When many people picture the earliest European settlements in what is now
the United States, they think of Massachusetts or Virginia or other East-Coast
sites rich in colonial history. Like much of the West Coast, California was
not even thought to be a gleam in the eye of European explorers. It may come
as a surprise, then, that Spanish settlements can trace their California
history back more than 400 years.
In 1542 Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo sailed into a wide harbor and planted the
flag of Spain in what he christened San Miguel. The settlement would later be
renamed San Diego. That naming came in 1602—five years before Jamestown
became the first permanent English settlement in North America—when
Spanish explorer Sebastian Vizcaino arrived near what is now Point Loma and
named the area in honor of the Spanish Catholic saint, San Diego de
Alcala.
By the mid 1700s Spain began to assert control over the coast of
California, and in July 1769 the first of California's string of missions,
built as way stations for travelers and to bring local Indians to the church,
was established in San Diego by Father Junipero Serra. It was named Mission
San Diego de Alcala.
While the original mission was burned in 1775 by the Indians, who also
killed the priest, Father Luis Jayme, it was rebuilt according to
specifications for Spanish forts and opened at its present location in 1813.
It was restored in 1931 and today is an active parish church. Jayme,
considered California's first Christian martyr, is buried under the altar. At
its peak in the early 1800s, Mission San Diego encompassed 50,000 acres.
Pala Mission was founded in 1816 as an asistencia to the larger
Mission San Luis Rey in the northeastern part of what's now San Diego County.
Pala Mission is the only one of the area's missions still fulfilling its
original purpose of serving as a mission to local Indians, in this case the
Pala Indians. It also has a museum and gift shop.
The original Pala Mission has been meticulously reconstructed and is an
excellent venue for getting an idea of what typical mission architecture
involved. Its walls display paintings by local Indians, and its bell tower is
notable for being the only freestanding one among the California missions.
There is also an old cemetery next to the mission.
A third surviving mission in the San Diego area is Mission San Luis Rey de
Francia, named for France's King Louis IX. When it was built in 1798, about
six miles from Pala Mission, it was the 18th of the 21 California missions. In
the early years of its existence, the mission was self-sustaining, making its
own bricks, using its own irrigation system to water fruit trees and grape
vines, and containing about 50,000 head of cattle. Today the mission includes
a retreat center, museum, gardens, and the largest collection of old Spanish
vestments in the United States. Self-guided and escorted tours are
available.
Mission San Diego de Alcala
10818 San Diego Mission Road
Mission Valley
(619) 281-8449
www.missionsandiego.com
Pala Mission
Off Route 76
Pala
(760) 742-1600
Mission San Luis Rey
4050 Mission Avenue
Oceanside
(760) 757-3651
www.sanluisrey.org▪