- Californio
Infobox Ethnic group
group = Californio
caption = Notable CaliforniosPío Pico ·Andrés Pico ·José Antonio Estudillo ·José Antonio Carrillo
poptime = Spanish & Mexican 92,597 Californios were in the 1850Alta California population Californios andSpaniards inAlta California
-
popplace =
region1 =
pop1 = Less than (92,597) 1850
region2 =
pop2 = (650 pop)1850
region3 =
pop3 = (56,802) 1860
langs = Spanish
rels = PredominantlyRoman Catholic
related = Mediterranean·Amerindian ·Mestizo Californio's (Spanish for "Californian") is a term used to identify a Californian of Hispanic and/or Latin-American descent, first as a part of
New Spain , later ofMexico , today as part of theUSA . The territory of California was annexed in 1848 by theUnited States following the American invasion and subsequentMexican-American War .Californios included both the descendants of
Europe an settlers fromSpain andMexico , and also included other European settlers,Mestizos , and local Native Americans who adopted Spanish culture and converted toChristianity . Some Americans, who immigrated to California, learned to speak Spanish, and lived as Mexicans, are also considered Californios.Spanish, and later, Mexican officials encouraged people from the northern and western provinces of Mexico, as well as people from other parts of
Latin America , most notablyPeru andChile , to settle in California, and were welcomed to become Mexican citizens.Much of Californio society lived at or near the many Missions, which were established in the 18th and 19th centuries. There were 21 Missions under the
Roman Catholic church along the fabled route, "El Camino Real". The Californio Rancho society produced the largest cowhide and tallow business in North America, trading with the merchant ships from Boston, who would port inSan Diego , San Juan (Capistrano), San Pedro, Santa Bonaventura (Ventura), Monterey and Yerba Buena (San Francisco ).Californio invasion
Mexico 's Governor in California,Pío Pico , was forced to abandon the Californios at the outset of the American invasion. The Californios then organized a militia to defend themselves against the United States. The Californios defeated an American force inLos Angeles onSeptember 30 ,1846 , at theSiege of Los Angeles . Several battles were fought in defense of California, but the Californio Lancers were defeated in January of 1847 after the Americans reinforced their army and marines in Southern California. The next year Mexico signed theTreaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo , accepting American sovereignty over California onFebruary 2 ,1848 . [ [http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/st/~sarah2/Californios.html] ] [ [http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/st/~sarah2/page4.html] ]European and Anglo American settlers in Northern California had already threatened to rebel against Mexican rule in the 1840s. Among them was
John Sutter , a land owner from Switzerland and founder ofNew Helvetia , in present-day Sacramento. That town was made famous by the 1848California gold rush after miners found gold on the banks of theAmerican River . When thousands of American immigrants came to the conquered lands, long-time Californios helped the newcomers raise livestock and crops.Key Californio battles
* 1846
**Battle of Dominguez Rancho ,October 9 .Jose Antonio Carrillo leads Californio forces in victory against 350 US Marines and sailors nearLos Angeles .
**Battle of San Pasqual ,December 6 .US Cavalry General Stephen Kearny 's dragoons are defeated by the Californio forces, led byAndrés Pico north ofSan Diego .
**Temecula Massacre , December 1846. Californios andCahuilla Indians combine to wipe out a party of Pauma BandLuiseno Indians responsible for a massacre of eleven unarmed Californios, nearTemecula .
* 1847
**Battle of Rio San Gabriel ,January 8 . Kearny and Stockton's 700 man army defeat the 160 man Californio Lancer force nearLos Angeles .
**Battle of La Mesa ,January 9 . Kearny,Robert F. Stockton andJohn Fremont 's combined US forces, defeat the Californios in the climactic battle for California, at present dayMontebello east of Los Angeles.The war campaign in California ended on
January 13 ,1847 , after the signing ofTreaty of Cahuenga . Later, the U.S. cavalry seized Pio Pico's adobe in present-dayBell, California , south of Los Angeles, and arrested Mexican-Californio nobleDon Antonio Lugo in his adobe near present-dayChino, California .Fact|date=June 2007The end of Mexican rule
In the 1830s Californios differentiated themselves from Mexicanos, migrants from the Mexican interior, by asserting exclusionary land grant laws after the dissolution of the mission lands in 1834. These laws created the conditions for favoritism in the parcelling of mission lands that had been worked by the Mexicans and Indians for many years. Many Mexicans and Indians were able to assert their rights to mission lands, but they were not given official papers documenting these claims.
Following the discovery of gold in 1848, Congress set up a Board of Land Commissioners to determine the validity of Spanish and Mexican
land grants in California. California SenatorWilliam M. Gwin presented a bill that, when approved by the Senate and the House, became the Act ofMarch 3 ,1851 , [Robinson, p. 100] which stated that unless grantees presented evidence supporting their title within two years, the property would automatically pass into thepublic domain . [House Executive Document 46, pp. 1116-1117] This proviso was contrary to Articles VIII and X of theTreaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo , which guaranteed full protection of all property rights for Mexican citizens. [ [http://www.southwestbooks.org/treaty.htm#articleviii Center For Land Grant Studies - Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ] ] [ [http://www.southwestbooks.org/treaty.htm#articlex Center For Land Grant Studies - Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ] ] The Commission eventually confirmed 604 of the 813 smaller claims they received, but the cost of litigation, surveys, and permits forced most of the larger Rancho Californio land owners to lose their property. This land in turn was parceled out to American immigrant settlers under the 1862Homestead Act .Californios after U.S. annexation
The mysterious "disappearance" of Californios after 1850 in state history is debated. Some
Mexican Americans andLatinos residing in California claim to have genealogical roots with Californios before the arrival of non-Spanish white Americans. The romantic history of Californios has even fueled the political volatile issues of theLa Raza movement by someChicano activists who depict "Mexican" Californios or Hispanics as the state's original people, instead of the nativeCoast Miwok ,Ohlone ,Wintun ,Yokuts and other Native Americans who inhabited the region for centuries before European contact. They claim that California was part of a "lost land" of the Southwest U.S., where there was a Latin American culture: some Californios,Fact|date=March 2008 along withTejanos of Texas and Chicanos (a 20th century designation), prefer to be identified asSpanish Americans .Fact|date=March 2008 Other Californio descendants claim their integrated society of Mexicans, Indians, Mestezos, Mulattos and American Immigrants, that evolved over 150 years beginning with the founding ofMisión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó in the California territory in 1697, lost their land, businesses and society to the United States due to the American aggression that propagated the ideals ofManifest Destiny .The agricultural economy of California allowed many Californios to continue living in pueblos alongside Native peoples and Mexicanos well into the 20th century. These settlements eventually grew into many modern California cities, including Santa Ana,
San Diego ,San Fernando , San Jose, Monterey,Los Alamitos ,San Juan Capistrano , San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Arvin, Mariposa, Hemet and Indio.From the 1850s until the 1960s the Californios (either of Spanish, Mexican and native Californian origins) lived in relative autonomy, practicing some acts of social segregation by custom, while maintaining Spanish language newspapers, entertainment, schools, bars, and clubs. Cultural practices were often tied to local churches and mutual aid societies.
At some point in the early 20th Century the official modes of record-keeping (census takers, city records, etc.) began lumping together all Californios, Mexicanos, and Native ("Indio") peoples with Spanish surnames under the terms "Spanish", "Mexican", and sometimes, "colored". Thus the unique history and identity of the Californio people has been absorbed into that of the greater Hispanic community in the area.Dubious|date=March 2008
Californio identity in the 20th century
Until recently, especially within long-standing Mexican communities in Southern California, a number of people who claimed Native Californian and Californio ancestry could be found. However, in the 1970 and 1980 US census reports less than 1,000 Americans of Mexican descent in California called themselves Californios. It is often believed that these communities have become extinct, or that they have become absorbed or integrated with the more recent immigrants from Mexico and Central America over the recent decades. [ [http://www.lasculturas.com/lib/sd/blsd092200a.php A History of Mexican Americans in California ] ]
Historically many cultural differences have existed between Californios and Mexicanos. In the 1910s and 1920s, when a large wave of Mexican immigrants poured into Californio communities in California and the Southwestern U.S., social friction took place between the two Hispanic groups,Fact|date=March 2008 as the older generation felt more "American" and "Spanish" than the recent arrivals from Mexico since the settlers of northern New Spain (which is now California, most of the present-day Northern Mexican states and the rest of American Southwest) during the colonial period and before it became part of newly formed country of Mexico were Spaniards and identify with Spanish history while the central or south Mexicans who came to California since
Mexican Revolution were mostly of Native American blood or mestizos and identify with Mexican history.Fact|date=June 2007Nevertheless, strong historical ties exist between Mexicanos, many of whose families immigrated to the U.S. between 1900 and
World War II , and the Californios and Native Californians. There has been a constant exchange of culture and language between Mexico and these enclaves of Mexicano/Californio/Indio culture, evidenced by marriage, migratory trends, and linguistic evolution in the region. As a result, the cultural dividing lines separating Californios from the descendants of more recent Mexican immigrants have blurred considerably over the years. Fact|date=February 2007In the 20th century descendants of southern Spanish (Andalusian, Granadan or Valencian)
pineapple andsugar cane workers who first settledHawaii and northern Spanish (Asturian, Galician or Leonese) skilled workers in the beginning of the century settled California and they are the newest Californio and Spanish American populations in the state.Remnants of the so-called Californio people are in the small Central Valley town of Hornitos located in Mariposa County. The majority of its 500 residents claimed both Spanish and Native American descent, but would use the term "Californio". Fact|date=February 2008
Notable Californios
*
José María Alviso Grantee of Rancho Milpitas, Alcalde of San José
*Juan Bautista de Anza
*José Antonio Estudillo
*José María Estudillo
*Arcadia Bandini, co-founder ofSanta Monica, California
*Juan Bandini
*José Raimundo Carrillo
*José Antonio Carrillo
*Nicolas Den
*Manuel Dominguez
*José María Flores
*William Edward Petty Hartnell , also known as "Don Guillermo Arnel"
*Robert Livermore , namesake ofLivermore, California
*Eulalia Perez de Guillén Mariné
*Joaquin Murietta , basis for fictional heroZorro
*Andrés Pico
*José Maria Pico
*Pío Pico , the lastMexican governor ofAlta California
*Sepulveda Family
*José Sepúlveda
*Abel Stearns
*John Temple , early Long Beach rancher
*Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo , the namesake ofVallejo, California
*Tiburcio Vasquez , bandit
*José María Verdugo , recipient of major land grant
*Benjamin Davis Wilson , also known as "Don Benito Wilson"
*Jose Antonio Yorba , major land grant recipient
*Juan Matias Sanchez , Juan Matias Sanchez Adobe, Rancho Merced, Montebello, CaliforniaCalifornios in literature
Richard Henry Dana, Jr. , recorded his 1834 visit as a sailor to California in "Two Years Before the Mast ". Other Americans such asJoseph Chapman, a land realtor hailed the first Yankee to reside in the old Pueblo de Los Angeles in 1831, described Southern California as a paradise yet to be developed. He mentions a civilization of Spanish-speaking colonists, "Californios," who thrived in the pueblos, the missions, and "ranchos"."The Squatter and the Don" by Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, a novel written and set in 1880s California, depicts a very wealthy Californio family's legal struggles with immigrant squatters on their land. The novel was based on the legal struggles of General
Mariano G. Vallejo , the author's good friend. While the novel is by no means representative of the majority of Californios' lives and standard of living, it is truthful in its depiction of the legal process by which Californios were often "relieved" of their land.Verify source|date=November 2007 This process was long (most Californios spent upwards of fifteen years defending their grants before the courts), and the legal fees alone were enough to make many Californios landless.Fact|date=November 2007 Californios felt confused about having to pay land taxes to American officials, because they opposed the idea on paying for land ownership that wasn't in Mexican law. In some cases Californios had little fluid capital because their economy had operated on a barter system, and they often lost their land because they were unable to pay the taxes.Clarifyme|date=November 2007 They could not compete economically with all the European and Anglo-American emigrants who arrived in the region with large amounts of money.nonspecific|date=November 2007The end of Californio culture is depicted in the novel "
Ramona ", written byHelen Hunt Jackson in 1884. The fictionalZorro has grown to become the most identifiable Californio due to short stories, motion pictures and by the 1950s ontelevision ; although the historical truth of the era is sometimes lost in the story-telling.ee also
*
Hispanic
*Peninsulares
*Spanish American
*Mestizo
*Spanish people
*History of California to 1899 References
External links
* [http://www.californios.us/ca/ "Californios, a People and a Culture", a personal website]
* [http://www.sandiegohistory.org/bio/californios.htm Californios ~ early Mexican San Diegans]
*" [http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/5views/5views5.htm Mexican Americans in California] ," "FIVE VIEWS: An Ethnic Historic Site Survey for California", California Department of Parks and Recreation Office of Historic Preservation, December 1988 (includes discussion on Californios)
* [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt2j49q754 Guide to the Amador, Yorba, López, and Cota families correspondence.] Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
* [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt196nc419 Guide to the Orange County Californio Families Portrait Photograph Album.] Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
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