The California Missions

I can't really think about the California Missions without cringing a bit.  As part of a history/geography project in 4th grade (I think - might have been 5th grade) the students were required to construct a mission (of their choosing) from a list of suitable materials for the construction.  I can't remember which mission Megan picked but I am positive that I knew from the minute she told me her choice that it would be the most difficult mission to model. 

The materials "we" chose for the modeling were sugar cubes and Pepsodent toothpaste as the "glue" or mortar to hold the cubes together.  

What a nightmare!  We worked on it together and just when we would begin to think we were making some significant progress the bell tower would collapse or a whole side of the mission would drift off to the right. 

We made the project deadline by the skin of our teeth and transported it to school on a board.  If I remember correctly it fell apart about the time we reached her classroom door.  By this time we were both so over that mission that we got an attack of the giggles about it.  We took it in and placed it where it was supposed to be placed and spent a couple of minutes doing the repairs that we could and then both of us bowed our heads to each other and called it a finished project.

To this day the smell of Pepsodent toothpaste gives me an anxiety attack.

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http://www.californiamissions.com/cahistory/index.html


                                       

                                                          Mission San Juan Capistrano

Introduction

Although the settlement of California did not begin until 1769, forces were at work only the year after the first voyage of Columbus, which ultimately brought Spanish missionaries to the Golden State of today. In 1493 Pope Alexander VI drew an arbitrary line on the map which was to divide the spheres of interest of Spain and Portugal, and declared that all explorers should be accompanied by "worthy, God-fearing, learned, skilled and experienced men to instruct the inhabitants in the Catholic faith." Controversy arose immediately. The religious element held that all men were brothers, and that newly discovered territory belonged first to the King and then to the original inhabitants . Colonists thought of the natives as sub-human beings with no rights of private ownership. The King of Spain used both of the opposing forces, first one, then the other, to advance expansion of the Spanish Empire.

Then Charles V issued a code of "New Laws" which eventually became the foundation of the California mission system. It stated that the Indians should be permitted to live in communities of their own; they should be permitted to choose their own leaders and councilors; no Indian to be held as a slave; no Indian to live outside his own village; no Spaniard to stay in an Indian village for more than three days, and then only if he were a merchant or ill; and the Indians to be instructed in the Catholic faith.

Under the protection of these new laws, religious communities began to spring up in Mexico and Central America. Although strenuously opposed by Spanish plantation owners, and not given any great favor by the King and his viceroys, even so the missionaries were self-supporting and provided an inexpensive means of securing frontiers against other European ambitions.

The court of King Philip II became the richest in Europe after Spanish conquest of islands of the Pacific such as the Philippines. Spanish galleons plying the vast Pacific, bringing treasures of the Orient, needed safe harbors on the western Mexican coast.
 It was Vizcaino in 1602 who discovered Monterey Bay and first described Upper California as the land of "milk and honey" and the best port that could be desired, sheltered from all winds; with much wood and water; settlements of friendly Indians; springs of good water; beautiful lakes covered with ducks and many other birds; good meadows for cattle; fertile fields for growing crops. Yet the discovery gave Spain no immediate advantage. A hundred years later their influence extended only up the barren coast of Lower California, where the Jesuits had established a chain of missions.

The Jesuits had made their own rules and commanded their own security forces. This was not to be tolerated by secular elements. Eventually, the Jesuits were replaced in Mexico by the Franciscans , who were to extend the mission system into Upper California but under the control of and in cooperation with Spanish authorities.

Miguel Joseph Serra was born November 24, 1713, the son of a farmer, at Petra, Majorca, in Spain's Balearic Isles. He was baptized at the parish church of St. Peter's, and received his first education at the Franciscan Friary of San Bernardino. Both of these buildings, as well as the rough stone birth dwelling, may still be seen at Petra.

On taking his religious vows in 1730 Serra took the name Junípero, after a beloved disciple of St. Francis of Assisi. Later the little padre, scarcely over five feet tall, and who was to become the "apostle of California", arrived in Mexico. There he and Governor Portola planned how to extend Spanish domain into Upper California by extending the chain of missions northward.

Due to the uncertainties of the times the soldier and the priest decided that their first effort, to present San Diego, would be divided into five segments; three ships and two expeditions by land, all to leave at separate times. Padre Junípero Serra and the governor, riding on mules, were in the second land party. After many hardships crossing the virtual desert, both land parties reached San Diego Bay to find only two of the ships in the harbor; with the crews, and soldiers who were passengers, badly decimated by scurvy . The third ship was never heard from.

California Missions In Order of Founding:

  1. Mission San Diego de Alcala (1769)
  2. Mission San Carlos Borroméo de Carmelo (1770)
  3. Mission San Antonio de Padua (1771)
  4. Mission San Gabriel Arcángel (1771)
  5. Mission San Luis Obispo (1772)
  6. Mission San Francisco de Asís (1776)
  7. Mission San Juan Capistrano (1776)
  8. Mission Santa Clara de Asís (1777)
  9. Mission San Buenaventura (1782)
  10. Mission Santa Barbara (1786)
  11. Mission La Purisíma Concepción (1787)
  12. Mission Santa Cruz (1791)
  13. Mission Nuestra Señora de la Soledad (1791)
  14. Mission San José (1797)
  15. Mission San Juan Bautista (1797)
  16. Mission San Miguel de Arcángel (1797)
  17. Mission San Fernando Rey de España (1797)
  18. Mission San Luis Rey de Francia (1798)
  19. Mission Santa Inés (1804)
  20. Mission San Rafael Arcángel (1817)
  21. Mission San Francisco de Solano (1823)

 

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