4
Joaquin, settler.
2
Romero, Antonio, servant.
2
Romero, Felipe, smith.
3
Romero, Anselmo Josd Ignacio r child.
Roman,
2
Lorenzo, sailor.
741
1769-1800.
8
Rubio, Luis Ma., child.
Joaquin, soldier.
4
Jose Antonio, soldier. 3
Rubio, Rafael Felipe, child.
4
3
Jose" Fran. Ant. L., child.
Paibiol, Francisco, Cat. vol.
3
Rubi. Mariano, padre. 3
Jose" Ignacio, soldier.
Josd de Jesus I. child. 3
Rueda, Pedro.
1
Jose" Leon, child. 3
Ruelas, Fernando, soldier.
3
Josd Ma., child. 3
Ruelas, Francisco, soldier.
4
3
Ruelas, Venancio, Cat. vol.
Sebastian, child.
1
4
Ruiz, Antonio Vicente.
Alejandro, child.
1
4
Ruiz, Alejandro, soldier.
Felipe Antonio, child.
Josd del Carmen S., child. 4 Ruiz, Juan Ma., soldier. 1
2
4
Jose" Brigido, child.
Ruiz, Diego Ma., soldier.
2
4
Ruiz, Francisco Ma., soldier.
Juan, child.
,
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
712
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Ruiz,
Saez,
Saez,
Saez,
Saez,
3
Efigenio, soldier.
Fructuoso Ma.,
child. 3
Sepulveda, Enrique.
Sepulveda, Francisco Javier, child.*
4
Sepulveda, Jose" Dolores, child.
Sepulveda, Jose" Enrique A., child.*
1
Sepulveda, Jose" de los Dolores, child,
Jose".
EsteVan, bricklayer.
4
Ignacio, soldier.
4
Jose" Hilario, child.
Jose"
4
Sepiilveda, Patricio.
4
Joaquin, child.
4
Manuel, mechanic.
4
Santiago, mason.
4
Toribio, mason.
Nazario, settler.
3
Justo, soldier.
Juan, settler.
4
Miguel.
4
Servin, Jose" Isidro, Cat. vol.
2
Sierra, Benito, padre.
4
Saenz, Ignacio, convict.
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
3
Sajo, Jos 6, soldier.
Sal,
Hermenegildo,
soldier. 2
4
Salazar, Miguel, soldier.
3
Samaniego, Jos6 Ma. Gil, soldier.
3
Samaniego, Pablo An t.Nemesio, child.
3
Samaniego, Tiburcio Antonio, child.
4
Samaniego, Jose" del Carmen, child.
1
r'ar'chez, Francisco Miguel, padre.
2
Sanchez, Joaquin, servant.
2
Sanchez, Jose" Antonio, soldier.
2
Sanchez, Juan, sailor.'
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Sanchez,
Francisco, soldier. 3
3
Jose"
Tadeo, soldier.
4
Segundo, soldier.
Jose" Antonio, child. 4
4
Juan, soldier.
Juan Ma., child. 4
Jos<5
Vicente. 4
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
Silva,
Jose", settler.
Hilario
Leon
Jose", child.
settler. 2
3
2
Manuel, servant.
Jose" Miguel, soldier. 2
Juan de Dios J. S., child. 8
Jose"
3
Rafael, child.
Hilario Leon Jose", child. 4
Jose" de los Santos, child. 4
Ma., child.
Jose Manuel Victor, child.*
Teodoro. 4
2
Sinova, Jose", soldier.
2
Sinova, Jose" Francisco, servant.
1
Sitjar, Buenaventura, padre.
Jose"
1
Soberanes, Jose" Ma., soldier.
2
Soberanes, Agustin, servant.
2
Soberanes, Jose' Ma., soldier.
2
Segundo, Angel,
soldier. 3
17G9-1SOO.
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
743
1769-1800.
3
Guillermo, soldier.
3
Ignacio Javier.
Jos6 Joaquin, child. 3
3
Mariano, servant.
4
Antonio, settler.
Jose" Ma. Ant., child.*
Juan. 4
Valencia, Ignacio.
3
Valencia, Juan Ignacio, soldier.
3
Valencia, Juan Vicente Cris., child.
3
Valencia, Manuel, settler.
3
Valencia, Miguel Antonio, child.
4
Valencia, Jos< Antonio, child.
Valencia, Jose" Manuel, child.*
2
4
Valenzuela, Agustin, soldier.
Miguel, soldier.
2
4
Valenzuela, Jose Julian, child.
Sof.o, Rafael.
2
4
Soto, Tomas.
Valenzuela, Rafael, soldier.
3
1
Valenzuela, Angel, soldier.
Sotomayor, Alejandro, soldier.
3
Valenzuela, Antonio Ma., child.
Sotomayor, Josti Crisogono.
3
Valenzuela, Gaspar Jose", child.
Sotomayor, Jose Doroteo.
3
4
Suarez, Simon, lieutenant.
Valenzuela, Jose.
3
Talamantes, soldier. 4
Valenzuela, Jos6 Antonio Ma. child.
3
3
Valenzuela, Jose" Manuel, soldier.
Tapia, Felipe Santiago, soldier.
3
Valenzuela, Antonio deGr., child.*
Tapia, Bartolomd, servant.
4
3
Valenzuela, Joaquin, child.
Tapia, Cristobal.
3
Valenzuela, Jos< Antonio Ma. child.*
Tapia, Jose" Bartolo, settler.
3
Valenzuela, Jose Candelario, child.*
Tapia, Jose" Francisco, soldier.
4
4
Valenzuela, Josd Ignacio.
Tapia, Francisco, soldier.
4
Valenzuela, Josd Rafael, child.*
Tapia, Jose" Antonio, child.
4
4
Valenzuela, Juan, soldier.
Tapia, Mariano, potter.
Valenzuela, Juan Angel, child.*
Tapinto, Mariano, tailor.*
4
3
Valenzuela, Juan Ma., child.
Tapis, Est6van, padre.
4
4
Maximo.
vol.
Cat.
Valenzuela,
Antonio,
Tejo, Ignacio
4
Tico, Jose" Joaquin, sergeant Cat. vol.* Valenzuela, Pedro, soldier.
4
Valenzuela, Simeon Maximo, child.*
Tic6, Fern. Jos6 Ma. Ign. M., child.
4
4
Valenzuela, Vicente, soldier.
Tobar, Albino, settler.
4
Valenzuela, Vicente Antonio, child.*
Toca, Jose" Manuel, teacher.
3
4
Valenzuela, Jose* Ma., child.
Toral? Jose Perez, cadet.
3
2
Valenzuela, Jose Matias, child.
Torres, Victoriano, settler.
3
4
Valenzuela, Jose" Miguel, child.
Torres, Narciso, Cat. vol.
3
4
Valenzuela, Jose" Pedro, soldier.
Torres, Nicolas.
3
Torrens. Hilario, padre. 3
Valenzuela, Jos6 Ramon, child.
3
1
Valenzuela, Segundo, soldier.
Trasviuas, Antonio, soldier.
4
4
Valero, Ignacio, soldier.
Trujillo, Josti, Cat. vol.
2
3
Ulloa, Jos< Santos, smith.
Vallejo, Ign. Vicente Ferrer, soldier.
Soto,
Soto,
Soto,
Soto,
Soto,
Soto,
Soto,
Soto,
de StaM., child. 3
3
Valdes, Crecencio.
Valdes, Francisco, Cat. vol.*
4
Valdes, Gregorio.
4
Valdes, Josi Rafael, child.
2
Valencia, Josu Manuel, soldier.
3
Valencia, Francisco, soldier.
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Vazquez,
Juan
2
Silverio, child.
Faustino. 4
4
Felipe.
Felix. 4
Hermenegildo.*
Jos6 Antonio Pablo, child. 4
Jose Timoteo, settler. 4
744
INHABITANTS OF CALIFORNIA,
4
Velarde, Agustin.
*
Velarde, Jose" Luciano.
1
Vegerano, Jos^ Ma., muleteer.
3
Velasco, Fernando, soldier.
Velasco, Jose" Ignacio Mateo, child.*
1
Velazquez, Jose".
4
Velazquez, Jose Ma., convict.
2
Velez, Josd Miguel, settler.
1
4
Velis, Jose", Cat. vol.
1
Verdugo, Joaquin.
1
Verdugo, Jos6 Ma., soldier.
1
Verdugo, Francisco Ma. de la Cruz.
1
Verdugo, Mariano de la Luz, soldier.
*
Verdugo, Florencio, soldier.
2
Verdugo, Ignacio Leonardo Ma.
2
Verdugo, Juan .Diego, soldier.
3
Verdugo, Juan Ma., soldier.
3
Verdugo, Leonardo, soldier.
3
Verdugo, Manuel Jose", child.
4
Verdugo, Aiiselmo Jose", child.
4
Verdugo, Joaquin.
4
Verdugo, Jose" Francisco, child.
4
Verdugo, Juan Andres Dolores, child.
4
Verdugo, Julio Antonio Jose", child.
4
Verdugo, Melitoii Jose".
l
Verduzco, Anastasio Javier.
4
1769-1800.
4
Villalobos, Jose Ma., child.
4
Villasefior, Jose", artillei^man.
1
Villavicencio, Rafael, soldier.
2
Villavicencio, Jose" Antonio, child.
3
Villavicencio, Antonio, settler.
3
Villavicencio, Felix, settler.
4
Villavicencio, Pascual, settler.
4
Villaviceucio, Jose", soldier.
4
Villarino, Felix Antonio, settler.
Villela,
Villela,
Juan Manuel,
soldier. 2
4
Marcos, soldier.