SAN GABRIEL, ARCANGEL
We have already seen that San Gabriel,
the fourth Mission, was founded September 8, 1771.
The natives gave cheerful assistance in bringing timber,
erecting the wooden buildings, covering them with tules,
and constructing the stockade enclosure which surrounded
them. They also brought offerings of acorns and
pine-nuts. In a few days so many of them crowded
into camp that Padre Somero went to San Diego for an
addition to the guard, and returned with two extra
men. It was not long before the soldiers got
into trouble, owing to their treatment of the Indian
women, and an Indian attack, as before related, took
place. A few days later, Fages appeared on the
scene from San Diego with sixteen soldiers and two
missionaries, who were destined as guard and priests
for the new Mission of San Buenaventura. But
the difficulty with the Indians led Fages to postpone
the founding of the new Mission. The offending
soldier was hurried off to Monterey to get him out
of the way of further trouble. The padres
did their best to correct the evil impression the soldiers
had created, and, strange to say, the first child brought
for baptism was the son of the chief who had been
killed in the dispute with the soldiers.
But the San Gabriel soldiers were
not to be controlled. They were insolent to the
aged priests, who were in ill-health; they abused the
Indians so far as to pursue them to their rancherias
“for the fun of the thing;” and there
they had additional “sport” by lassoing
the women and killing such men as interfered with
their lusts. No wonder Serra’s heart was
heavy when he heard the news, and that he attributed
the small number of baptisms only seventy-three
in two years to the wickedness of the men
who should have aided instead of hindering the work.
In his first report to Mexico, Serra
tells of the Indian population around San Gabriel.
He says it is larger than at any other Mission, though,
unfortunately, of several different tribes who are
at war with one another; and the tribes nearest to
the sea will not allow others to fish, so that they
are often in great want of food. Of the prospects
for agriculture he is most enthusiastic. The
location is a well-watered plain, with plenty of water
and natural facilities for irrigation; and though
the first year’s crop was drowned out, the second
produced one hundred and thirty fanegas of maize
and seven fanegas of beans. The buildings
erected are of the same general character as those
already described at San Carlos, though somewhat smaller.
When Captain Anza reached California
from Sonora, by way of the Colorado, on his first
trip in 1774, accompanied by Padre Garces, he stayed
for awhile to recuperate at San Gabriel; and when he
came the second time, with the colonists for the new
presidio of San Francisco, San Gabriel was their first
real stopping-place after that long, weary, and arduous
journey across the sandy deserts of Arizona and California.
Here Anza met Rivera, who had arrived the day before
from Monterey. It will be remembered that just
at that time the news came of the Indian uprising
at San Diego; so, leaving his main force and the immigrants
to recuperate, he and seventeen of his soldiers, with
Padre Font, started with Rivera for the south.
This was in January, 1776. He and Rivera did
not agree as to the best methods to be followed in
dealing with the troublesome Indians; so, when advices
reached him from San Gabriel that provisions were
giving out, he decided to allow Rivera to follow his
own plans, but that he would wait no longer.
When he arrived at San Gabriel, February 12, he found
that three of his muleteers, a servant, and a soldier
belonging to the Mission had deserted, taking with
them twenty-five horses and a quantity of Mission
property. His ensign, Moraga, was sent after
the deserters; but, as he did not return as soon as
was expected, Anza started with his band of colonists
for the future San Francisco, where they duly arrived,
as is recorded in the San Francisco chapter.
In 1777-1778 the Indians were exceedingly
troublesome, and on one occasion came in large force,
armed, to avenge some outrage the soldiers had perpetrated.
The padres met them with a shining image of Our
Lady, when, immediately, they were subdued, and knelt
weeping at the feet of the priests.
In October, 1785, trouble was caused
by a woman tempting (so they said) the neophytes and
gentiles to attack the Mission and kill the padres.
The plot was discovered, and the corporal in command
captured some twenty of the leaders and quelled the
uprising without bloodshed. Four of the ringleaders
were imprisoned, the others whipped with fifteen or
twenty lashes each, and released. The woman was
sentenced to perpetual exile, and possibly shipped
off to one of the peninsula Missions.
In 1810 the settlers at Los Angeles
complained to the governor that the San Gabriel
padres had dammed up the river at Cahuenga, thus
cutting off their water supply; and they also stated
that the padres refused to attend to the spiritual
wants of their sick. The padres offered to
remove the dam if the settlers were injured thereby,
and also claimed that they were always glad to attend
to the sick when their own pressing duties allowed.
On January 14, 1811, Padre Francisco
Dumetz, one of Serra’s original compadres,
died at San Gabriel. At this time, and since 1806,
Padre Jose Maria Zalvidea, that strict martinet of
padres, was in charge, and he brought the Mission
up to its highest state of efficiency. He it was
who began the erection of the stone church that now
remains, and the whole precinct, during his rule,
rang with the busy hammer, clatter, chatter, and movement
of a large number of active workers.
It was doubtless owing to the earthquake
of December 8, 1812, which occurred at sunrise, that
a new church was built. The main altar was overthrown,
several of the figures broken, the steeple toppled
over and crashed to the ground, and the sacristy walls
were badly cracked. The padres’ house
as well as all the other buildings suffered.
One of the adjuncts to San Gabriel
was El Molino Viejo, the old mill.
Indeed there were two old mills, the first one,
however, built in Padre Zalvidea’s time, in
1810 to 1812, being the one that now remains.
It is about two miles from the Mission. It had
to be abandoned on account of faulty location.
Being built on the hillside, its west main wall was
the wall of the deep funnel-shaped cisterns which furnished
the water head. This made the interior damp.
Then, too, the chamber in which the water-well revolved
was so low that the powerful head of water striking
the horizontal wheel splashed all over the walls and
worked up through the shaft holes to the mill stones
and thus wet the flour. This necessitated the
constant presence of Indian women to carry away the
meal to dry storerooms at the Mission where it was
bolted by a hand process of their own devising.
On this account the mill was abandoned, and for several
years the whole of the meal for the Mission was ground
on the old-style metates.
The region adjacent to the mill was
once largely inhabited by Indians, for the foreman
of the mill ranch declares that he has hauled from
the adjacent bluff as many stone pestles and mortars,
metates and grinders as would load a four-horse
wagon.
It should not be forgotten that originally
the mill was roofed with red tiles made by the Indians
at the Mission; but these have entirely disappeared.
It was the habit of Padre Zalvidea
to send certain of his most trusted neophytes over
to the islands of San Clemente and Catalina with a
“bolt” or two of woven serge, made at
the Mission San Gabriel, to exchange with the island
Indians for their soapstone cooking vessels, mortars,
etc. These traders embarked from a point
where Redondo now is, and started always at midnight.
In 1819 the Indians of the Guachama
rancho, called San Bernardino, petitioned for the
introduction of agriculture and stock raising, and
this was practically the beginning of that asistencia,
as will be recorded in the chapter on the various
chapels. A chapel was also much needed at Puente,
where Zalvidea had six hundred Indians at work in
1816.
In 1822 San Gabriel was fearfully
alarmed at the rumor that one hundred and fifty Indians
were bearing down upon that Mission from the Colorado
River region. It transpired that it was an Opata
with despatches, and that the company had no hostile
intent. But Captain Portilla met them and sent
them back, not a little disconcerted by their inhospitable
reception.
Of the wild, political chaos that
occurred in California after Mexico became independent
of Spain, San Gabriel felt occasional waves. When
the people of San Diego and the southern part of the
State rebelled against Governor Victoria, and the
latter confident chief came to arrange matters, a
battle took place near Los Angeles, in which he was
severely wounded. His friends bore him to San
Gabriel, and, though he had entirely defeated his
foes, so cleverly did some one work upon his fears
that he made a formal surrender, December 6, 1831.
On the ninth the leader of the rebels, the former
Governor Echeandia, had a conference with him at San
Gabriel, where he pledged himself to return to Mexico
without giving further trouble; and on the twentieth
he left, stopping for awhile at San Luis Rey with
Padre Peyri. It was at this time the venerable
and worthy Peyri decided to leave California, and he
therefore accompanied the deposed governor to San
Diego, from which port they sailed January 17, 1832.
After secularization San Gabriel was
one of the Missions that slaughtered a large number
of her cattle for the hides and tallow. Pio Pico
states that he had the contract at San Gabriel, employing
ten vaqueros and thirty Indians, and that he thus
killed over five thousand head. Robinson says
that the rascally contractors secretly appropriated
two hides for every one they turned over to the Mission.
In 1843, March 29, Micheltorena’s
order, restoring San Gabriel to the padres, was
carried out, and in 1844 the official church report
states that nothing is left but its vineyards in a
sad condition, and three hundred neophytes. The
final inventory made by the comisionados under Pio
Pico is missing, so that we do not know at what the
Mission was valued; but June 8, 1846, he sold the
whole property to Reid and Workman in payment for
past services to the government. When attacked
for his participation in what evidently seemed the
fraudulent transfer of the Mission, Pico replies that
the sale “did not go through.” The
United States officers, in August of the same year,
dispossessed the “purchasers,” and the
courts finally decreed the sale invalid.
There are a few portions of the old
cactus hedge still remaining, planted by Padre Zalvidea.
Several hundreds of acres of vineyard and garden were
thus enclosed for purposes of protection from Indians
and roaming bands of horses and cattle. The fruit
of the prickly pear was a prized article of diet by
the Indians, so that the hedge was of benefit in two
ways, protection and food.
On the altar are several of the old
statues, and there are some quaint pictures upon the
walls.
In the baptistry is a font of hammered
copper, probably made either at San Gabriel or San
Fernando. There are several other interesting
vessels. At the rear of the church are the remains
of five brick structures, where the soap-making and
tallow-rendering of the Mission was conducted.
Five others were removed a few years ago to make way
for the public road. Undoubtedly there were other
buildings for the women and male neophytes as well
as the workshops.
The San Gabriel belfry is well known
in picture, song, and story. Yet the fanciful
legends about the casting of the bells give way to
stern fact when they are examined. Upon the first
bell is the inscription: “Ave Maria Santisima.
S. Francisco. De Paula Rvelas, me fecit.”
The second: “Cast by G.H. Holbrook,
Medway, Mass., 1828.” The third: “Ave
Maria, Sn Jvan Nepomvseno, Rvelas me fecit, A.D., ’95.”
The fourth: “Fecit Benitvs a Regibvs, Ano
D. 1830, Sn. Frano.”
In the year 1886 a number of needed
repairs were made; the windows were enlarged, and
a new ceiling put in, the latter a most incongruous
piece of work.