Chamuscado and Rodriguez Expedition

Chamuscado and Rodriguez Expedition

The Chamuscado and Rodriguez Expedition visited New Mexico in 1581-1582. The expedition was led by Francisco Sanchez, called "El Chamuscado," and Friar Augustin Rodriguez, the first Spaniards known to have visited the Pueblo Indians since Francisco Vasquez de Coronado 40 years earlier.

Contents

Background

Friar Augustine Rodriguez, stationed near the mining town of Santa Barbara, Chihuahua, the northernmost outpost of New Spain, organized the expedition. In 1579, Rodriguez became interested when an Indian told him of settlements to the north in which the Indians grew cotton and wove cloth. To the Spanish this meant that the Indians were civilized beings who might be made Christian. Rodriguez got permission from Spanish authorities "for the purpose of preaching the Holy Gospel." Rodriguez apparently had little familiarity with Coronado's expedition but had read the account of Cabeza de Vaca.[1]

The expedition left Santa Barbara on June 5, 1581. The appointed leader was El Chamuscado, so-called because of his flaming red beard. The expedition included nine Spanish soldiers, three Catholic clerics, including Friar Augustin, and 19 Indian servants, including two women. The soldiers were well armed and mounted; the expedition took along ninety horses and 600 sheep, goats, cattle and pigs.[2] The expedition was also authorized to explore the country for valuable minerals#[3]

The Route and the Indians

The expedition preceded down the Conchos River to its junction with the Rio Grande. Along more than one hundred miles of the Conchos lived the Concho and Raya Indians who spoke the same language and were "naked and lived on roots and other things."[4] Beyond the Conchos, occupying 40 miles of the river banks were the Cabris or Pasaguantes, also "naked" but speaking a different language and cultivating squash and beans in addition to gathering wild plants. They were described as "very handsome." Both the Conchos and the Cabris had been victims of slave raids by Spaniards.[5]

Near La Junta, the junction of the Conchos River and the Rio Grande, Chamuscado and Rodriguez found several groups of Indians. At the junction and south were the Abraidres; northward were the Patarabueyes and Otomoacos or Amotomancos. They were friendly, the men described as "handsome" and the women "beautiful". They lived in wattled houses and grew squash and beans, but the Spanish considered them "naked and barbarous people."[6] Northwards, near present day El Paso lived the Caguates. They lived in mud brick houses and, while growing corn and beans, they also journeyed to the Great Plains to hunt buffalo and ate fish caught in the river. The explorers estimated that the Indians between La Junta and El Paso numbered about 10,000.[7] The Indians directed the Spanish to follow the Rio Grande upstream to where they would find "houses two stories high and of good appearance, built of mud walls and white inside, the people being dressed in cotton."[8] Scholars debate which of these various tribes, if any, were the people later known as Jumanos.

The Pueblo Indians

After many days of following the Rio Grande through unoccupied territory, the expedition reached the first village of Pueblo Indians south of Socorro, New Mexico, near the future site of Fort Craig, and continued up the Rio Grande passing through many large and prosperous Pueblo villages. North of Albuquerque they left the Rio Grande and journeyed eastward to the largest of the Pueblos at Pecos. It had 400 to 500 houses and rose to four or five stories—indicating a population of perhaps more than 3,000. The Spaniards described the Pueblo Indians as "handsome and fair-skinned and some of the women had "light hair." Coronado's army may have left its seed behind. They grew corn, beans, and squash and kept turkeys and, all in all, the Spanish were impressed with them and their manner of living.[9]

On September 10, 1581, one of the three Catholic friars, Juan de Santa Maria, decided to return to Mexico. Reluctantly, Chamuscado acceded to his desire and he departed.

The soldiers ventured eastward onto the Great Plains in search of buffalo. On the Pecos River near Santa Rosa they encountered a rancheria of Querecho Indians. Four hundred men armed with bows and arrows came out to meet them, but Friar Rodriguez calmed them. The Spanish described them as "naked" -- uncivilized—people who hunted the buffalo. A short distance further east they found the buffalo in many herds of 200 to 300 and killed about 40 of them and made jerky.[10] The Querechos were the people who would later be called Apaches.

Returning to the Rio Grande Valley they journeyed west to Acoma Pueblo and Zuni but were stopped by winter snows from continuing on to the Hopi pueblos. Then, they ventured east again to visit several Pueblos in the salinas east of the Manzano Mountains.

The chroniclers of the expedition did not note any influence of the Coronado expedition on the Pueblos who apparently had not adopted any Spanish customs nor had they preserved any of the horses or other livestock left behind by Coronado. They had, moreover, apparently recovered in numbers from the disastrous levies on their resources that Coronado had imposed.,[11] Chamuscado and Rodriguez with their slight numbers made fewer demands on the Pueblos, although they had one altercation after Indians killed three Spanish horses.[12]

Chamuscado and Rodriguez visited 61 Pueblo towns along the Rio Grande and its tributaries and counted a total of 7,003 houses of one or more stories in the Pueblos. If a later estimate of eight persons per house is accurate, the population of the towns visited was 56,000. In addition, they heard of other Pueblos, including the Hopi which they were unable to visit.[13]

The Return

The Spanish learned that Friar Juan had been killed by Indians only two or three days after leaving the expedition.[14] Despite the killing of Friar Juan, the two remaining friars were determined to stay in New Mexico. The soldiers left them, most of their supplies, and several Indian servants behind in Puaray and departed on the return to Santa Barbara on June 31, 1582.[15] During their return, Chamuscado, almost 70 years of age, died. The eight remaining soldiers arrived in Santa Barbara on April 15, 1582.[16]

The two friars and their Indian servants left behind were also soon killed by the Indians although two Indians escaped and returned to Mexico to tell the story.[17] The Chamuscado and Rodriguez expedition was a modest affair, but revived Spanish interest in New Mexico leading to a colony being established there a few years later by Juan de Onate.

References

  1. ^ Mecham, J. Lloyd, "The Second Spanish Expedition to New Mexico, New Mexico Historical Review, Vol 1, No. 3, July 1926, 265-267; Bolton, Herbert Eugene, Spanish Exploration in the Southwest, 1542-1706. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916
  2. ^ Mecham, 267-268
  3. ^ Riley, Carroll L., Rio del Norte, Salt Lake City: U of Utah Press, 1995, 227
  4. ^ Hammond, George P. and Rey, Agapito, The Rediscovery of New Mexico, 1580-1594. Albuquerque: U of NM Press, 1966, 70; Bolton, 145
  5. ^ Hammond and Rey, 70; Mecham, 269
  6. ^ Hammond and Rey, 73-75
  7. ^ Mecham, 270-271
  8. ^ Bolton, 146, Mecham, 271
  9. ^ Hammond and Rey, 84-85; Riley, 231; Bolton, 146
  10. ^ Bolton, 148
  11. ^ Riley, 209
  12. ^ Flint
  13. ^ Hammond and Rey, 115-120,172-173
  14. ^ Flint, Richard and Flint, Shirley Cushing, "Francisco Sanchez Chamuscado and Agustin Rodriguez", http://www.newmexicohistory.org/filedetails.php?fileID=468, accessed Apr 1, 2010
  15. ^ Mecham, 239
  16. ^ Mecham, 290
  17. ^ Bolton, 152

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