The Old Spanish Trail - San Gabriel, California
Posted by: Metro2
N 34° 05.785 W 118° 06.400
11S E 397914 N 3773399
This sign is located near the entrance to Mission San Gabriel.
Waymark Code: WMQCEJ
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 02/04/2016
Views: 2
The sign reads:
"Old Spanish Trail
1829 - 1848
The Old Spanish Trail was an historic pack trail connecting Santa Fe to the pueblo of Los Angeles. Travelers on the trail aimed for the San Gabriel Mission as a welcome destination and gathering place. In addition to Mexican traders, emigrants from Santa Fe also used the trail. Traders brought wooden good from New Mexico and returned with highly prized California mules and horses. The trail originated as a trade route from Santa Fe into central Utah during the Spanish Colonial days but was extended west to California during the Mexican period.
San Gabriel Mission
On September 8, 1771 founding Fathers Pedro Cambon and Angel Somera named the new mission for the Archangel Gabriel. It was the fourth in a chain of 21 missions in California. In 1774, Juan Bautista de Anza arrived and established a formal overland route from Mexico City to California.
As trade between the United States and Mexico and the new Republic of Mexico expanded, Santa Fe traders saw the potential for profits in dealing directly with California ranchers and church missions. In the fall of 1829, well after Mexican Independence from Spain, Antonio Armijo led a caravan westward from Santa Fe. He arrived at the San Gabriel Mission in January, 1830 with 60 men and pack mules loaded with woolen goods. Armijo returned to Santa Fe that spring with an additional 100 horses and mules. For the first time, a trade and communication route was established between the Mexican provinces of New Mexico and California. Thus the Old Spanish Trail was born.
Following the success of Armijo's expedition, San Gabriel Mission became the focal point for the lucrative trade. Traders, trappers and travelers coming west gathered here to conduct their business with the Californios. The Mission was one of the most prosperous in California, and the padres graciously provided food, rest and shelter to the travelers, weary from the long and difficult trail. Some of the visitors were no doubt rough and unruly, but all were treated with gentle courtesy by the padres of the Mission.
The San Gabriel Mission was secularized in 1834 and much of the land became private property. In 1874, the Catholic Church was granted control of the 13-acre property surrounding and including the Mission Church"
Group that erected the marker: Old Spanish Trail Association
URL of a web site with more information about the history mentioned on the sign: [Web Link]
Address of where the marker is located. Approximate if necessary: 428 South Mission Drive San Gabriel, CA USA
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