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The scheme for the occupation and coloniza- tion of Alta California was to be jointly the work of church and state. The representative of the state was José de Galvez, visitador-gen- eral of New Spain, a man of untiring energy, great executive ability, sound business sense and, as such men are and ought to be, some- what arbitrary. Galvez reached La Paz in July, 1768. At once he began investigating the condi- tion of the peninsular missions and supplying their needs. This done, he turned his attention to the northern colonization. Establishing his headquarters at Santa Ana near La Paz, he sum- moned Father Junipero for consultation in regard to the founding of missions in Alta Cali- fornia. It was decided to proceed to the initial points, San Diego and Monterey, by land and sea. Three ships were to be dispatched carrying the heavier articles, such as agricultural imple-
ments, church ornaments, and a supply of provi- sions for the support of the soldiers and priest after their arrival in California. The expedi- tion by land was to take along cattle and horses to stock the country. This expedition was divided into two detachments, the advance one under the command of Rivera y Moncada, who had been a long time in the country, and the second division under Governor Gaspar de Portolá, who was a newcomer. Captain Rivera was sent northward to collect from the missions ail the live stock and supplies that could be spared and take them to Santa Maria, the most northern mission of the peninsula. Stores of all kinds were collected at La Paz. Father Serra made a tour of the missions and secured such church furniture, ornaments and vestments as could be spared.
The first vessel fitted out for the expedition by sea was the San Carlos, a ship of about two hundred tons burden, leaky and badly con- structed. She sailed from La Paz January 9, 1769, under the command of Vicente Vila. In addition to the crew there were twenty-five Cat- alonian soldiers, commanded by Lientenant Fages, Pedro Prat, the surgeon, a Franciscan friar, two blacksmiths, a baker, a cook and two tortilla makers. Galvez in a small vessel accom- panied the San Carlos to Cape San Lucas, where he landed and set to work to fit out the San Antonio. On the 15th of February this vessel sailed from San José del Cabo (San José of the Cape), under the command of Juan Perez, an expert pilot, who had been engaged in the Phil- ippine trade. On this vessel went two Franciscan friars, Juan Viscaino and Francisco Gomez. Captain Rivera y Moncada, who was to pioneer the way, had collected supplies and cattle at Vel- icatá on the northern frontier. From here, with a small force of soldiers, a gang of neophytes and three muleteers, and accompanied by Padre Crespi, he began his march to San Diego on the 24th of March, 1769.
The second land expedition, commanded by Governor Gaspar de Portolá in person, began its march from Loreto, March 9, 1769. Father Serra, who was to have accompanied it, was de- tained at Loreto by a sore leg. He joined the expedition at Santa Maria, May 5, where it had
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been waiting for him some time. It then pro- ceeded to Rivera's camp at Velicatá, sixty miles further north, where Serra founded a mission, naming it San Fernando. Campa Coy, a friar who had accompanied the expedition thus far, was left in charge. This mission was intended as a frontier post in the travel between the pen- insular missions and the Alta California settle- ments. On the 15th of May Portolá began his 'northern march, following the trail of Rivera. Galvez had named, by proclamation, St. Joseph is the patron saint of the California expeditions. Santa Maria was designated as the patroness of conversions.
1
The San Antonia, the last vessel to sail, was the first to arrive at San Diego. It anchored in the bay April 11, 1769, after a prosperous voy- age of twenty-four days. There she remained at anchor, awaiting the arrival of the San Car- los, the flag ship of the expedition, which had sailed more than a month before her. On the 29th of April the San Carlos, after a disastrous voyage of one hundred and ten days, drifted into the Bay of San Diego, her crew prostrated with the scurvy, not enough able-bodied men being left to man a boat. Canvas tents were pitched and the afflicted men taken ashore. When the disease had run its course nearly all of the crew of the San Carlos, half of the sol- diers who had come on her, and nine of the sailors of the San Antonio, were dead.
On the 14th of May Captain Rivera y Mon- cada's detachment arrived. The expedition had made the journey from Velicatá in fifty-one days. On the first of July the second division, commanded by Portolá, arrived. The journey had been uneventful. The four divisions of the grand expedition were now united, but its num- bers had been greatly reduced. Out of two hundred and nineteen who had set out by land and sea only one hundred and twenty-six re- mained; death from scurvy and the desertion of the neophytes had reduced the numbers nearly one-half. The ravages of the scurvy had de- stroyed the crew of one of the vessels and greatly crippled that of the other, so it was im- possible to proceed by sea to Monterey, the second objective point of the expedition. A council of the officers was held and it was de-
cided to send the San Antonia back to San Blas for supplies and sailors to man the San Carlos. The San Antonia sailed on the 9th of July and after a voyage of twenty days reached her des- tination; but short as the voyage was, half of the crew died of the scurvy on the passage. In early American navigation the scurvy was the most dreaded scourge of the sea, more to be feared than storm and shipwreck. These might happen occasionally, but the scurvy always made its appearance on long voyages, and sometimes destroyed the whole ship's crew. Its appearance and ravages were largely due to the neglect of sanitary precautions and to the utter indiffer- ence of those in authority to provide for the comfort and health of the sailors. The interces- sion of the saints, novenas, fasts and penance were relied upon to protect and save the vessel and her crew, while the simplest sanitary meas- 11res were utterly disregarded. A blind, unrea- soning faith that was always seeking interposi- tion from some power without to preserve and ignoring the power within, was the bane and curse of that age of superstition.
If the mandates of King Carlos III. and the instructions of the visitador-general, José de Galvez, were to be carried out, the expedition for the settlement of the second point designated (Monterey) must be made by land; accordingly Governor Portolá set about organizing his forces for the overland journey. On the 14th of July the expedition began its march. It con- sisted of Governor Portolá, Padres Crespi and Gomez, Captain Rivera y Moncada, Lieutenant Pedro Fages, Engineer Miguel Constansó, sol- diers, muleteers and Indian servants, number- ing in all sixty-two persons.
On the 16th of July, two days after the de- parture of Governor Portolá, Father Junipero, assisted by Padres Viscaino and Parron, founded the mission of San Diego. The site selected was in what is now Old Town, near the tempo- rary presidio, which had been hastily con- structed before the departure of Governor Por- tolá. A hut of boughs had been constructed and in this the ceremonies of founding were leld. The Indians, while interested in what was going on, manifested no desire to be converted. They were willing to receive gifts, particularly
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of cloth, but would not taste the food of the Spaniards, fearing that it contained poison and attributing the many deaths among the soldiers and sailors to the food. The Indians had a great liking for pieces of cloth, and their desire to obtain this led to an attack upon the people of the mission. On the 14th of August, taking advantage of the absence of Padre Parron and two soldiers, they broke into the mission and began robbing it and the beds of the sick. The four soldiers, a carpenter and a blacksmith ral- lied to the defense, and after several of their numbers had fallen by the guns of the soldiers, the Indians fled. A boy servant of the padres was killed and Father Viscaino wounded in the hand. After this the Indians were more cau- tious.
We now return to the march of Portolá's ex- pedition. As the first exploration of the main land of California was made by it, I give con- siderable space to the incidents of the journey. Crespi, Constansó and Fages kept journals of the march. I quote from those of Constansó and Crespi. Lieutenant Constansó thus de- scribes the order of the march. "The setting- forth was on the 14th day of June* of the cited year of '69. The two divisions of the expedition by land marched in one, the commander so ar- ranging because the number of horse-herd and packs was much, since of provisions and victuals alone they carried one hundred packs, which he estimated to be necessary to ration all the folk during six months; thus providing against a delay of the packets, altho' it was held to be impossible that in this interval some one of them should fail to arrive at Monterey. On the marches the following order was observed: At the head went the commandant with the offi- cers, the six men of the Catalonia volunteers, who added themselves at San Diego, and some friendly Indians, with spades, mattocks, crow- bars, axes and other implements of pioneers, to chop and open a passage whenever necessary. After them followed the pack-train, divided into four bands with the muleteers and a competent number of garrison soldiers for their escort with each band. In the rear guard with the rest of
the troops and friendly Indians came the cap- tain, Don Fernando Rivera, convoying the horse-herd and the mule herd for relays."
* "It must be well considered that the marches of these troops with such a train and with such embarrassments thro' unknown lands and un- used paths could not be long ones; leaving aside the other causes which obliged them to halt and camp early in the afternoon, that is to say, the necessity of exploring the land one day for the next, so as to regulate them (the marches) according to the distance of the watering-places and to take in consequence the proper precau- tions; setting forth again on special occasions in the evening, after having given water to the beasts in that same hour upon the sure informa- tion that in the following stretch there was no water or that the watering place was low, or the pasture scarce. The restings were measured by the necessity, every four days, more or less, according to the extraordinary fatigue occa- sioned by the greater roughness of the road, the toil of the pioneers, or the wandering off of the beasts which were missing from the horse herd and which it was necessary to seek by their tracks. At other times, by the necessity of humoring the sick, when there were any, and with time there were many who yielded up their strength to the continued fatigue, the excessive heat and cruel cold. In the form and according to the method related the Spaniards executed their marches; traversing immense lands more fertile and more pleasing in proportion as they penetrated more to the north. All in general are peopled with a multitude of Indians, who came out to ineet them and in some parts accompa- nied them from one stage of the journey to the next; a folk very docile and tractable chiefly from San Diego onward."
Constansó's description of the Indians of Santa Barbara will be found in the chapter on the "Aborigines of California." "From the chan- nel of Santa Barbara onward the lands are not so populous nor the Indians so industrious, but they are equally affable and tractable. The Spaniards pursued their voyage without opposi- tion up to the Sierra of Santa Lucia, which they contrived to cross with much hardship. At the
*Evidently an error; it should be July 14th.
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HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
foot of said Sierra on the north side is to be found the port of Monterey, according to an- cient reports, between the Point of Pines and that of Año Nuevo (New Year). The Spaniards caught sight of said points on the Ist of October of the year '69, and, believing they had arrived at the end of their voyage, the commandant sent the scouts forward to reconnoitre the Point of Pines; in whose near vicinity lies said Port in 36 degrees and 40 minutes North Latitude. But the scant tokens and equivocal ones which are given of it by the Pilot Cabrera Bueno, the only clue of this voyage, and the character of this Port, which rather merits the name of Bay, being spacious (in likeness to that of Cadiz), not corresponding with ideas which it is natural to form in reading the log of the aforemen- tioned Cabrera Bueno, nor with the latitude of 37 degrees in which he located it, the scouts were persuaded that the Port must be farther to the north and they returned to the camp which our people occupied with the report that what they sought was not to be seen in those parts."
They decided that the Port was still further north and resumed their march. Seventeen of their number were sick with the scurvy, some of whom, Constansó says, seemed to be in their last extremity; these had to be carried in lit- ters. To add to their miseries, the rains began in the latter part of October, and with them came an epidemic of diarrhea, "which spread to all without exception; and it came to be feared that this sickness which prostrated their powers and left the persons spiritless, would finish with the expedition altogether. But it turned out quite to the contrary." Those afflicted with the scurvy began to mend and in a short time they wererestoredto health. Constansó thus describes the discovery of the Bay of San Francisco: "The last day of October the Expedition by land came in sight of Punta de Los Reyes and the Farallones of the Port of San Francisco, whose landmarks, compared with those related by the log of the Pilot Cabrera Bueno, were found exact. Thereupon it became of evident knowl- edge that the Port of Monterey had been left behind; there being few who stuck to the contrary opinion. Nevertheless the comman- dant resolved to send to reconnoitre the
land as far as Point de los Reyes. The scouts who were commissioned for this purpose found themselves obstructed by immense estuaries, which run extraordinarily far back into the land and were obliged to make great detours to get around the heads of these. *
* * Having arrived at the end of the first estuary and recon- noitered the land that would have to be followed to arrive at the Point de Los Reyes, interrupted with new estuaries, scant pasturage and fire -! wood and having recognized, besides this, the uncertainty of the news and the misapprehen- sion the scouts had labored under, the com- mandant, with the advice of his officers, resolved upon a retreat to the Point of Pines in hopes of finding the Port of Monterey and encountering in it the Packet San José or the San Antonia, whose succor already was necessary; since of the provisions which had been taken in San Diego no more remained than some few sacks of flour of which a short ration was issued to each individual daily."
"On the eleventh day of November was put into execution the retreat in search of Mon- terey. The Spaniards reached said port and the Point of Pines on the 28th of Novem- ber. They maintained themselves in this place until the Ioth of December without any ves- . sel having appeared in this time. For which reason and noting also a lack of victuals, and that the sierra of Santa Lucia was covering itself with snow, the commandant, Don Gaspar de Portolá, saw himself obliged to decide to continue the retreat unto San Diego, leaving it until a better occasion to return to the enter- prise. On this retreat the Spaniards experi- enced some hardships and necessities, because they entirely lacked provisions, and because the long marches, which necessity obliged to make to reach San Diego, gave no time for seeking sustenance by the chase, nor did game abound equally everywhere. At this juncture they killed twelve mules of the pack-train on whose meat the folk nourished themselves unto San Diego, at which new establishment they arrived, all in health, on the 24th of January, 1770."
The San José, the third ship fitted out by Visitador-General Galvez, and which Governor Portolá expected to find in the Bay of Monte-
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rey, sailed from San José del Cabo in May, 1770, with supplies and a double crew to sup- ply the loss of sailors on the other vessels, but nothing was ever heard of her afterwards. Pro- visions were running low at San Diego, no ship had arrived, and Governor Portolá had decided to abandon the place and return to Loreto. Father Junipero was averse to this and prayed unceasingly for the intercession of Saint Joseph, the patron of the expedition. A novena or nine days' public prayer was instituted to terminate with a grand ceremonial on March 19th, which was the saint's own day. But on the 23rd of March, when all were ready to depart, the packet San Antonia arrived. She had sailed from San Blas the 20th of December. She en- countered a storm which drove her four hun- dred leagues from the coast; then she made land in 35 degrees north latitude. Turning her prow southward, she ran down to Point Concep- cion, where at an anchorage in the Santa Bar- bara channel the captain, Perez, took on water and learned from the Indians of the return of Portolá's expedition. The vessel then ran down to San Diego, where its opportune arrival prevented the abandonment of that settle- ment.
With an abundant supply of provisions and a vessel to carry the heavier articles needed in forming a settlement at Monterey, Portolá or- ganized a second expedition. This time he took with him only twenty soldiers and one officer, Lieutenant Pedro Fages. He set out from San Diego on the 17th of April and followed his trail made the previous year. Father Serra and the engineer, Constansó, sailed on the San Antonia, which left the port of San Diego on the 16th of April. The land expedition reached Monterey . on the 23d of May and the San Antonia on the , 3Ist of the same month. On the 3d of June, 1770, the mission of San Carlos Borromeo de Monterey was formally founded with solemn church ceremonies, accompanied by the ringing of bells, the crack of musketry and the roar of cannon. Father Serra conducted the church services. Governor Portolá took possession of the land in the name of King Carlos III. A presidio or fort of palisades was built and a few huts erected. Portolá, having formed the nu- cleus of a settlement, turned over the command of the territory to Lieutenant Fages. On the 9th of July, 1770, he sailed on the San Antonia for San Blas. He never returned to Alta Cali- fornia.
CHAPTER IV. ABORIGINES OF CALIFORNIA.
W HETHER the primitive California In- dian was the low and degraded being that some modern writers represent him to have been, admits of doubt. A mis- sion training continued through three gen- erations did not elevate him in morals at least. When freed from mission restraint and brought in contact with the white race he lapsed into a condition more degraded and more debased than that in which the missionaries found him. Whether it was the inherent fault of the Indian or the fault of his training is a question that is useless to discuss now. If we are to believe the accounts of the California Indian given by Vis- caino and Constansó, who saw him before he
had come in contact with civilization he was not inferior in intelligence to the nomad aborigines of the country east of the Rocky mountains.
Sebastian Viscaino thus describes the In- dians he found on the shores of Monterey Bay three hundred years ago:
"The Indians are of good stature and fair complexion, the women being somewhat less in size than the men and of pleasing countenance. The clothing of the people of the coast lands consists of the skins of the sea-wolves (otter) abounding there, which they tan and dress bet- ter than is done in Castile; they possess also, in great quantity, flax like that of Castile, hemp and cotton, from which they make fishing-lines
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and nets for rabbits and hares. They have ves- sels of pine wood very well made, in which they go to sea with fourteen paddle men on a side with great dexterity, even in stormy weather."
Indians who could construct boats of pine boards that took twenty-eight paddle men to row were certainly superior in maritime craft to the birch bark canoe savages of the east. We might accuse Viscaino, who was trying to induce King Philip III. to found a colony on Monterey Bay, of exaggeration in regard to the Indian boats were not his statements con- firmed by the engineer, Miguel Constansó, who accompanied Portolá's expedition one hundred and sixty-seven years after Viscaino visited the coast. Constansó, writing of the Indians of the Santa Barbara Channel, says, "The dexterity and skill of these Indians is surpassing in the construction of their launches made of pine planking. They are from eight to ten varas (twenty-three to twenty-eight feet) in length, including their rake and a vara and a half (four fcet three inches) beam. Into their fabric enters no iron whatever, of the use of which they know little. But they fasten the boards with firmness, one to another, working their drills just so far apart and at a distance of an inch from the edge, the holes in the upper boards corresponding with those in the lower, and through these holes they pass strong lashings of deer sinews. They pitch and calk the seams, and paint the whole in sightly colors. They handle the boats with equal cleverness, and three or four men go out to sea to fish in them, though they have capacity to carry eight or ten. They use long oars with two blades and row with unspeakable lightness and velocity. They know all the arts of fishing, and fish abound along their coasts as has been said of San Diego. They have communication and commerce with the natives of the islands, whence they get the beads of coral which are current in place of money through these lands, although they hold in more esteem the glass beads which the Spaniards gave them, and of- fered in exchange for these whatever they had like trays, otter skins, baskets and wooden plates. * * *
"They are likewise great hunters. To kill deer and antelope they avail themselves of an
admirable ingenuity. They preserve the hide of the head and part of the neck of some one of these animals, skinned with care and leaving the horns attached to the same hide, which they stuff with grass or straw to keep its shape. They put this said shell like a cap upon the head and go forth to the woods with this rare equip- age. On sighting the deer or antelope they go dragging themselves along the ground little by little with the left hand. In the right they carry the bow and four arrows. They lower and raise the head, moving it to one side and the other, and making other demonstrations so like these animals that they attract them without difficulty to the snare; and having them within a short distance, they discharge their arrows at them with certainty of hitting."
In the two chief occupations of the savage, hunting and fishing, the Indians of the Santa Barbara Channel seem to have been the equals if not the superiors of their eastern brethren. In the art of war they were inferior. Their easy conquest by the Spaniards and their tame subjection to mission rule no doubt had much to do with giving them a reputation for infe- riority.
The Indians of the interior valleys and those of the coast belonged to the same general fam- ily. There were no great tribal divisions like those that existed among the Indians east of the Rocky mountains. Each rancheria was to a certain extent independent of all others, al- though at times they were known to combine for war or plunder. Although not warlike, they sometimes resisted the whites in battle with great bravery. Each village had its own terri- tory in which to hunt and fish and its own sec- tion in which to gather nuts, seeds and herbs. While their mode of living was somewhat no- madic they seem to have had a fixed location for their rancherias.
The early Spanish settlers of California and the mission padres have left but very meager accounts of the manners, customs, traditions. government and religion of the aborigines. The } padres were too intent upon driving out the old religious beliefs of the Indian and instilling new ones to care much what the aborigine had for- merly believed or what traditions or mytha hu
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had inherited from his ancestors. They ruth- lessly destroyed his fetiches and his altars wherever they found them, regarding them as inventions of the devil.
The best account that has come down to us of the primitive life of the Southern California aborigines is found in a series of letters written by Hugo Reid and published in the Los An- geles Star in 1851-52. Reid was an educated Scotchman, who came to Los Angeles in 1834. He married an Indian woman, Dona Victoria, a neophyte of the San Gabriel mission. She was the daughter of an Indian chief. It is said that Reid had been crossed in love by some high toned Spanish señorita and married the Indian woman because she had the same name as his lost love. It is generally believed that Reid was the putative father of Helen Hunt Jackson's heroine, Ramona.
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