's appointment as
Governor of the Californias in 1767 coincided with Serra's appointment as chief of the missions in
the Californias Into the vacuum created by the
Jesuits' expulsion from Mexico, stepped Franciscan missionaries. In July 1767, the guardian of the
college of San Fernando appointed Serra president of the missions of
Baja California, heading a group of 15 Franciscan friars;
Francisco Palóu served as his second in command. Jesuit priests had developed 13 missions on that long and arid peninsula over seven decades. Two Jesuits had died at the hands of Indians in the revolt of 1734–36. In March 1768, Serra and his missionary team boarded a Spanish
sloop at
San Blas, on Mexico's Pacific coast. Sailing over 200 miles up the
Gulf of California, they landed at
Loreto two weeks later.
Gaspar de Portolá, governor of Las Californias, welcomed them at the
Loreto mission, founded by Jesuits in 1697. While he gave control of the church to Serra, Portolá controlled the living quarters and rationed out food to the friars, charging their costs to the mission. Serra and Palóu found—to their unpleasant surprise—that they ruled only on spiritual matters: everyday management of the mission remained in the hands of the military, who had occupied the Baja missions since evicting the Jesuits. In August 1768, New Spain's inspector general
José de Gálvez, displeased with the sloppy military administration of the Baja missions, ordered them turned over fully to the Franciscan friars. . The Franciscans found that the Indian population in the Baja California mission territories had dwindled to about 7,150. By the time the Franciscans had moved north and turned the missions over to Dominican friars in 1772, the Indian population had decreased to about 5,000. "If it goes on at this rate," wrote Palóu, "in a short time Baja California will come to an end." Epidemics, especially syphilis introduced by Spanish troops, were wasting the Indians. But Palóu attributed the ravages of syphilis to God's retribution for the Indians' murder of the two Jesuit priests over 30 years earlier. In 1768
José de Gálvez, inspector general of New Spain, decided to send explorers and locate missions in Alta (upper) California. Gálvez aimed both to Christianize the extensive Indian populations and serve Spain's strategic interest by preventing Russian explorations and possible claims to North America's Pacific coast. Gálvez chose Serra to head the missionary team in the California expedition. Serra, now 55, eagerly seized the chance to harvest thousands of pagan souls in lands previously untouched by the church. But as the expedition gathered in
Loreto, Serra's foot and leg infection had become almost crippling. The commander,
Gaspar de Portolá, tried to dissuade him from joining the expedition, and wrote to
Gálvez about Serra's condition. Serra's fellow friar and former student
Francisco Palóu also became concerned, gently suggesting to Serra that he stay in Baja California and let the younger and stronger Palóu make the journey to San Diego in his place. Serra rebuffed both Portolá's and Palóu's doubts. He chided Palóu for his suggestion: "Let us not speak of that. I have placed all my confidence in God, of whose goodness I hope that He will grant me to reach not only San Diego to raise the standard of the Holy Cross in that port, but also Monterey." Serra suggested that the Portolá party set off without him; he would follow and meet up with them on the way to Alta California. He then assigned friar Miguel de la Campa as chaplain to the
Portolá expedition, which set out from
Loreto on March 9, 1769. Spending holy week at
mission Loreto, Serra set out on March 28. "From my mission of Loreto," wrote Serra, "I took along no more provisions for so long a journey than a loaf of bread and a piece of cheese. For I was there [at mission Loreto] a whole year, in economic matters, as a mere guest to receive the crumbs of the royal soldier commissioner, whose liberality at my departure did not extend beyond the aforementioned articles." Two servants—one named José María Vergerano, a 20-year-old from
Magdalena, the other a soldier guard—accompanied Serra on his journey from Loreto, as he rode on a feeble mule. On April 28, 1769, Serra arrived at
mission San Borja, where he received a warm welcome from friar
Fermín Lasuén. Founded just seven years before by the Jesuit
Wenceslaus Linck, mission San Borja sat in an unusually arid region of Baja California. Continuing north, Serra stopped on May 5 to celebrate a
Mass for the
feast of the Ascension in the deserted church at
Calamajué, scarcely more than a ruined hut. The next morning he arrived at
Santa María, where he met up with
Portolá, friar Miguel de la Campa and several members of their party. In this arid region, whose alkaline land resisted cultivation, lived the "poorest of all" the Indians Serra had encountered in Mexico. On Sunday May 7, Serra celebrated high Mass and preached a sermon at the mission church on the frontier of Spanish Catholicism.
Founding Mission Velicatá at
Mission Loreto, in
Baja California, in 1768–69 After leaving
Mission Santa María, Serra urged
Portolá to move ahead of the slow pack train, so they could reach Velicatá in time for
Pentecost the next day. Portolá agreed, so the small group traveled all day May 13 to reach Velicatá by late evening. The advanced guard of the party greeted them there. On Pentecost day, May 14, 1769, Serra founded his first mission,
Misión San Fernando Rey de España de Velicatá, in a mud hut that had served as a makeshift church when friar
Fermín Lasuén had traveled up on Easter to conduct the sacraments for the
Fernando Rivera expedition, the overland party that had preceded the Portolá party. The founding celebration took place "with all the neatness of holy poverty," in Serra's words. Smoke from the soldiers' guns, fired in repeated volleys, served as incense. The new mission lacked Indians to convert. A few days later, friar Miguel de la Campa notified Serra that a few natives had arrived. Serra joyously rushed out to welcome twelve Indians, men and boys. "Then I saw what I could hardly begin to believe when I read about it," wrote Serra. "... namely, that they go about entirely naked like Adam in paradise before the fall. ... We treated with them for a long time; and although they saw all of us clothed, they nevertheless showed not the least trace of shame in their manner of nudity." Serra placed both hands upon their heads as a token of paternal affection. He then handed them figs, which they ate immediately. One of the Indian men gave Serra roasted
agave stalks and four fishes. In return, Portolá and his soldiers offered tobacco leaves and various food items. Through a Christian Indian interpreter, Serra told the Indians that de la Campa would stay at the mission to serve them. According to Stephen Hyslop, "[Serra's] goal and that of his fellow friars was not to confirm Indians in their seeming innocence, like 'Adam in the garden, before sin', but to make them aware of their sins and move them to repent." The motive behind gifts of food, tobacco, and the like was, "in the words of Serra's colleague and biographer, Father Francisco Palóu, spiritual conquest meant enticing Indians with food and clothing, by which means they could be indoctrinated as Christians and 'gradually acquire a knowledge of what is spiritually good and evil' ". formerly installed in
Golden Gate Park,
San Francisco before it was removed during the
George Floyd protests Back on the road, Serra found it very difficult to stay on his feet because "my left foot had become very inflamed, a painful condition which I have suffered for a year or more. Now this inflammation has reached halfway up my leg." Portolá again tried to persuade Serra to withdraw from the expedition, offering to "have you carried back to the first mission where you can recuperate, and we will continue our journey." Serra countered that "God ... has given me the strength to come so far. ... Even though I should die on the way, I shall not turn back. They can bury me wherever they wish and I shall gladly be left among the pagans, if it be God's will." Portolá had a stretcher prepared, so that Christian Indians traveling with the expedition could carry Serra along the trail. Not wishing to burden his traveling companies, Serra departed from his usual practice of avoiding medicines: he asked one of the
muleteers, Juan Antonio Coronel, if he could prepare a remedy for his foot and leg wound. When Coronel objected that he knew only how to heal animals' wounds, Serra rejoined: "Well then, son, just imagine that I am an animal. ... Make me the same remedy that you would apply to an animal." Coronel then crushed some
tallow between stones and mixed it with green desert herbs. After heating the mix, he applied it to Serra's foot and leg. The next morning, Serra felt "much improved and I celebrated Mass. ... I was enabled to make the daily trek just as if I did not have any ailment. ... There is no swelling but only the itching which I feel at times." The expedition still had to travel to San Diego. They passed through desert terrain into oak savanna in June, often camping and sleeping under large oaks. From a high hill on June 20, their advance scouts saw the Pacific Ocean in the distance. Reaching its shores that evening, the party called the spot Ensenada de Todos Santos (All Saints' Cove, today simply
Ensenada). They now had less than to reach San Diego. Pressing north, they stayed close to the ocean. On June 23, they came upon a large Indian village where they enjoyed a pleasant stopover. The natives appeared healthy, robust and friendly, immediately repeating the Spanish words they heard. Some danced for the party, offering them fish and mussels. "We were all enamored of them," wrote Serra. "In fact, all the pagans have pleased me, but these in particular have stolen my heart." The Indians now encountered by the party near the coast appeared well-fed and more eager to receive cloth than food. On June 25, as the party struggled to cross a series of ravines, they noticed many Indians following them. When they camped for the night, the Indians pressed close. Whenever Serra placed his hands on their heads, they placed theirs on his. Coveting cloth, some begged Serra for the friar's habit he wore. Several women passed Serra's spectacles around with delight from hand to hand, until one man dashed off with them. Serra's companions rushed to recover them, the only pair of spectacles Serra possessed.
Arrival in San Diego at the
Presidio of San Diego, California On June 28, sergeant
José Ortega, who had ridden ahead to meet the
Rivera party in San Diego, returned with fresh animals and letters to Serra from friars
Juan Crespí and Fernando Parrón. Serra learned that two Spanish
galleons dispatched from Baja to supply the new missions had arrived at
San Diego Bay. One of the ships, the
San Carlos, had sailed almost four months from
La Paz, bypassing its destination by almost 200 miles before doubling back south to reach San Diego Bay. By the time it dropped anchor on April 29,
scurvy had so devastated its crew that they lacked the strength to lower a boat. Men on shore from the
San Antonio, which had arrived three weeks earlier, had to board the
San Carlos to help its surviving crew ashore. The Portolá/Serra party, having trekked from
Loreto and suffered dwindling food supplies along the way, arrived in
San Diego on July 1, 1769. "It was a day of great rejoicing and merriment for all," wrote Serra, "because although each one in his respective journey had undergone the same hardships, their meeting ... now became the material for mutual accounts of their experiences." Between the overland and seafaring parties of the expedition, about 300 men had started on the trip from Baja California. But no more than half of them reached San Diego. Most of the Christian Indians recruited to the overland parties had died or deserted; military officers had denied them rations when food started running low. Half of those who made it to San Diego spent months unable to resume the expedition, due to illness. Doctor Pedro Prat, who had also sailed on the
San Carlos as the expedition's surgeon, struggled to treat the ill men, himself weakened from scurvy. Friar Fernando Parrón, who had sailed on the
San Carlos as chaplain, had become weak with scurvy as well. Many men who had sailed on the
San Antonio, including captain
Juan Pérez, had also taken ill with scurvy. Despite the efforts of Doctor Prat, many of the ill men died in San Diego.
Mission San Diego de Alcalá On July 16, 1769, Serra founded
Mission San Diego in honor of
Didacus of Alcalá in a simple shelter on Presidio Hill serving as a temporary church. Tensions with the local
Kumeyaay people made it difficult to attract converts. The Indians accepted the trinkets Serra offered as rewards for visiting the new mission. But their craving for Spanish cloth irritated the soldiers, who accused them of stealing. Some of the Kumeyaay teased and taunted the sick soldiers. To warn them away, soldiers fired their guns into the air. The Christian Indians from Baja who remained with the Spaniards did not know the Kumeyaay language. On August 15, the
Feast of the Assumption, Serra and padre Sebastian Vizcaíno celebrated Mass at the new mission chapel, to which several Hispanics had gone for confession and
Holy Communion. After Mass, four soldiers went down to the beach to bring padre Fernando Parrón back from the
San Carlos, where he had been celebrating Mass. Observing the mission and its neighboring huts sparsely protected, a group of over 20 Indians attacked with bows and arrows. The four remaining soldiers, aided by the blacksmith and carpenter, returned fire with muskets and pistols. Serra, clutching a Jesus figurine in one hand and a Mary figurine in the other, prayed to God to save both sides from casualties. The blacksmith, Chacón, ran about the Spanish huts unprotected by a leather jacket, shouting: "Long live the faith of Jesus Christ and may these dogs, enemies of that faith, die!" on March 19, 1770 Serra's young servant José María Vergerano ran into Serra's hut, his neck pierced by an arrow. "Father, absolve me," he beseeched, "for the Indians have killed me." "He entered my little hut with so much blood streaming from his temples and mouth that, shortly after, I gave him absolution and helped him to die well," wrote Serra. "He passed away at my feet, bathed in his blood." Padre Vizcaíno, the blacksmith Chacón, and a Christian Indian from
San Ignacio suffered wounds. That night Serra buried Vergerano secretly, concealing his death from the Indians. The Indian warriors, suffering several dead and wounded, retreated with a new-found respect for the power of Spanish firearms. As local Indians cremated their dead, the wailing of their women sounded from local villages. Yet Serra wrote six months later, in a letter to the guardian of the
college of San Fernando, that "both our men and theirs sustained wounds"—without mentioning any Indian deaths. He added: "It seems none of them died so they can still be baptized." Tightening security, the soldiers built a stockade of poles around the mission buildings, banning Indians from entering. A teenage boy from the
Kumeyaay village of
Kosa'aay (Cosoy, known today as
Old Town, San Diego) who had often visited the mission before the outbreak of hostilities, resumed his visits with the friars. He soon learned enough Spanish for Serra to view him as an envoy to help convert the Kumeyaay. Serra urged the boy to persuade some parents to bring their young child to the mission, so that Serra could administer
Catholic baptism to the child by pouring water over his head. A few days later, a group of Indians arrived at the mission carrying a naked baby boy. The Spaniards interpreted their sign language as a desire to have the boy baptized. Serra covered the child with some clothing and asked the corporal of the guard to sponsor the baptism. Dressed in
surplice and
stole, Serra read the initial prayers and performed the ceremonies to prepare for baptism. But just as he lifted the baptismal shell, filled it with water and readied to pour it over the baby's head, some Indians grabbed the child from the corporal's arms and ran away to their village in fear. The other Kumeyaay visitors followed them, laughing and jeering. The frustrated Serra never forgot this incident; recounting it years later brought tears to his eyes. Serra attributed the Indians' behavior to his own sins. Over six months dragged on without a single Indian convert to Mission San Diego. On January 24, 1770, the 74 exhausted men of the
Portolá expedition returned from their exploratory journey up the coast to San Francisco. They had survived by slaughtering and eating their mules along the return trek south. Commander
Gaspar de Portolá, engineer and cartographer
Miguel Costansó, and friar
Juan Crespí all arrived in San Diego with detailed diaries of their trip. They reported large populations of Indians living along the coast who seemed friendly and docile, ready to embrace the gospel. Serra fervently wrote to the guardian of the
college of San Fernando, requesting more missionaries willing to face hardships in Alta California. Food remained scarce as the San Diego outpost awaited the return of the supply ship
San Antonio. Weighing the risk of his soldiers dying of starvation, Portolá set a deadline of March 19, the
feast of Saint Joseph, patron of his expedition: If no ship arrived by that day—Portolá told Serra—he would march his men south the next morning. The anguished Serra, along with friar Juan Crespí, insisted on staying in San Diego in the event of the Portolá group's departure. Boarding the
San Carlos (still anchored in San Diego Bay), Serra told captain Vicente Vila of Portolá's plan. Vila agreed to stay in the harbor until the relief ship arrived—and to welcome Serra and Crespí aboard if they got stranded by Portolá's departure. On the morning of March 19, Serra celebrated Mass and preached a sermon at the forlorn mission on Presidio Hill. No ship appeared in the bay that morning. But around 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the sails of a ship—the
San Antonio—came into view on the horizon. It sailed past San Diego Bay, destined for Monterey. When it got to the Santa Barbara Channel, its sailors made landfall to fetch fresh water. There they learned from Indians that the Portolá expedition had returned south. So the
San Antonio also turned south, anchoring in San Diego Bay on March 23.
Monterey , 1877 Bolstered by the food unloaded from the
San Antonio, Portolá and his men shifted their sights back north to
Monterey, specified by
José de Gálvez as the northern stake of Spain's empire in California. Friar
Juan Crespí prepared to accompany the second Portolá expedition to Monterey. Leaving Mission San Diego in the hands of friars Fernando Parrón and Francisco Gómez, Serra rode a launch out to board the
San Antonio. He and Crespí would meet in Monterey. Since Serra planned to establish the mission there while having Crespí establish
mission San Buenaventura, the two friars would be living over 200 miles apart. "Truly," wrote Serra to
Palóu, "this state of solitude shall be ... the greatest of my hardships, but God in His infinite mercy will see me through." On April 16, 1770, the
San Antonio set sail from San Diego Bay, carrying Serra, doctor Pedro Prat, engineer
Miguel Costansó and a crew of sailors under captain
Juan Pérez. Contrary winds blew the ship back south to the
Baja peninsula, then as far north as the
Farallon Islands. As the ship heaved against heavy winds, Pérez, Serra and sailors recited daily prayers, promising to make a
novena and celebrate High Mass upon their safe arrival in Monterey. Several sailors fell sick with scurvy. Serra described the six-week voyage as "somewhat uncomfortable." Meanwhile, the land expedition departed from San Diego on April 17 under the command of
Portolá. His group included friar
Crespí, captain
Pedro Fages, twelve Spanish volunteers, seven leather-jacketed soldiers, two
muleteers, five Baja Christian Indians, and Portolá's servant. Following the same route they had taken the year before, the expedition reached Monterey Bay on May 24, without losing a single man or suffering any serious illness. , in
Monterey, where
Sebastián Vizcaíno celebrated mass in 1602 and Serra celebrated mass in 1770 With the
San Antonio nowhere in sight, Portolá, Crespí and a guard walked over the hills to Point Pinos, then to a beachside hill just south where their party had planted a large cross five months before on their journey back from San Francisco Bay. They found the cross surrounded by feathers and broken arrows driven into the ground, with fresh sardines and meat laid out before the cross. No Indians were in sight. The three men then walked along the rocky coast south to
Carmel Bay. Several Indians approached them, and the two groups exchanged gifts. On May 31, the
San Antonio sailed into
Monterey Bay and dropped anchor, reuniting the surviving men of the land and sea expeditions. On
Pentecost Sunday, June 3, 1770, Serra, Portolá and the whole expedition held a ceremony at a makeshift chapel erected next to a massive oak tree by Monterey Bay, to found
mission San Carlos Borromeo. "The men of the land and sea expeditions coming from different directions met here at the same time," wrote Serra, "we singing the divine praises in our launch, while the gentlemen on land sang in their hearts." After the raising and planting of a large cross, which Serra blessed, "the standards of our Catholic monarch were also set up, the one ceremony ... accompanied by shouts of 'Long live the Faith!' and the other by 'Long live the King!' Added to this was the clangor of the bells, the volleys of the muskets, and the cannonading from the ship." Both king
Carlos III and viceroy
Carlos de Croix had chosen to name the new mission after
Carlo Borromeo. The body of a sailor, Alexo Niño, who had died the day before aboard the
San Antonio, was buried at the foot of the newly erected cross. Serra realized from the start that the new mission needed relocation: While the
Laws of the Indies required missions to be located near Indian villages, there were no Indian settlements near the newly christened mission by Monterey Bay. "It might be necessary," wrote Serra to the guardian of the
college of San Fernando, "to change the site of the mission toward the area of
Carmel, a locality indeed more delightful and suitable because of the extent and excellent quality of the land and water supply necessary to produce very abundant harvests." On July 9, the
San Antonio set sail from Monterey, bound for Mexico. Aboard were
Portolá and
Miguel Costansó, along with several letters from Serra. Forty men, including the two friars and five Baja Indians, remained to develop the mission on the
Monterey peninsula. In San Diego, south, 23 men remained to develop the mission there. Both groups would have to wait a year before receiving supplies and news from Mexico.
Missions founded was founded by Serra in 1769, as the first of the
California missions , where Serra died, was founded in 1770 When the party reached
San Diego on July 1, Serra stayed behind to start
Mission San Diego de Alcalá, the first of the 21 California missions •
Mission Basilica San Diego de Alcalá, July 16, 1769, present-day San Diego, California. •
Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, June 3, 1770, present-day Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. •
Mission San Antonio de Padua, July 14, 1771, near present-day Jolon, California, was later converted into a
parish church and no longer provides any
missions •
Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, September 8, 1771, present-day San Gabriel, California. •
Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa, September 1, 1772, present-day city of San Luis Obispo, California. •
Mission San Francisco de Asís, June 29, 1776, present-day San Francisco, California chain of missions. •
Mission San Juan Capistrano, November 1, 1776, present-day San Juan Capistrano •
Mission Santa Clara de Asís, January 12, 1777, present-day city of Santa Clara, California, and •
Mission San Buenaventura, March 31, 1782, present-day Ventura, California. Converted into a parish. Serra was also present at the founding of the
Presidio of Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, California) on April 21, 1782, but was prevented from locating the mission there because of the animosity of Governor
Felipe de Neve. , founded in 1771 He began in San Diego on July 16, 1769, and established his headquarters near the
Presidio of Monterey, but soon moved a few miles south to establish
Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo in today's
Carmel, California. For Serra and his companions, therefore, instructing the natives so that their children might also be saved would have most likely been a great concern. From this came the determined efforts of missionaries to the detriment of native cultures, which few today would support. Discipline was strict, and the converts were not allowed to come and go at will. Indians who were baptized were required to live at the mission and conscripted into forced labor as plowmen, shepherds, cattle herders, blacksmiths, and carpenters on the mission. Disease, starvation, overwork, and torture decimated these tribes. Serra successfully resisted the efforts of Governor Felipe de Neve to bring Enlightenment policies to missionary work, because those policies would have subverted the economic and religious goals of the Franciscans. Serra wielded this kind of influence because his missions served economic and political purposes as well as religious ends. The number of civilian colonists in Alta California never exceeded 3,200, and the missions with their Indian populations were critical to keeping the region within Spain's political orbit. Economically, the missions produced all of the colony's cattle and grain, and by the 1780s were even producing surpluses sufficient to trade with Mexico for luxury goods. In 1779,
Franciscan missionaries under Serra's direction planted California's first sustained
vineyard at
Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Hence, he has been called the "Father of
California Wine". The variety he planted, presumably descended from Spain, became known as the
Mission grape and dominated California wine production until about 1880. == Treatment of Native Californians ==