Alta California
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Territorio de Alta California
Nueva California
Alta California (Upper California) was formed in 1804 when the Province of the Californias, then a part of the Commandancy General of the Provincias Internas in the Viceroyalty of New Spain, was divided in two, along a line separating the Franciscan missions in the north from the Dominican missions in the south. The southern part became the territory of Baja California ("Lower California"), also referred to at times as Vieja California ("Old California"). The northern part became Alta California, also alternatively called Nueva California ("New California").
The new territory included land that today forms the modern United States states of California and parts of Nevada. Since the eastern bounderies of the Province were not defined, many maps from the period show its borders including parts of today's Utah, northern Arizona, western Colorado, and southwestern Wyoming. The Province would have bouned on the east with the Spanish, later Mexican, settlements in Arizona and the Province, later Territory, of Nuevo México.[1]
Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821 upon conclusion of a decade-long war of independence. The region was automatically included in the short-lived First Mexican Empire. With the establishment of a republican United Mexican States in 1823, California, like many northern territories, was not recognized as one of the constituent states because of its small population. (The 1824 Constitution refers to Alta California as a "territory"). After Juan Bautista Alvarado's revolt in 1836, the territory was transformed into a department, which granted it more autonomy.
Mexico lost the territory more than two decades later as a result of the Mexican-American War. The last Mexican Governor of California was PÃo Pico, who served until 1846. The capital of Alta California was Monterey.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, there was a San Francisco-based newspaper called The Daily Alta California (or The Alta Californian). Mark Twain's first widely successful book, The Innocents Abroad, was an edited collection of letters written for this publication.
Contents
[edit] Lands under Spanish rule
- See also: Spanish missions in California
Under Spanish rule, all lands in California were claimed by the king of Spain, who granted them to the Roman Catholic Church and to individuals. Specifically, the Spanish constructed and funded the missions for the Franciscans of the Catholic Church to gather and convert the Native American people, presidios to house Spanish soldiers who would enforce the peace, and Spanish settlement lands. The presidios and missions were the first lands chosen and developed.
By law, the mission land and property was to pass to the resident Native Americans of California after a period of about ten years, when the natives would become Spanish citizens. In the interim period, the Franciscans were to act as mission administrators who held the land in trust for the Natives. The Franciscans, however, prolonged this power arrangement and ran the missions for more than 60 years.[2][3]
Once the Spanish began to send settlers to Northern California, a gray area began to grow over the future (and boundaries) of the mission properties. Property disputes arose over the mission (and adjacent) lands, between the Spanish Crown and the Catholic Church, and also between the Natives and the Spanish settlers: There were heated debates between the Spanish state and ecclesiastical bureaucracies over the government authority of the missions.[4] Setting an interesting precedent, the Franciscan priests of Santa Clara sent a petition to the Governor in 1782, claiming the "missions Indians" owned both land and cattle, and represented the Natives in a petition against the Spanish settlers of the pueblo of San José.[5] The fathers mentioned the "Indians' crops" were being damaged by the San Jose settlers' livestock, and also mentioned settlers "getting mixed up with the livestock belonging to the Indians from the mission." They also stated the Mission Indians had property and rights to defend it.[6]
Under Spanish rule, Southern California and the Ranchos prospered and grew with the Missions. Californio cattle ranchers and the local people evolved into a different society from the northern American settlers of the fur trapping and mining economy that developed in the Sacramento River valley. This dichotomy of evolution was reflected during the Mexican-American War where the American immigrants of the north coveted the property, lands and riches of the more prosperous Southern California Californios and their vast Ranchos. (Reference Historical California Adobes and Rancho San Pascual).
[edit] Mexican-American War
Upon the declaration of war by the United States Congress—partly in response to events in Texas after its annexation by the United States, and partly in response to calls from Northern California's American residents who were striving for independence from Mexico—United States Army and Navy forces entered into the territory and overpowered the remaining Mexican military units.
In Southern California, the Californios formed a defensive army and were victorious after the Siege of Los Angeles, the Battle of San Pascual, and the Battle of DomÃnguez Rancho; but the subsequent encounters at the Battle of RÃo San Gabriel and the Battle of La Mesa were indecisive. They formally surrendered with the signing of the Treaty of Cahuenga on 13 January 1847. California was ceded to the United States in 1848 by the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
[edit] Flags over California
[edit] Spanish Governors of Alta California
[edit] Ranchos of California
The Spanish, and later the Mexican governments, encouraged the establishment of large land grants, which were turned into ranchos, devoted to the raising of cattle and sheep. Hides (at roughly $1 each) and tallow (used to make candles as well as soaps) from the livestock were the primary exports of California until the mid-19th century. The owners of these ranchos styled themselves after the landed gentry in Spain. Their workers included some Native Americans who had learned to speak Spanish and ride horses.


