Misión San Miguel Arcángel de la Frontera

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Another mission bearing the name San Miguel Arcángel is the Mission San Miguel Arcángel in San Miguel, California.

Mission San Miguel was established on 28 March 1787 by the Dominican missionary Luis Sales among the Kumeyaay Indians of northwestern Baja California, Mexico. The ruins of the mission are located in present-day Ejido La Misión in the municipio of Ensenada.

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[edit] History

The mission was built with the support of six soldiers from the Presidio of San Diego and five others probably from Mission San Vicente. They had just begun to build the first houses and plant the first crops when the neighboring San Juan Bautista Creek ran dry. This forced them to move the mission to a new site called San Juan Bautista, 10 kilometers upstream, where there was a good supply of water.

In 1787, the Mission had a population of 137, and by 1800 it had increased to 229, of which 207 were natives and 22 were Spaniards. This was one of the last Dominican missions that functioned successfully, under the administration of Félix Caballero. However, the decline of the Indian population and the Mexican government's secularization policy resulted in the abandonment of San Miguel in 1833.

[edit] Mission complex

The three remaining walls of the mission, covered by a protective layer.
The three remaining walls of the mission, covered by a protective layer.

The enclosure was rectangular, with the church and the residential quarters facing east and south. It had an open patio, the only entrance to which was a large door located in the southeast corner of the complex, protected by a barrack. The complex also included an irrigation ditch, four granaries, two houses, a corral, and three other rooms.

The buildings of the complex were made of adobe, with round stone foundations, set at a depth of 90 centimeters, cemented with a mortar of clay, sand, and lime. The adobe bricks resting on the foundation were cemented with the same mortar and placed in an alternating fashion to give the structure more strength and stability, making walls from 0.90 to 1.10 meters thick. The adobe was made with local soil, water, clay, sand, and straw to make it more resistant.

The walls probably reached a height of 4.50 meters, and the roofs were interlaced with tule branches possibly over beams or with adobe tile. The floors were made of flooring tile.

[edit] Location and natural habitat

This Mission is located at the base of a mountain, surrounded by meadows and hills, crossed by the San Juan Bautista stream, also known as the Guadalupe River. Further downhill this stream joins the sea, forming an estuary rich in diverse types of plants and animals, such as white herons and wild ducks.

The missionaries wrote in their diaries about finding plentiful pasture in the area and further inland as well as watercress, chia, mangrove, cattail, brushwood, a few isolated pines, yucca, mesquite, sycamores, chamomile, willows, and evergreen oaks.

The native animals that inhabited the region were coyotes, bobcats, beavers, moles, rabbits, squirrels, rats, and mice, among others. There were also marine species such as sea bass, corbina, tuna, sardine, boga octopus, abalone, clam, and mussel.

The humidity at San Miguel Arcángel de la Frontera favored the development of cattle herds. According to the missionaries' reports, they had more than 3,000 head of cattle, goats, and sheep, as well as 400 horses and mules in the meadows.

Agricultural crops included wheat, maize, cantaloupe, watermelon, beans, lentils, vegetables, grapes, and barley.

A shored-up Mission wall.
A shored-up Mission wall.

[edit] Conservation

Conservation efforts at San Miguel form part of the "Camino Real Misionero de las Californias" program of Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH). Foundations of the eroded walls have been consolidated. Rain gutters have been built to divert the water and prevent its concentration at the base of the remains. One of the walls has been shored. The remains of the walls are covered by a layer made of clay, sand, water, slices of nopal cactus, and manure to protect them from the wind, sunlight, and rain.

[edit] References

  • Meigs, Peveril, III. 1935. The Dominican Mission Frontier of Lower California. University of California Publications in Geography No. 7. Berkeley.
  • Vernon, Edward W. 2002. Las Misiones Antiguas: The Spanish Missions of Baja California, 1683-1855. Viejo Press, Santa Barbara, California.

[edit] See also


Baja California missions

Misión San Bruno (1683) · Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó (1697) · Visita de San Juan Bautista Londó (1699) · Misión San Francisco Javier de Viggé-Biaundó (1699) · Misión San Juan Bautista Malibat (Misión Liguí) (1705) · Misión Santa Rosalía de Mulegé (1705) · Misión San Jose de Comondú (1708) · Misión La Purísima Concepción de Cadegomó (1720) · Misión de Nuestra Señora del Pilar de La Paz Airapí (1720) · Misión Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Huasinapi (1720) · Misión Santiago de Los Coras (1721) · Misión Nuestra Señora de los Dolores del Sur Chillá (1721) · Misión San Ignacio Kadakaamán (1728) · Misión Estero de las Palmas de San José del Cabo Añuití (1730) · Misión Santa Rosa de las Palmas (Misión Todos Santos) (1733) · Misión San Luis Gonzaga Chiriyaqui (1740) · Misión Santa Gertrudis (1752) · Misión San Francisco Borja (1762) · Visita de Calamajué (1766) · Misión Santa María de los Ángeles (1767) · Misión San Fernando Rey de España de Velicatá (1769) · Visita de la Presentación (1769) · Misión Nuestra Señora del Santísimo Rosario de Viñacado (1744) · Visita de San José de Magdalena (1774) · Misión Santo Domingo de la Frontera (1775) · Misión San Vicente Ferrer (1780) · Misión San Miguel Arcángel de la Frontera (1797) · Misión Santo Tomás de Aquino (1791) · Misión San Pedro Mártir de Verona (1794) · Misión Santa Catarina Virgen y Mártir (1797) · Visita de San Telmo (1798) · Misión El Descanso (Misión San Miguel la Nueva) (1817) · Misión de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe del Norte (1834)