A Spanish story written four hundred
years ago speaks of California as an island rich in
pearls and gold. Only black women lived there,
the story says, and they had golden spears, and collars
and harness of gold for the wild beasts which they
had tamed to ride upon. This island was said
to be at a ten days’ journey from Mexico, and
was supposed to lie near Asia and the East Indies.
Among those who believed such fairy
tales about this wonderful island of California was
Cortes, a Spanish soldier and traveller. He had
conquered Mexico in 1521 and had made Montezuma, the
Mexican emperor, give him a fortune in gold and precious
stones. Then Cortes wished to find another rich
country to capture, and California, he thought, would
be the very place. He wrote home to Spain promising
to bring back gold from the island, and also silks,
spices, and diamonds from Asia. For he was sure
that the two countries were near together, and that
both might be found in the Pacific Ocean, or South
Sea, as he called it, by sailing northwest.
So for years Cortes built ships in
New Spain (or Mexico), and sent out men to hunt for
this golden island. They found the Gulf of California,
and at last Cortes himself sailed up and down its waters.
He explored the land on both sides, and saw only poor,
naked Indians who had a few pearls but no gold.
Cortes never found the golden island. We should
remember, however, that his ships first sailed on the
North Pacific and explored Lower California, and that
he first used the name California for the peninsula.
It was left for a Portuguese ship-captain
called Cabrillo to find the port of San Diego in 1542.
He was the first white man to land upon the shores
of California, as we know it. Afterwards he sailed
north to Monterey. Many Indians living along
the coast came out to his ship in canoes with fish
and game for the white men. Then Cabrillo sailed
north past Monterey Bay, and almost in sight of the
Golden Gate. But the weather was rough and stormy,
and without knowing of the fine harbor so near him,
he turned his ship round and sailed south again.
He reached the Santa Barbara Islands, intending to
spend the winter there, but he died soon after his
arrival. The people of San Diego now honor Cabrillo
with a festival every year. He was the sea-king
who found their bay and first set foot on California
ground.
About this time Magellan had discovered
the Philippine Islands, and Spain began to send ships
from Mexico to those islands to buy silks, spices,
and other rich treasures. The Spanish galleons,
or vessels, loaded with their costly freight, used
to come home by crossing the Pacific to Cape Mendocino,
and then sailing down the coast of California to Mexico.
Before long the English, who hated Spain and were
at war with her, sent out brave sea-captains to capture
the Spanish galleons and their cargoes. Sir Francis
Drake, one of the boldest Englishmen, knew this South
Sea very well, and on a ship called the Golden
Hind (which meant the Golden Deer), he came to
the New World and captured every Spanish vessel he
sighted. He loaded his ship with their treasures,
gold and silver bars, chests of silver money, velvets
and silks, and wished to take his cargo back to England.
He tried to find a northern, or shorter way home, and
at last got so far north that his sailors suffered
from cold, and his ship was nearly lost. Obliged
to sail south, he found a sheltered harbor near Point
Reyes, and landed there in 1579. Drake claimed
the new country for the English Queen, Elizabeth,
and named it New Albion. A great many friendly
Indians in the neighborhood brought presents of feather
and bead work to the commander and his men. These
Indians killed small game and deer with bows and arrows,
and had coats or mantles of squirrel skins.
Drake and his sailors repaired and
refitted their vessel during the month they stayed
at Drake’s Bay. They made several trips
inland also and saw the pine and redwood forests with
many deer feeding on the hills; but they did not discover
San Francisco Bay. On leaving New Albion, Drake
sailed the Golden Hind across the Pacific to
the East Indies and the Indian Ocean, and round the
Cape of Good Hope home to England, with all the treasure
he had taken. The queen received him with great
honors and his ship was kept a hundred years in memory
of the brave admiral, who had commanded it on this
voyage.
During the next century several English
commanders of vessels sailed the South Sea while hunting
Spanish galleons to capture, and these ships often
touched at Lower California for fresh water. Some
of the captains explored the coast and traded with
the Indians, but no settlements were made.
Then the Spanish tried to find and
settle the country they had heard so many reports
of, thinking to provide stations where their trading
ships might anchor for supplies and protection.
Viscaino, on his second voyage for this purpose, landed
at San Diego in 1602. Sailing on to the island
he named Santa Catalina, Viscaino found there a tribe
of fine-looking Indians who had large houses and canoes.
They were good hunters and fishermen and clothed themselves
in sealskins. Viscaino went on to Monterey and
finally as far north as Oregon, but owing to severe
storms, and to sickness among his sailors, he was
obliged to return to Mexico.
For a long time after this failure
to settle upon the coast, the Spanish came to Lower
California for the pearl-fisheries. Along the
Gulf of California were many oyster-beds where the
Indians secured the shells by diving for them.
Large and valuable pearls were found in many of the
oysters, and the Spanish collected them in great quantities
from the Indians who did not know their real value.
In this peninsula of Lower California
fifteen Missions, or settlements, each having a church,
were founded by Padres of the Jesuits. But
later the Jesuits were ordered out of the country,
and their Missions turned over to the Franciscan order
of Mexico.
With the coming of the Franciscans
a new period of California’s history began.
Spain wished to settle Alta California, or that region
north of the peninsula, and Father Serra, the head
and leader of these Franciscans, was chosen to begin
this work.
How he did this, and how he and his
followers founded the California Missions you will
read in the story of that time.