FRANCISCAN MISSIONARIES IN TEXAS BEFORE 1690
The Rodriquez-Sánchez expedition, one of the
earliest, took a route northward followed by most later travelers (dashed line).
The northern frontier of New Spain had reached the mining areas of Santa Bárbara
by the 1570s, and the Río Conchos provided a connecting path. The Rodriquez-Sánchez
side-trip eastward to the Plains Indians in the Panhandle was also followed
by many later excursions. (The letters on the map indicate
locations where Franciscan missionaries worked and are included in brief
profiles that follow.)
The first
Christian missionaries came to Texas by way of New Mexico.
This odd
historical fact was the result of three influences: the goals of the earliest
Spanish explorers, the geography of New Spain and the Spanish sense of
responsibility for spreading the faith. That the religion was introduced from
the west is odd because other development of Texas – social, economic and
cultural – came from the east and south.
Explorers' Goals
Spain's
early goals in the Southwest were primarily materialistic, and the search for
wealth resulted first in the Coronado expedition of 1540-42. Considering the
context of the times, it was not far-fetched to believe that immense wealth was
over the horizon. The Inca Empire of Peru had been conquered a mere seven years
earlier. The Incas ruled the second grand system of civilization the Spanish
had encountered in the New World. The first, the Aztecs, was conquered in
1519-22.
Then came
bits of evidence of a possible third indigenous "empire" north of Texas. The
reports included mention of people who lived in houses. The physical evidence
included samples of fine woven cloth, as well as a few gemstones and metal
objects. Of course, the Pueblo people of northern New Mexico, as it turned out,
did not possess the kind of wealth Spanish explorers sought. But, there Spain
was.
Crusading Mission
Abandonment
of the area was not conceivable. This was because of Spain's sense of Christian
mission that came out of their own peculiar history. It is beyond our purposes
to go into that history in this article, except to say the Spanish were a
crusading society, and they had acquired a keen sense of responsibility for all
peoples to receive the Santa Fe (Holy Faith).
Unlike the
English and French colonizers who wanted the Indians just to get out of the
way, the Spanish were continuously wrestling with dual and conflicting impulses
toward the Indians – greed and charity. The greed for new wealth was witnessed
mostly in the soldiers and civilian explorers, who often exploited the Indians
as labor. The protective missionaries, some say overly protective, bore
evangelistic charity toward the native people, wishing to instruct them in the
new faith but also to teach them crafts and agricultural techniques through the
elaborate mission system.
With the
pursuit of wealth a dashed hope, the Spanish religious mission became the
primary catalyst for policy in the Southwest for the following two centuries.
The
Franciscan order was given the job of teaching the Indians, and before 1690,
when the Spanish turned their interest to East Texas, there was much activity
in West Texas in spreading the Christian faith.
Geographical
Avenues
The
geography, especially the layout of the river systems, was the third element
that influenced where and when different tribes received the missionaries'
message. New Spain's northern frontier by the 1570s had reached mining areas
around Santa Bárbara at the headwaters of the Río Conchos (see map).
From there,
movement along the Conchos to its junction (La Junta) with the Rio Grande
provided an avenue for travel northward. La Junta de los Ríos became an
important stopover on most excursions. It had been a settled farming area since
1500 B.C. and in the late 1500s A.D. it was the home to several different
Indian groups. Nancy Parrot Hickerson, in her study of the Jumano Indians in
the region, says there were eight villages at La Junta on both sides of the Rio
Grande, some of them with more than 2,000 people.
In 1598,
Juan de Oñate led the entrada through El Paso del Norte that began the
colonizing of New Mexico. The Spanish founded the first settlement and mission
near present Española. In 1610, the capital of New Mexico was moved to Santa
Fe. As the New Mexico base became established with the arrival of more Franciscans
at the Isleta monastery (at least 53 between 1612-1629), there was a burst of
missionary activity in all directions.
Concho-Colorado
In 1629,
the deepest missionary activity into West Texas occurred at the confluence of
the Colorado (then called the San Clemente) and the Concho (then called the
Nueces) rivers, most sources say. (Anthropologist Hickerson says it was at a
Jumano base [ranchería] north of there, possibly at the headwaters of the Red
River in Palo Duro Canyon.)
This
mission came on the pleadings of the Jumanos who showed some familiarity with
Christianity, all sources agree. Believers hold that the Indians encountered a
mysterious "Woman in Blue" who spoke to them in their languages and told them
to seek further religious instruction (see Lady in Blue). Skeptics say
it was the weaker tribes' fear of the encroaching Apaches that spurred their
interest in Spanish protection.
A second
mission to the Plains Jumanos occurred in 1632. Sources disagree on whether
Fray Juan de Salas participated or merely directed it, but all agree the second
mission was to the Colorado-Concho area near present-day San Angelo.
In 1630,
there was a brief attempt for a mission in the El Paso area to serve the
primitive Mansos Indians. Around 1656 there was a second attempt there, and
finally a successful and permanent mission in 1659.
In
1674-1675, there were brief forays from Monclova in Mexico. These occurred near
Del Rio and Eagle Pass and were efforts to reach tribes who had crossed the Rio
Grande from missions in Coahuila.
Santa Fe Uprising
On Aug. 10,
1680, the Pueblo Uprising began in New Mexico, and within weeks the 2,000
Spanish colonists were forced to flee to El Paso. After decades of enduring
inept and sometimes malicious governors, the Indians established an alliance
strong enough to successfully revolt. There had also been overzealous
missionaries who prohibited Indian customs and ceremonies they deemed pagan and
diabolical.
When the
Spanish refugees arrived at El Paso del Norte, they camped in what were thought
to be short-lived settlements.
Instead, it
would be twelve years before they were to return to Santa Fe. In the meantime,
the Spanish established a government-in-exile in San Lorenzo a short distance
down river from the El Paso mission. And, for the Indian allies who had fled
with them, settlements and missions were established that still exist today at
Ysleta and Socorro.
In 1683,
some of the missionaries from El Paso moved down river to establish other
missions for La Junta. Also in that year, Juan Domínguez de Mendoza led an
expedition that returned to the area near present San Angelo, first reached in
1629-32 by Salas.
In all,
some 32 Franciscans worked to advance the Christian faith into West Texas
before the emphasis switched to East Texas and later still to the area around
San Antonio.
– Robert Plocheck
• • •
Following are listed the Franciscans connected to ministry
in Texas before 1690, grouped by expedition. The letters following in
parenthesis indicate locations on the accompanying map where they worked.
Sources are also named (NHB, [New Handbook of Texas], etc). A complete list of
sources follows.
The Rodriquez-Sánchez expedition, one of the
earliest, took a route northward followed by most later travelers (dashed line).
The northern frontier of New Spain had reached the mining areas of Santa Bárbara
by the 1570s, and the Río Conchos provided a connecting path. The Rodriquez-Sánchez
side-trip eastward to the Plains Indians in the Panhandle was also followed
by many later excursions. (The letters on the map indicate
locations where Franciscan missionaries worked and are included in brief
profiles that follow.)
CORONADO 1540
PADILLA, Fray Juan de. Came to the New World from his native
Andalucia in Spain, where he had been a soldier before joining the Franciscan
order. The exact date of his arrival is not known, but his signature did appear
on a letter from the New World dated Oct. 19, 1529. ... Padilla was among the
party that journeyed in 1541 with Francisco Vázquez de Coronado to Quivira, the
Wichita village in present-day Kansas. He reportedly conducted a service of
thanksgiving [Eucharist] in Palo Duro Canyon [or Blanco Canyon]. When the
disillusioned Coronado declared his intention to return to New Spain in the
spring of 1542, Padilla chose to remain and continue missionary efforts among
the Plains tribes. He and two lay brothers worked in the New Mexico pueblos and
reportedly were martyred. ...
Padilla and
his companions set out for the buffalo plains. Some accounts claim that they
followed the Canadian River as far as the area of present Hutchinson and
Roberts counties before turning north to Quivira, where they were warmly
received by the natives. After working in the area about two years, Padilla,
with companions, wanted to expand their ministry to neighboring tribes in
unexplored territory.
About Nov.
30, 1544, at a little more than a day's journey from their home base, they were
suddenly set upon by a war party of enemy tribesmen. Urging his companions to
flee, the account goes, the friar knelt and deliberately sacrificed himself to
the arrows of the Indians, who "threw him into a pit, covering his body with
innumerable stones." The actual location of Padilla's death is disputed, as are
certain details surrounding the episode, such as who was really with him.
However, he has been revered by Texans as the first Christian martyr of Texas.
In 1936 a monument commemorating the martyrdom was erected jointly by the State
of Texas and the Knights of Columbus in Amarillo's Ellwood Park. – Anderson,
NHB. (A,B)
DANIEL, Fray. One of three lay Franciscans on Coronado
expedition 1541-44. No last name given. – Castañeda. (A,B)
DE LA CRUZ, Fray Juan. One of two lay Franciscan brothers
who remained after Coronado returned to Mexico. Worked with Padilla in the New
Mexico pueblos and reportedly was martyred Nov. 25, 1542. Aged missionary. Had
labored for many years among Indians of Jalisco. Little is known except he
remained alone among Tiguex. Died pierced by arrows. "He was so highly regarded
for his saintly life by Coronado himself, that the latter gave orders to his
soldiers that each should touch his hat or helmet whenever the name of this
holy man was mentioned." – Castañeda. (A,B)
ESCALONA, Fray Luis de (or Descalona/Ubeda). One of two lay
Franciscan brothers who remained after Coronado returned to Mexico. Worked with
Padilla (who was youngest of three) in the New Mexico pueblos and reportedly
martyred circa 1544. (A)
NIZA, Fray Marcos de. Had served in Central America and
Peru. Controversial Franciscan explorer, led the 1539 expedition into the
American Southwest. ... It was based on his reports – some say exaggerations – that the Coronado expedition was initiated. Niza traveled in 1540 to Cíbola
with Coronado. Niza (from Nice) returned to Mexico City where he died in 1558. – Weber, NHB. (A,B)
RODRÍGUEZ and ESPEJO 1581-83
RODRÍGUEZ, Fray Agustín (d.1582). Lay brother on upper Río
Conchos in 1570s when he read Cabeza de Vaca's account of adventures and heard
reports from La Junta about Indians in cotton clothes who lived in houses.
Secured permission (1581) to explore Pueblo areas, went from Santa Bárbara up
to Taos. Martyred at Puaray, N.M., after the soldier escorts (including leader
Sanchez) returned to Mexico. (B,D,E)
BELTRÁN, Fray Bernardino. Resident in monastery
in Durango, Mexico. Accompanied Antonio de Espejo on mission of 1582-83 in
attempt to rescue Fray Rodriguez and companions. At Pauray, urged returning to
Mexico once martyrdom of friars determined. (D,E)
LÓPEZ, Fray Francisco. As priest, was designated superior
when he accompanied Fray Rodriguez on 1581 entrada. Martyred at Puaray with
Rodriguez. (D,E)
SANTA MARÍA, Fray Juan de. Accompanied Fray Rodriguez on
1581 entrada along Rio Grande. Turning back to Mexico alone, he was killed by
Indian war party. (D,E)
OÑATE 1598
VELASCO, Fray Francisco de. In company of Oñate in 1598-1601
at El Paso and in Texas Panhandle. (D,B)
VERGARA, Fray Pedro de. Lay brother with Oñate in 1598-1601
at El Paso and in Texas Panhandle. (D,B)
SALAS 1629
SALAS, Fray Juan de. Franciscan, came to New Mexico in 1613
or 1622 and founded Isleta mission, near present Albuquerque. Benavides says
Indians had special fondness for Salas. In 1629 Jumano Indians went to the
monastery and asked for religious instruction, stating that they came at the
request of the "Woman in Blue," María de Ágreda.
It was
while they were living on a stream which the Spaniards called Noeces or Nueces
that they were visited by María de Ágreda. This river, erroneously thought to be
the Arkansas, has definitely been identified with the present middle Concho, in
Texas...Salas and Father Fray Diego López [set out] with a guard of three
soldiers...guided on this occasion by the friendly delegation that had come to
seek for them ... going approximately 300 miles east-southeast from old Isleta.—
Castañeda.
[Salas and
companions reached] southwest Texas where they were welcomed by a large band of
Indians, who claimed they had been advised of approaching Christian
missionaries by the Woman in Blue. Although no permanent mission was set up
among the Jumanos, in 1632 Fray Ascencio de Zarate and Fray Pedro de Ortega
lead a follow-up expedition to the same locale. – Chipman.
A senior
and much respected priest must have been in attendance at [1629] meeting ...
[where] Jumanos requested missionaries because, says Benavides, they were
influenced by the virtuous reputation of the Franciscans, and they acted out of
a special fondness for Fray Salas. ... [who] would have understood (the Jumanos)
situation. Salas had worked among the Tompiros and Jumanos in the Salinas (in
New Mexico) for many years ... He had a reputation for skill with native
languages and had become acquainted with Jumano leaders such as Captain Tuerto.
Benavides indicated ... Salas was eager to undertake the mission. ... [Plains
Jumanos] optimal location near Canadian, Red and Brazos suggests possibly a
protected site in a canyon or barranca such as Palo Duro Canyon. ... After an
indefinite period of time – a month at most – during which they worked at
catechizing, erected a large cross, conducted healing sessions, and met with
the ambassadors from neighboring tribes, the priest departed....it was evidently
their intention to return. – N. Hickerson. (C) [or A,B, according to
Hickerson].
LÓPEZ, Fray Diego. Young ... perhaps one of the [1629]
arrivals in New Mexico. Accompanied Fray Salas on first mission to Jumanos in
Texas. – N.Hickerson. Some (Blake, NHB) say surname was LEON. (C)
ORTEGA, Fray Pedro (or Juan) de. Priest-missionary to
Jumanos in 1632. Worked six months at confluence of Concho-Colorado in West
Texas. ..."Died among the Jumanos," Benavides, Memorial of 1634, "... worn out by
the long and severe hardships of the march, the evangelical preaching, and the
catechizing of the Indians in the Christian doctrine." Some sources say he was
poisoned by Indians. Unlike Salas, he had difficulties with Indians. In Taos,
Indians "gave him tortillas of corn made with urine and mice meat." —
N.Hickerson. (C)
ZÁRATE, Fray Asencíon de. Priest-missionary to Jumanos in
1632. Accompanied Ortega to confluence of Concho-Colorado in West Texas. ...
Posada, Report of 1686: "two hundred leagues southeast of Santa Fe, on a stream
called the Nueces (Concho)." – N.Hickerson. (C)
EL PASO 1630-59
SAN FRANCISCO y ZúÑIGA, Fray García. In 1659, founded
Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe Mission at El Paso del Norte, coming from Senecú in
New Mexico. Mission still stands in downtown Juárez, the oldest structure in
the El Paso area. Some sources say he started a branch mission also called
Senecú in Texas before 1662. It is said that he refused [to receive Holy]
Orders until he set out for New Mexico, when he was ordained under oath of
obedience. Founded New Mexico's Socorro mission. At El Paso until 1671 when he
returned to New Mexico. He died in 1673. – Castañeda. (D)
ARTEAGA, Fray Antonio de (b. 1589). Native of Mexico, son of
distinguished family from Canary Islands. Attended University of Mexico. Joined
Franciscans 1612 at age of 23. Attained distinction as a sacred orator. One of
30 missionaries arriving in New Mexico in 1628. At Senecú (N. M.) where he was
a colleague of San Francisco y Zúñiga: "By his tender care and ardent zeal he
succeeded in winning the heart of this heretofore unconquered nation [Mansos]."
(Baltzar Medina in his 1682 Chrónica.) ... In 1630, he made first attempt at
mission in El Paso; obliged to abandon his work among the El Paso Mansos
shortly after his arrival. Just how long he stayed is not known. – Castañeda. (D)
CABAL, Fray Juan. Franciscan priest and colleague of San
Francisco y Zúñiga in second El Paso mission attempt 1656. (D)
PÉREZ, Fray Francisco. Franciscan priest colleague of San
Francisco y Zúñiga in second El Paso mission attempt 1656. (D)
SALAZAR, Fray Juan de. Franciscan priest and colleague of San
Francisco y Zúñiga in third and permanent El Paso mission 1659. (D)
DEL RIO and EAGLE PASS 1675
LARIOS, Fray Juan. On April 30, 1675, Fernando del Bosque,
Fray Larios, and company set out from the mission of Nuestra Señora de
Guadalupe, at present Monclova, Coahuila. ... On May 11 they reached the Rio
Grande, probably below present Eagle Pass. Bosque took formal possession of the
river, erected a wooden cross, and renamed the river the San Buenaventura del
Norte. On May 15, the expedition was met by several Indian chiefs, who asked
the missionaries to come to teach and baptize their followers. The oath of
allegiance to the king was administered to all the Indians, a portable altar
was set up, and Mass was celebrated.
In all, the
Spaniards traveled 40 leagues past the Rio Grande and made six halts in south
central Texas. On May 25 they reached a site in Edwards County that they called
San Pablo Hermitano. They returned by a northerly route to Guadalupe, where
they arrived on June 12; there Bosque made a formal report to Antonio de
Balcárcel. The latter recommended that three mission districts be established,
including land and Indians north of the Rio Grande.
Indian
hostilities and disputes with Nuevo León about the jurisdiction of the area,
however, delayed implementation of the plan for more than a decade, and by that
time the focus of efforts had shifted to East Texas to counteract French
incursions. – Walker, NHB. (F)
DE LA CRUZ, Fray Manuel. A lay brother sent by Larios into
Texas in 1674 ... crossed between present Eagle Pass and Del Rio. He came to a
"mountain range which the Indians called Dacate" – probably the hills along
Devil's River in Val Verde County. Spent three weeks among Indians of Maverick,
Kinney and Val Verde counties. – Castañeda. (F)
PEÑASCO de LOZANO, Fray Francisco. Crossed Rio Grande near
Del Rio in 1674 after return of Brother Manuel de la Cruz. Brought Indians back
to mission at Santa Rosa, Coahuila. Colleague of Larios. (F)
SAN BUENAVENTURA, Fray Dionisio de. With Larios at Eagle
Pass and Edwards County in 1675. (F)
YSLETA and SOCORRO 1680
AYETA, Fray Francisco de (b.1640). Born in Pamplona. He
entered the Franciscan order at the age of 19, was ordained a priest the next
year, and was assigned to the province of New Mexico. He provided vital
assistance to refugees at El Paso del Norte when they arrived after the Pueblo
Revolt of 1680. Father Ayeta, in ill health and physically impaired, left the
frontier and returned to Spain in 1683. There he took up his pen in defense of
the missionary (regular) clergy, who were increasingly challenged by bishops
and the secular clergy. Ayeta died in Spain during the decade of the 1690s. —
NHB. (D)
GUERRA, Fray Antonio. First missionary stationed at Socorro,
Texas, 1680-82. (D)
YNOJOSA, Fray Joaquin (or de Hinojosa). First missionary
stationed at Ysleta, Texas 1680-82. Assisted Fray Colina at La Junta missions
in 1687. (D,E)
ZAVALETA, Fray Juan de. Celebrated first Mass at Ysleta,
Texas 1680. Missionary to La Junta in 1683. Went on with Mendoza-Lopez to San
Clemente at junction of Colorado-Concho 1683. – Castañeda. (D,E,C)
PRESIDIO and SAN CLEMENTE 1683
LÓPEZ, Fray Nicolas. Was custodian of the missions in New
Mexico in 1680 when the Indian revolt drove the Spanish back to El Paso. ... with
Fray Juan de Zavaleta and Fray Antonio Acevedo established two missions at La
Junta, La Navidad en las Cruces and Apostol Santiago, in December of 1683.
López and
Zavaleta joined Juan Domínguez de Mendoza at Apostol Santiago and accompanied
his expedition to Concho-Colorado (San Clemente). Interpretations of Mendoza's route have placed the
mission variously on the Colorado River west of Ballinger (Bolton), near the
confluence of the Concho and Colorado rivers (Castañeda), and on the South
Llano River (Williams). ... Seymour V. Connor, locates the mission on the San
Saba River west of Menard. ... During [Mendoza-López] six-week stay at San
Clemente, the Spaniards were joined by 2,000 to 3,000 Indians, most of whom
were baptized by the two priests ... After several attacks by the Apaches from
the north and the Salineros from Nueva Vizcaya, the Spaniards abandoned the
mission.— Standifer NHB (E,C)
ACEVEDO, Fray Antonio. Missionary with Fray Nicolas Lopez to
La Junta in 1683-84. (E)
COLINA, Fray Agustín de. As priest, was stationed in 1687 at
the struggling missions of La Junta de los Ríos, at the site of present
Presidio, Texas, and Ojinaga, Chihuahua. There in the fall of that same year,
widely traveled Cíbolo and Jumano Indians approached Colina and asked him for a
letter that they could take to "the Spaniards (French) who were coming and
going among the Tejas" in East Texas. ... It is possible, but by no means
certain, that Colina continued to labor as a missionary in the La Junta region.
(E)
CHRONICLER
BENAVIDES, Franciscan Fray Alonso de (ca. 1578-1635).
Custodian of the Franciscan missions in the Southwest from 1626 to 1629 and
interviewer of María de Agreda in Spain. Son of Pedro Alonso Nieto and Antonia
Murato de Benavides, was born on the island of San Miguel in the Azores about
1578. He is noted for his memorials (reports) which comprise one of the basic
sources for history of the West Texas missions. He arrived in New Spain in 1598
and took vows with the Franciscans some three years later in Mexico City. Benavides
filled the office of novice master at Puebla for a time and was later
associated with the Inquisition, while residing at the friary of Cuernavaca. —
Weddle, NHB. (D,E) I
— written by Robert Plocheck, associate editor, and first published in the Texas Almanac 2004–2005.
Sources
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in the American West 1540-1821 , University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque,
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• New Handbook of Texas , Texas State Historical Association, 1996,
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• Encyclopaedia Britannica , “María de Ágreda,” “Conceptionists,” and “Philip
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• Texas Historical Commission, Austin.
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