The Spanish Pioneers And The California Missions, Part 1

Author: Charles F. Lummis
Publication date: 1936
Publisher: A. C. McClurg & Co.
Number of Pages: 401


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UNIVERSAL LIBRARY


129 322


LIBRARY UNIVERSAL


THE SPANISH PIONEERS and the CALIFORNIA MISSIONS By CHARLES F LUMMIS


THE SPANISH PIONEERS and the CALIFORNIA MISSIONS


IDEAL HEAD OF JUNIPERO SERRA By WM. KEITH


THE SPANISH PIONEERS


and the


CALIFORNIA MISSIONS


by CHARLES F. LUMMIS


Author of! "Land of Poco Tiempo," "Mesa, Canon and Pueblo," "Pueblo Indian Folk Stories, " etc., etc.


Illustrated


NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION


CHICAGO A. C. McCLURG & CO. 1936


COPYRIGHT BY CHARLES F. LUMMIS 1893-1929


THE views presented in this book have already taken their place in historical litera- ture, but they are certainly altogether new ground for a popular work. Because it is new, some who have not fully followed the recent march of scientific investigation may fear that it is not authentic. I can only say that the estimates and statements embodied in this volume are strictly true, and that I hold myself ready to defend them from the standpoint of historical science.


I do this, not merely from the motive of personal regard toward the author, but especially in view of the merits of his work, its value for the youth of the present and of the coming generations.


AD. F. BANDELIER.


PREFACE.


TT is because I believe that every other young Saxon-American loves fair play and admires heroism as much as I do, that this book has been written. That we have not given justice to the Spanish Pioneers is simply because we have been misled. They made a record unparalleled; but our text-books have not recognized that fact, though they no longer dare dispute it. Now, thanks to the New School of American History, we are coming to the truth, -a truth which every manly American will be glad to know. In this country of free and brave men, race- prejudice, the most ignorant of all human ignorances, must die out. We must respect manhood more than nationality, and admire it for its own sake wherever found, - and it is found everywhere. The deeds that hold the world up are not of any one blood. We may be born anywhere, - that is a mere accident ;


PREFACE.


but to be heroes we must grow by means which are not accidents nor provincialisms but the birthright and glory of humanity.


We love manhood; and the Spanish pioneering of the Americas was the largest and longest and most marvellous feat of man- hood in all history. It was not possible for a Saxon boy to learn that truth in my boy- hood; it is enormously difficult, if possible, now. The hopelessness of trying to get from any or all English text-books a just picture of the Spanish hero in the New World made me resolve that no other young American lover of heroism and justice shall need to grope so long in the dark as I had to; and for the following glimpses into the most in- teresting of stories he has to thank me less than that friend of us both, A. F. Bandelier, the master of the New School. Without the light shed on early America by the scholar- ship of this great pupil of the great Humboldt, my book could not have been written, -nor by me without his generous personal aid.


C. F. L.


On One of Such Women as Make Heroes and Keep Chivalry Alive in Our Less Single-Hearted Days:


ELIZABETH BACON CUSTER


IN pronouncing the Spanish names give -


a the sound of ah


ay


1


ee


h


1


0 R ¥ oh


00


h is silent


W is sounded like Ili in million


«


ny in lanyard


hua


= wa in water


CONTENTS


I. The Broad Story


CHAPTER PAGE


I. THE PIONEER NATION


17


II. A MUDDLED GEOGRAPHY


25


III. COLUMBUS THE FINDER


36


IV. MAKING GEOGRAPHY


43


V. THE CHAPTER OF CONQUEST 56


VI. A GIRDLE ROUND THE WORLD


71


VII. SPAIN IN THE UNITED STATES


78


VIII. Two CONTINENTS MASTERED


.


90


II. Sperimen Hinnerry


I. THE FIRST AMERICAN TRAVELLER


IOI


II. THE GREATEST AMERICAN TRAVELLER


117


III. THE WAR OF THE ROCK


125


IV. THE STORMING OF THE SKY-CITY


135


V. THE SOLDIER POET 144


VI. THE PIONEER MISSIONARIES


149


VII. THE CHURCH-BUILDERS IN NEW MEXICO


158


VIII. ALVARADO'S LEAP


·


170


IX. THE AMERICAN GOLDEN FLEECE


18I


CONTENTS


III. The Greatest Conquest


CHAPTER PAGE


I. THE SWINEHERD OF TRUXILLO . 203


II. THE MAN WHO WOULD NOT GIVE UP 215


III. GAINING GROUND 225


IV. PERU AS IT WAS 238


V. THE CONQUEST OF PERU 246


VI. THE GOLDEN RANSOM 257


VII. ATAHUALPA'S TREACHERY AND DEATH 265 VIII. FOUNDING A NATION - THE SIEGE OF CUZCO 275 IX. THE WORK OF TRAITORS #84


IV. Chr California Altastons


I. WHAT THEY DID TO THE UNITED STATES .


295


V. The Misaton Story


I. THE MISSION STORY IN SKELETON


331


II. THE PRESENT STATUS


334


VI. Appendicea


I. CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER OF THE ESTABLISHMENT


OF THE MISSIONS


338


IL LIST OF FOUNDING FRAILES AND FIRST MIS-


SIONARIES


340


List of Illustrations


FACING PAGE


IDEAL HEAD OF JUNIPERO SERRA, BY WILLIAM KEITH


Frontispiece


SAN LUIS REY MISSION


.


24


MISSION SAN ANTONIO DE PADUA


30


UNIQUE ROSICRUCIAN FOUNTAIN AT MISSION SAN FERNANDO 48


FRANCISCO PIZARRO


ONE OF THE MOQUI TOWNS


86


68


"QUEEN OF THE MISSIONS," SANTA BARBARA


THE ROCK OF ACOMA


.126


WHERE ZALDIVAR STORMED THE CITY


. 136


SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, " JEWEL OF THE MISSIONS . 150


RUINS OF THE CHURCH AT PECOS


. 162


CHURCH, PUEBLO OF ISLETA


. 164


MISSION SAN BUENAVENTURA


, 184


PALA, ASISTENCIA (BRANCH) OF SAN LUIS REY . 198


MISSION CARMEL .


.


· . 210


MISSION DOLORES, SAN FRANCISCO


. 236


ATAHUALPA'S HOUSE, CAXAMARCA


. 260


CHURCH OF ST. FRANCIS, CAXAMARCA


268


AN ANGLE OF THE FORTRESS OF THE SACSAHUAMAN 278


MISSION SAN FERNANDO


. 296


JUNIPERO SERRA'S AUTOGRAPH · 310 JUNÍPERO SERRA'S CHAIR . 326 MAP SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE MISSIONS . 334-5


IIO


L. THE BROAD STORY.


HOW AMERICA WAS FOUND AND TAMED.


.


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


I.


THE PIONEER NATION.


TT is now an established fact of history that the Norse rovers had found and made a few expe- ditions to North America long before Columbus. For the historian nowadays to look upon that Norse discovery as a myth, or less than a certainty, is to confess that he has never read the Sagas. The Norsemen came, and even camped in the New World, before the year 1000 ; but they only camped. They built no towns, and practically added to the world's knowledge nothing at all. They did nothing to en- title them to credit as pioneers. The honor of giv- ing America to the world belongs to Spain, - the credit not only of discovery, but of centuries of such pioneering as no other nation ever paralleled in any land. It is a fascinating story, yet one to which our histories have so far done scant justice. History on true principles was an unknown science until within a century ; and public opinion has long been ham- pered by the narrow statements and false conclusions


2


18


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


of closet students. Some of these men have been not only honest but most charming writers ; but their very popularity has only helped to spread their errors wider. But their day is past, and the beginnings of new light have come. No student dares longer re- fer to Prescott or Irving, or any of the class of which they were the leaders, as authorities in history ; they rank to-day as fascinating writers of romance, and nothing more. It yet remains for some one to make as popular the truths of American history as the fables have been, and it may be long before an un- mistaken Prescott appears; but meantime I should like to help young Americans to a general grasp of the truths upon which coming histories will be based. This book is not a history ; it is simply a guideboard to the true point of view, the broad idea, - starting from which, those who are interested may more safely go forward to the study of details, while those who can study no farther may at least have a general understanding of the most romantic and gallant chapter in the history of America.


We have not been taught how astonishing it was that one nation should have earned such an over- whelming share in the honor of giving us America ; and yet when we look into the matter, it is a very startling thing. There was a great Old World, full of civilization : suddenly a New World was found, - the most important and surprising discovery in the whole annals of mankind. One would naturally suppose that the greatness of such a discovery would stir the intel- ligence of all the civilized nations about equally, and


19


THE PIONEER NATION.


that they would leap with common eagerness to avail themselves of the great meaning this discovery had for humanity. But as a matter of fact it was not so. Broadly speaking, all the enterprise of Europe was confined to one nation, - and that a nation by no means the richest or strongest. One nation practically had the glory of discovering and exploring America, of changing the whole world's ideas of geography, and making over knowledge and business all to herself for a century and a half. And Spain was that nation.


It was, indeed, a man of Genoa who gave us America ; but he came as a Spaniard, - from Spain, on Spanish faith and Spanish money, in Spanish ships and with Spanish crews; and what he found he took possession of in the name of Spain. Think what a kingdom Ferdinand and Isabella had then besides their little garden in Europe, -an untrodden half world, in which a score of civilized nations dwell to-day, and upon whose stupendous area the newest and greatest of nations is but a patch ! What a dizzi- ness would have seized Columbus could he have fore- seen the inconceivable plant whose unguessed seeds he held that bright October morning in 1492 !


It was Spain, too, that sent out the accidental Florentine whom a German printer made godfather of a half world that we are barely sure he ever saw, and are fully sure he deserves no credit for. To name America after Amerigo Vespucci was such an ignorant injustice as seems ridiculous now; but, at all events, Spain sent him who gave his name to the New World.


1


20


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


Columbus did little beyond finding America, which was indeed glory enough for one life. But of the gallant nation which made possible his dis- covery there were not lacking heroes to carry out the work which that discovery opened. It was a century before Anglo-Saxons seemed to waken enough to learn that there really was a New World, and into that century the flower of Spain crowded marvels of achievement. She was the only Euro- pean nation that did not drowse. Her mailed explorers overran Mexico and Peru, grasped their incalculable riches, and made those kingdoms in- alienable parts of Spain. Cortez had conquered and was colonizing a savage country a dozen times as large as England years before the first English- speaking expedition had ever seen the mere coast where it was to plant colonies in the New World ; and Pizarro did a still greater work. Ponce de Leon had taken possession for Spain of what is now one of the States of our Union a generation before any of those regions were seen by Saxons. That first traveller in North America, Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca, had walked his unparalleled way across the continent from Florida to the Gulf of California half a century before the first foot of our ancestors touched our soil. Jamestown, the first English set- tlement in America, was not founded until 1607, and by that time the Spanish were permanently estab- lished in Florida and New Mexico, and absolute masters of a vast territory to the south. They had already discovered, conquered, and partly colonized


21


THE PIONEER NATION.


inland America from northeastern Kansas to Buenos Ayres, and from ocean to ocean. Half of the United States, all Mexico, Yucatan, Central America, Vene- zuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Paraguay, Peru, Chile, New Granada, and a huge area besides, were Spanish by the time England had acquired a few acres on the nearest edge of America. Language could scarcely overstate the enormous precedence of Spain over all other nations in the pioneering of the New World. They were Spaniards who first saw and explored the greatest gulf in the world ; Spaniards who discovered the two greatest rivers; Spaniards who found the greatest ocean ; Spaniards who first knew that there were two continents of America; Spaniards who first went round the world ! They were Spaniards who had carved their way into the far interior of our own land, as well as of all to the south, and founded their cities a thousand miles inland long before the first Anglo-Saxon came to the Atlantic seaboard. That early Spanish spirit of finding out was fairly superhuman. Why, a poor Spanish lieutenant with twenty soldiers pierced an unspeakable desert and looked down upon the greatest natural wonder of America or of the world-the Grand Canon of the Colorado - three full centuries before any "American " eyes saw it! And so it was from Colorado to Cape Horn. Heroic, impetuous, im- prudent Balboa had walked that awful walk across the Isthmus, and found the Pacific Ocean, and built on its shores the first ships that were ever made in the Americas, and sailed that unknown sea, and had


22


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


been dead more than half a century before Drake and Hawkins saw it.


England's lack of means, the demoralization fol- lowing the Wars of the Roses, and religious dissen- sions were the chief causes of her torpidity then. When her sons came at last to the eastern verge of the New World they made a brave record ; but they were never called upon to face such inconceivable hardships, such endless dangers as the Spaniards had faced. The wilderness they conquered was savage enough, truly, but fertile, well wooded, well watered, and full of game; while that which the Spaniards tamed was such a frightful desert as no human conquest ever overran before or since, and peopled by a host of savage tribes to some of whom the petty warriors of King Philip were no more to be compared than a fox to a panther. The Apaches and the Araucanians would perhaps have been no more than other Indians had they been transferred to Massachusetts ; but in their own grim domains they were the deadliest savages that Europeans ever encountered. For a century of Indian wars in the east there were three centuries and a half in the southwest. In one Spanish colony (in Bolivia) as many were slain by the savages in one massacre as there were people in New York city when the war of the Revolution began ! If the Indians in the east had wiped out twenty-two thousand set- tlers in one red slaughter, as did those at Sorata, it would have been well up in the eighteen-hundreds before the depleted colonies could have untied the


23


THE PIONEER NATION.


uncomfortable apron-strings of the mother coun- try, and begun national housekeeping on their own account.


When you know that the greatest of English text- books has not even the name of the man who first sailed around the world (a Spaniard), nor of the man who discovered Brazil (a Spaniard), nor of him who discovered California (a Spaniard), nor of those Spaniards who first found and colonized in what is now the United States, and that it has a hundred other omissions as glaring, and a hundred histories as untrue as the omissions are inexcusable, you will understand that it is high time we should do better justice than did our fathers to a subject which should be of the first interest to all real Americans.


The Spanish were not only the first conquerors of the New World, and its first colonizers, but also its first civilizers. They built the first cities, opened the first churches, schools, and universities ; brought the first printing-presses, made the first books; wrote the first dictionaries, histories, and geographies, and brought the first missionaries; and before New England had a real newspaper, Mexico had a sev- enteenth-century attempt at one !


One of the wonderful things about this Spanish pioneering - almost as remarkable as the pioneering itself - was the humane and progressive spirit which marked it from first to last. Histories of the sort long current speak of that hero-nation as cruel to the Indians ; but, in truth, the record of Spain in


24


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


that respect puts us to the blush. The legislation of Spain in behalf of the Indians everywhere was incomparably more extensive, more comprehensive, more systematic, and more humane than that of Great Britain, the Colonies, and the present United States all combined. Those first teachers gave the Spanish language and Christian faith to a thousand aborigines, where we gave a new language and re- ligion to one. There have been Spanish schools for Indians in America since 1524. By 1575 - nearly a century before there was a printing-press in English America - many books in twelve different Indian languages had been printed in the city of Mexico, whereas in our history John Eliot's Indian Bible stands alone; and three Spanish universities in America were nearly rounding out their century when Harvard was founded. A surprisingly large proportion of the pioneers of America were college men; and intelligence went hand in hand with heroism in the early settlement of the New World.


1


1


1


-


SAN LUIS REY MISSION, "KING OF THE MISSIONS" About present condition.


25


A MUDDLED GEOGRAPHY.


II.


A MUDDLED GEOGRAPHY.


T HE least of the difficulties which beset the finders of the New World was the then tre- mendous voyage to reach it. Had that three thou- sand miles of unknown sea been the chief obstacle, civilization would have overstepped it centuries before it did. It was human ignorance deeper than the Atlantic, and bigotry stormier than its waves, which walled the western horizon of Europe for so long. But for that, Columbus himself would have found America ten years sooner than he did; and for that matter, America would not have waited for Columbus's five-times-great-grandfather to be born. It was really a strange thing how the rich- est half of the world played so long at hide-and- seek with civilization ; and how at last it was found, through the merest chance, by those who sought something entirely different. Had America waited to be discovered by some one seeking a new con- tinent, it might be waiting yet.


Despite the fact that long before Columbus va- grant crews of half a dozen different races had already reached the New World, they had left


26


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


neither mark on America nor result in civilization ; and Europe, at the very brink of the greatest dis- covery and the greatest events in history, never dreamed of it. Columbus himself had no imagin- ings of America. Do you know what he started westward to find? Asia.


The investigations of recent years have greatly changed our estimates of Columbus. The tendency of a generation ago was to transform him to a demi- god, - an historical figure, faultless, rounded, all noble. That was absurd ; for Columbus was only a man, and all men, however great, fall short of per- fection. The tendency of the present generation is to go to the other extreme, -to rob him of every heroic quality, and make him out an unhanged pirate and a contemptible accident of fortune ; so that we are in a fair way to have very little Colum- bus left. But this is equally unjust and unscientific. Columbus in his own field was a great man despite his failings, and far from a contemptible one.


To understand him, we must first have some gen- eral understanding of the age in which he lived. To measure how much of an inventor of the great idea he was, we must find out what the world's ideas then were, and how much they helped or hindered him.


In those far days geography was a very curious affair indeed. A map of the world then was some- thing which very few of us would be able to identify at all ; for all the wise men of all the earth knew less of the world's topography than an eight-year old


27


A MUDDLED GEOGRAPHY.


schoolboy knows to-day. It had been decided at last that the world was not flat, but round, - though even that fundamental knowledge was not yet old ; but as to what composed half the globe, no man alive knew. Westward from Europe stretched the "Sea of Darkness," and beyond a little way none knew what it was or contained. The variation of the compass was not yet understood. Everything was largely guess-work, and groping in the dark. The unsafe little "ships" of the day dared not venture out of sight of land, for there was nothing reliable to guide them back; and you will laugh at one reason why they were afraid to sail out into the broad western sea, - they feared that they might unknowingly get over the edge, and that ship and crew might fall off into space ! Though they knew the world was roundish, the attraction of gravitation was not yet dreamed of; and it was supposed that if one got too far over the upper side of the ball one would drop off !


Still, it was a matter of general belief that there was land in that unknown sea. That idea had been growing for more than a thousand years, -for by the second century it began to be felt that there were islands beyond Europe. By Columbus's time the map-makers generally put on their rude charts a great many guess-work islands in the Sea of Dark- ness. Beyond this swarm of islands was supposed to lie the east coast of Asia, - and at no enormous distance, for the real size of the world was under- estimated by one third. Geography was in its mere


28


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


infancy ; but it was engaging the attention and study of very many scholars who were learned for their day. Each of them put his studious guessing into maps, which varied astonishingly from one another.


But one thing was accepted : there was land somewhere to the west, -some said a few islands, some said thousands of islands, but all said land of some sort. So Columbus did not invent the idea ; it had been agreed upon long before he was born. The question was not if there was a New World, but if it was possible or practicable to reach it without sailing over the jumping-off place or encountering other as sad dangers. The world said No; Colum- bus said Yes, - and that was his claim to greatness. He was not an inventor, but an accomplisher; and even what he accomplished physically was less remarkable than his faith. He did not have to teach Europe that there was a new country, but to believe that he could get to that country; and his faith in himself and his stubborn courage in making others believe in him was the greatness of his character. It took less of a man to make the final proof than to convince the public that it was not utter foolhardiness to attempt the proof at all.


Christopher Columbus, as we call him (as Colon 1 he was better known in his own day), was born in Genoa, Italy, the son of Dominico Colombo, a wool- comber, and Suzanna Fontanarossa. The year of his birth is not certain; but it was probably about


1 Pronounced Co-lon, -the Spanish form.


29


A MUDDLED GEOGRAPHY.


1446. Of his boyhood we know nothing, and little enough of all his early life, -though it is certain that he was active, adventurous, and yet very stu- dious. It is said that his father sent him for awhile to the University of Pavia ; but his college course could not have lasted very long. Columbus himself tells us that he went to sea at fourteen years of age. But as a sailor he was able to continue the studies which interested him most, - geography and kindred topics. The details of his early seafaring are very meagre; but it seems certain that he sailed to England, Iceland, Guinea, and Greece, - which made a man then far more of a traveller than does a voyage round the world nowadays; and with this broadening knowledge of men and lands he was gaining such grasp of navigation, astronomy, and geography as was then to be had.


It is interesting to speculate how and when Columbus first conceived an idea of such stupen- dous importance. It was doubtless not until he was a mature and ex- ·S. perienced man, who had become not only -S. A . S. XMY Xp o FERENS Autograph of Christopher Columbus. a skilled sailor, but one familiar with what other sailors had done. The Madeiras and the Azores had been dis- covered more than a century. Prince Henry, the Navigator (that great patron of early exploration), was sending his crews down the west coast of


30


THE SPANISH PIONEERS.


Africa, - for at that time it was not even known what the lower half of Africa was. These expe- ditions were a great help to Columbus as well as to the world's knowledge. It is almost certain, too, that when he was in Iceland he must have heard something of the legends of the Norse rovers who had been to America. Everywhere he went his alert mind caught some new encouragement, direct or indirect, to the great resolve which was half unconsciously forming in his mind.


About 1473 Columbus wandered to Portugal ; and there formed associations which had an influence on his future. In time he found a wife, Felipa Moniz, the mother of his son and chronicler Diego. As to his married life there is much uncertainty, and whether it was creditable to him or the reverse. It is known from his own letters that he had other children than Diego, but they are left in obscurity. His wife is understood to have been a daughter of the sea-captain known as "The Navigator," whose services were rewarded by making him the first governor of the newly discovered island of Porto Santo, off Madeira. It was the most natural thing in the world that Columbus should presently pay a visit to his adventurous father-in-law ; and it was, perhaps, while in Porto Santo on this visit that he began to put his great thoughts in more tangible shape.




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