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Juan Bautista de Anza

Juan Bautista de Anza Bezerra Nieto (July 6 or 7, 1736[1] – December 19, 1788) was an expeditionary leader, military officer, and politician primarily in California and New Mexico under the Spanish Empire. He is credited as one of the founding fathers of Spanish California and served as an official within New Spain as Governor of the province of New Mexico.[2]

Juan Bautista de Anza
Portrait by Fray Orcí, 1774.
55th Governor of Province of New Mexico
In office
1778–1788
Preceded byFrancisco Trevre
Succeeded byFernando de la Concha
Personal details
Born
Juan Bautista de Anza Bezerra Nieto

July 6/7, 1736
Fronteras, New Navarre, New Spain
(now Sonora, Mexico)
DiedDecember 19, 1788 (1788-12-20) (aged 52)
Arizpe, New Navarre, New Spain
ProfessionExplorer and Governor of New Mexico
Signature

Early life edit

 
Equestrian statue of Anza at Lake Merced, San Francisco, California.

Juan Bautista de Anza Bezerra Nieto was born in Fronteras, New Navarre, New Spain (today Sonora, Mexico) in 1736 (near Arizpe), most probably at Cuquiarachi, Sonora,[3] but possibly at the Presidio of Fronteras.

His family was a part of the military leadership in Nueva España, as his father and maternal grandfather, Captain Antonio Bezerra Nieto, had both served Spain, their families living on the frontier of Nueva Navarra. He was the son of Juan Bautista de Anza I. It is traditionally thought that he may have been educated at the College of San Ildefonso in Mexico City, and later at the military academy there.[4] In 1752 he enlisted in the army at the Presidio of Fronteras. He advanced rapidly and had become a captain by 1760. He married in 1761. His wife was Ana María Pérez Serrano (b. January 1744/45, d. date unknown), the daughter of Spanish mine owner Francisco Pérez Serrano. They had no children. His military duties mainly consisted of hostile forays against Native Americans, such as the Apache, during the course of which he explored much of what is now Arizona.

California expeditions edit

 
Juan Bautista de Anza, from a portrait in oil by Fray Orsi in 1774
 
Map of the route that Juan Bautista de Anza traveled in 1775–76 from Mexico to today's San Francisco

The Spanish began colonizing Alta California with the Portolá expedition of 1769–1770. The two-pronged Portolá effort involved both a long sea voyage against prevailing winds and the California Current, and a difficult land route from Baja California. Colonies were established at San Diego and Monterey, with a presidio and Franciscan mission at each location. A more direct land route and further colonization were desired, especially at present-day San Francisco, which Portolá saw but was not able to colonize. By the time of Juan Bautista de Anza's expedition, three more missions had been established, including Mission San Antonio de Padua in the Salinas Valley.

In 1772, Anza[5] proposed an expedition to Alta California to the Viceroy of New Spain. This was approved by the King of Spain and on January 8, 1774, with 3 padres, 20 soldiers, 11 servants, 35 mules, 65 cattle, and 140 horses, Anza set forth from Tubac Presidio, south of present-day Tucson, Arizona. Anza heard of a California Native American called Sebastian Tarabal who had fled from Mission San Gabriel to Sonora, and took him as guide. The expedition took a southern route along the Rio Altar (Sonora y Sinaloa, New Spain), then paralleled the modern Mexico/California border, crossing the Colorado River at its confluence with the Gila River. This was in the domain of the Yuma tribe, with which he established good relations.

Anza reached Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, near the California coast, on March 22, 1774, and Monterey, California, Alta California's future capital (Alta California split from Las Californias 1804, creating Baja and Alta), on April 19. He returned to Tubac by late May 1774. This expedition was closely watched by Viceroy and King, and on October 2, 1774, Anza was promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and ordered to lead a group of colonists to Alta California. The Spanish were desirous of reinforcing their presence in Alta California as a buffer against Russian colonization of the Americas advancing from the north, and possibly establish a harbor that would give shelter to Spanish ships. The expedition got under way on October 23, 1775, and arrived at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel in January 1776, the colonists having suffered greatly from the winter weather en route.

The expedition continued on to Monterey with the colonists. Having fulfilled his mission from the Viceroy, he continued north with the priest Pedro Font and a party of twelve others, following an inland route to the San Francisco Bay established in 1770 by Pedro Fages.[citation needed] On the way, he led a raid on Apache settlements near Presidio San Ignacio de Tubac, capturing forty Apaches. The soldiers divided the captives among them as slaves; Anza kept the fifteen female captives and their newborns as his share.[6]

In Anza's diary on March 25, 1776, he states that he "arrived at the arroyo of San Joseph Cupertino (now Stevens Creek), which is useful only for travelers. Here we halted for the night, having come eight leagues in seven and a half hours. From this place we have seen at our right the estuary which runs from the port of San Francisco."[7] Pressing on, Anza located the sites for the Presidio of San Francisco and Mission San Francisco de Asis in present-day San Francisco, California on March 28, 1776. He did not establish the settlement; it was established later by José Joaquín Moraga. While returning to Monterey, he located the original sites for Mission Santa Clara de Asis and the town of San José de Guadalupe (modern day San Jose, California), but again did not establish either settlement.[8] Today this route is marked as the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail.

Despite DeAnza's successes, Spanish ambitions to establish a permanent overland route from Sonora to Alta California were thwarted in 1781, when a revolt of the Yumas tribe closed the trail at the Yuma Crossing of the Colorado River. The route was not reopened until the later 1820s, and the only regular travel to Alta California during the intervening years was by sea.

Governor of New Mexico edit

 
Portrait by Gerald Cassidy.

On his return from this successful expedition in 1777 he journeyed to Mexico City with the chief of the lower Colorado River area Quechan (Yuma) Native American tribe who requested the establishment of a mission. On August 24, 1777, the Viceroy of New Spain appointed Anza as the Governor of the Province of Nuevo México, the present day U.S. state of New Mexico.

Governor Anza led a punitive expedition against the Comanche group of Native Americans, who had been repeatedly raiding Taos during 1779. With his Ute and Apache Native American allies, and around 800 Spanish soldiers, Anza went north through the San Luis Valley, entering the Great Plains at what is now Manitou Springs, Colorado. Circling "El Capitan" (current day Pikes Peak), he surprised a small force of the Comanche near present-day Colorado Springs. Pursuing them south down Fountain Creek, he crossed the Arkansas River near present-day Pueblo, Colorado. He found the main body of the Comanche on Greenhorn Creek, returning from a raid in Nuevo México, and won a decisive victory. Chief Cuerno Verde, for whom Greenhorn Creek is named, and many other leaders of the Comanche were killed.[9]

In late 1779, Anza and his party found a route from Santa Fe to Sonora, west of the El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro. His various local military expeditions against tribes defending their homelands were often successful, but the Quechan (Yuma) Native American tribe which he had established peace with earlier rebelled, and he fell out of favor with the military commander of the Northern Frontier, the frontier-general. In 1783 Anza led a campaign against the Comanche on the eastern plains and by 1784 they were suing for peace. The last of the Comanche chiefs eventually acceded and a formal treaty was concluded on 28 February 1786 at Pecos Pueblo.[10] This paved the way for traders and the development of the Comanchero trade.

Juan Bautista de Anza remained as governor of Nuevo Mexico (New Mexico) until 1787 when he returned to Sonora. He was appointed commander of the Presidio of Tucson in 1788 but died before he could depart and take office. He was 52 years old. Anza was survived by his wife.

Juan Bautista de Anza died in Arizpe, in what is now the State of Sonora, Mexico, and was buried in the Church of Nuestra Señora de la Asunción de Arizpe. In 1963, with the participation of delegations from the University of California, Berkeley and San Francisco, he was disinterred and reburied in a new marble memorial mausoleum at the same Church.

 
Statue by Dorr Bothwell in Riverside, California.
 
Juan Bautista de Anza's burial site in Arizpe, Sonora.

The primary legacy is the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail in California and Arizona, administered by the US National Park Service, for hiking and driving the route of his expedition exploring Las Californias[11] In the San Fernando Valley the trail crosses the Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space Preserve, and in the San Gabriel Valley the trail is in the Puente Hills just north of Whittier, California.[12][13]

Also named for Anza is Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, located mostly in eastern San Diego County, California. The park contains a long and difficult stretch of the Anza trail, traveling west from the Imperial Valley to the coastal mountain passes north-east of San Diego.[14] The de Anza Country Club and its 18-hole championship Golf course is located within the village of Borrego Springs, California, which is entirely surrounded by the park.

A building named the Juan de Anza House in San Juan Bautista, California is a National Historic Landmark. However, it was constructed c. 1830 with its connection unclear. The Juan Bautista de Anza Community Park is in Calabasas, California, and De Anza Park and the De Anza Community and Teen Center are in Ontario, California.

A 20-foot (6.1 m) statue of Anza, sculpted in 1939, is located in Riverside, California at the corner of Magnolia Ave. and 14th Street,[15] and another statue stands in Lake Merced park, San Francisco.[16] A 10-foot high portrait of de Anza by Albert Herter in 1929 hangs in the History Room of the Los Angeles Central Library.[17][18]

The de Anza and De Anza spellings are also the namesake of streets, schools, and buildings in his honor including: De Anza Boulevards in San Mateo and Cupertino, De Anza Park in Sunnyvale, De Anza College in Cupertino, De Anza High School in Richmond, Juan Bautista De Anza elementary school in San Jacinto, Juan De Anza K-5 in the Wiseburn Elementary School District of Hawthorne, De Anza Middle School in Ontario, De Anza Middle School in Ventura, De Anza Elementary School in El Centro, and the De Anza School in Baldwin Park, the landmark De Anza Hotel in San Jose, and the historic De Anza Hotel in Calexico—all in California.

Using just Anza in his honor are: Anza Vista Avenue within the Anza Vista neighborhood of San Francisco, Anza Street in that city's Richmond District, Lake Anza in Tilden Regional Park above Berkeley in the Berkeley Hills, and Anza Avenue and Anza Elementary School in Torrance. The town of Anza, California, is a small town of 7,000 people on State Route 371 in the mountains south of Palm Springs.

Also named in his honor is Juan Bautista Circle in the Parkmerced development in San Francisco.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Garate, Donald T. (2003). Juan Bautista de Anza: Basque Explorer in the New World, 1693–1740. Reno, Nevada: University of Nevada Press. p. 155. ISBN 0-87417-626-3.
  2. ^ Douglass, William A.; Douglass, Bilbao, J. (2005) [1975]. Amerikanuak: Basques in the New World. Reno, NV: University of Nevada Press. p. 190. ISBN 0-87417-625-5. Retrieved 16 February 2014.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Kessell, John L. (2013). Miera y Pacheco: A Renaissance Spaniard in Eighteenth-Century New Mexico. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-8061-4377-4.
  4. ^ Garate, Donald T. (2003). Juan Bautista de Anza: Basque Explorer in the New World, 1693–1740. p. 229. ISBN 9780874175059.
  5. ^ Web de Anza. The Basque surname was simply Anza, without "de" 2016-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Stockel, Henrietta (15 September 2022). Salvation Through Slavery: Chiricahua Apaches and Priests on the Spanish Colonial Frontier. University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-4327-7.
  7. ^ de Anza, Juan Bautista (1776). Diary of Juan Bautista de Anza October 23, 1775 – June 1, 1776. . Archived from the original on 2009-11-25. Retrieved 2009-12-14. Accessed September 8, 2009 University of Oregon Web de Anza pages
  8. ^ Edward F. O'Day (October 1926). . San Francisco Water. Spring Valley Water Authority. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved February 7, 2013.
  9. ^ Thomas, Alfred Barnaby (ed.) (1932) "Governor Anza's Expedition against the Comanche 1779" Forgotten Frontiers: A Study of the Spanish Indian Policy of Don Juan Bautista de Anza, Governor of New Mexico, 1777–1787 University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma, pp. 66–71 OCLC 68116825
  10. ^ A full translation of the treaty is set out at Thomas, Alfred Barnaby (ed.) (1932) "The Spanish-Comanche Peace Treaty of 1786" Forgotten Frontiers: A Study of the Spanish Indian Policy of Don Juan Bautista de Anza, Governor of New Mexico, 1777–1787 University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma, pp. 329–332 OCLC 68116825
  11. ^ National Park Service: Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail
  12. ^ Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space: de Anza Trail
  13. ^ Puente Hills Habitat Authority 2009-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ . CaliforniaResortLife. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2015-12-15.
  15. ^ Patterson, Tom. Landmarks of Riverside, and the Stories Behind Them. The Press Enterprise Company, Riverside, CA, 1964. pp. 174–175.
  16. ^ Statue in Lake Merced
  17. ^ "Painted Decoration: Goodhue Building". Los Angeles Public Library. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  18. ^ Imharnish (13 June 2022). "Mary Mallory: Hollywood Heights – Central Library Murals". L.A. Daily Mirror. Retrieved 1 October 2023.

Further reading edit

  • J. N. Bowman and R. F. Heizer, "Anza and the Northwest Frontier of New Spain," Southwest Museum Papers: No. 20. Los Angeles, CA: 1967.
  • Carlos R. Herrera, Juan Bautista de Anza: The King's Governor in New Mexico. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2015.
  • Wilfred Martinez, Anza and Cuerno Verde, Decisive Battle.

External links edit

  • Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
  • Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail – Official U.S. National Park Service website.
  • – de Anza online resources.
  • An Interactive Study Environment on Spanish Exploration and Colonization of "Alta California" 1774–1776
  • – an interesting high school project
Preceded by
Francisco Trevre acting
Governor of New Mexico
1778–1788
Succeeded by

juan, bautista, anza, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, anza, second, maternal, family, name, bezerra, nieto, bezerra, nieto, july, 1736, december, 1788, expeditionary, leader, military, officer, politician, primarily, california, mexico, under, s. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Anza and the second or maternal family name is Bezerra Nieto Juan Bautista de Anza Bezerra Nieto July 6 or 7 1736 1 December 19 1788 was an expeditionary leader military officer and politician primarily in California and New Mexico under the Spanish Empire He is credited as one of the founding fathers of Spanish California and served as an official within New Spain as Governor of the province of New Mexico 2 Juan Bautista de AnzaPortrait by Fray Orci 1774 55th Governor of Province of New MexicoIn office 1778 1788Preceded byFrancisco TrevreSucceeded byFernando de la ConchaPersonal detailsBornJuan Bautista de Anza Bezerra NietoJuly 6 7 1736Fronteras New Navarre New Spain now Sonora Mexico DiedDecember 19 1788 1788 12 20 aged 52 Arizpe New Navarre New SpainProfessionExplorer and Governor of New MexicoSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 California expeditions 3 Governor of New Mexico 4 Footnotes 5 Further reading 6 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Equestrian statue of Anza at Lake Merced San Francisco California Juan Bautista de Anza Bezerra Nieto was born in Fronteras New Navarre New Spain today Sonora Mexico in 1736 near Arizpe most probably at Cuquiarachi Sonora 3 but possibly at the Presidio of Fronteras His family was a part of the military leadership in Nueva Espana as his father and maternal grandfather Captain Antonio Bezerra Nieto had both served Spain their families living on the frontier of Nueva Navarra He was the son of Juan Bautista de Anza I It is traditionally thought that he may have been educated at the College of San Ildefonso in Mexico City and later at the military academy there 4 In 1752 he enlisted in the army at the Presidio of Fronteras He advanced rapidly and had become a captain by 1760 He married in 1761 His wife was Ana Maria Perez Serrano b January 1744 45 d date unknown the daughter of Spanish mine owner Francisco Perez Serrano They had no children His military duties mainly consisted of hostile forays against Native Americans such as the Apache during the course of which he explored much of what is now Arizona California expeditions editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Juan Bautista de Anza news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Juan Bautista de Anza from a portrait in oil by Fray Orsi in 1774 nbsp Map of the route that Juan Bautista de Anza traveled in 1775 76 from Mexico to today s San Francisco The Spanish began colonizing Alta California with the Portola expedition of 1769 1770 The two pronged Portola effort involved both a long sea voyage against prevailing winds and the California Current and a difficult land route from Baja California Colonies were established at San Diego and Monterey with a presidio and Franciscan mission at each location A more direct land route and further colonization were desired especially at present day San Francisco which Portola saw but was not able to colonize By the time of Juan Bautista de Anza s expedition three more missions had been established including Mission San Antonio de Padua in the Salinas Valley In 1772 Anza 5 proposed an expedition to Alta California to the Viceroy of New Spain This was approved by the King of Spain and on January 8 1774 with 3 padres 20 soldiers 11 servants 35 mules 65 cattle and 140 horses Anza set forth from Tubac Presidio south of present day Tucson Arizona Anza heard of a California Native American called Sebastian Tarabal who had fled from Mission San Gabriel to Sonora and took him as guide The expedition took a southern route along the Rio Altar Sonora y Sinaloa New Spain then paralleled the modern Mexico California border crossing the Colorado River at its confluence with the Gila River This was in the domain of the Yuma tribe with which he established good relations Anza reached Mission San Gabriel Arcangel near the California coast on March 22 1774 and Monterey California Alta California s future capital Alta California split from Las Californias 1804 creating Baja and Alta on April 19 He returned to Tubac by late May 1774 This expedition was closely watched by Viceroy and King and on October 2 1774 Anza was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel and ordered to lead a group of colonists to Alta California The Spanish were desirous of reinforcing their presence in Alta California as a buffer against Russian colonization of the Americas advancing from the north and possibly establish a harbor that would give shelter to Spanish ships The expedition got under way on October 23 1775 and arrived at Mission San Gabriel Arcangel in January 1776 the colonists having suffered greatly from the winter weather en route The expedition continued on to Monterey with the colonists Having fulfilled his mission from the Viceroy he continued north with the priest Pedro Font and a party of twelve others following an inland route to the San Francisco Bay established in 1770 by Pedro Fages citation needed On the way he led a raid on Apache settlements near Presidio San Ignacio de Tubac capturing forty Apaches The soldiers divided the captives among them as slaves Anza kept the fifteen female captives and their newborns as his share 6 In Anza s diary on March 25 1776 he states that he arrived at the arroyo of San Joseph Cupertino now Stevens Creek which is useful only for travelers Here we halted for the night having come eight leagues in seven and a half hours From this place we have seen at our right the estuary which runs from the port of San Francisco 7 Pressing on Anza located the sites for the Presidio of San Francisco and Mission San Francisco de Asis in present day San Francisco California on March 28 1776 He did not establish the settlement it was established later by Jose Joaquin Moraga While returning to Monterey he located the original sites for Mission Santa Clara de Asis and the town of San Jose de Guadalupe modern day San Jose California but again did not establish either settlement 8 Today this route is marked as the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail Despite DeAnza s successes Spanish ambitions to establish a permanent overland route from Sonora to Alta California were thwarted in 1781 when a revolt of the Yumas tribe closed the trail at the Yuma Crossing of the Colorado River The route was not reopened until the later 1820s and the only regular travel to Alta California during the intervening years was by sea Governor of New Mexico edit nbsp Portrait by Gerald Cassidy On his return from this successful expedition in 1777 he journeyed to Mexico City with the chief of the lower Colorado River area Quechan Yuma Native American tribe who requested the establishment of a mission On August 24 1777 the Viceroy of New Spain appointed Anza as the Governor of the Province of Nuevo Mexico the present day U S state of New Mexico Governor Anza led a punitive expedition against the Comanche group of Native Americans who had been repeatedly raiding Taos during 1779 With his Ute and Apache Native American allies and around 800 Spanish soldiers Anza went north through the San Luis Valley entering the Great Plains at what is now Manitou Springs Colorado Circling El Capitan current day Pikes Peak he surprised a small force of the Comanche near present day Colorado Springs Pursuing them south down Fountain Creek he crossed the Arkansas River near present day Pueblo Colorado He found the main body of the Comanche on Greenhorn Creek returning from a raid in Nuevo Mexico and won a decisive victory Chief Cuerno Verde for whom Greenhorn Creek is named and many other leaders of the Comanche were killed 9 In late 1779 Anza and his party found a route from Santa Fe to Sonora west of the El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro His various local military expeditions against tribes defending their homelands were often successful but the Quechan Yuma Native American tribe which he had established peace with earlier rebelled and he fell out of favor with the military commander of the Northern Frontier the frontier general In 1783 Anza led a campaign against the Comanche on the eastern plains and by 1784 they were suing for peace The last of the Comanche chiefs eventually acceded and a formal treaty was concluded on 28 February 1786 at Pecos Pueblo 10 This paved the way for traders and the development of the Comanchero trade Juan Bautista de Anza remained as governor of Nuevo Mexico New Mexico until 1787 when he returned to Sonora He was appointed commander of the Presidio of Tucson in 1788 but died before he could depart and take office He was 52 years old Anza was survived by his wife Juan Bautista de Anza died in Arizpe in what is now the State of Sonora Mexico and was buried in the Church of Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion de Arizpe In 1963 with the participation of delegations from the University of California Berkeley and San Francisco he was disinterred and reburied in a new marble memorial mausoleum at the same Church nbsp Statue by Dorr Bothwell in Riverside California nbsp Juan Bautista de Anza s burial site in Arizpe Sonora The primary legacy is the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail in California and Arizona administered by the US National Park Service for hiking and driving the route of his expedition exploring Las Californias 11 In the San Fernando Valley the trail crosses the Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space Preserve and in the San Gabriel Valley the trail is in the Puente Hills just north of Whittier California 12 13 Also named for Anza is Anza Borrego Desert State Park located mostly in eastern San Diego County California The park contains a long and difficult stretch of the Anza trail traveling west from the Imperial Valley to the coastal mountain passes north east of San Diego 14 The de Anza Country Club and its 18 hole championship Golf course is located within the village of Borrego Springs California which is entirely surrounded by the park A building named the Juan de Anza House in San Juan Bautista California is a National Historic Landmark However it was constructed c 1830 with its connection unclear The Juan Bautista de Anza Community Park is in Calabasas California and De Anza Park and the De Anza Community and Teen Center are in Ontario California A 20 foot 6 1 m statue of Anza sculpted in 1939 is located in Riverside California at the corner of Magnolia Ave and 14th Street 15 and another statue stands in Lake Merced park San Francisco 16 A 10 foot high portrait of de Anza by Albert Herter in 1929 hangs in the History Room of the Los Angeles Central Library 17 18 The de Anza and De Anza spellings are also the namesake of streets schools and buildings in his honor including De Anza Boulevards in San Mateo and Cupertino De Anza Park in Sunnyvale De Anza College in Cupertino De Anza High School in Richmond Juan Bautista De Anza elementary school in San Jacinto Juan De Anza K 5 in the Wiseburn Elementary School District of Hawthorne De Anza Middle School in Ontario De Anza Middle School in Ventura De Anza Elementary School in El Centro and the De Anza School in Baldwin Park the landmark De Anza Hotel in San Jose and the historic De Anza Hotel in Calexico all in California Using just Anza in his honor are Anza Vista Avenue within the Anza Vista neighborhood of San Francisco Anza Street in that city s Richmond District Lake Anza in Tilden Regional Park above Berkeley in the Berkeley Hills and Anza Avenue and Anza Elementary School in Torrance The town of Anza California is a small town of 7 000 people on State Route 371 in the mountains south of Palm Springs Also named in his honor is Juan Bautista Circle in the Parkmerced development in San Francisco Footnotes edit Garate Donald T 2003 Juan Bautista de Anza Basque Explorer in the New World 1693 1740 Reno Nevada University of Nevada Press p 155 ISBN 0 87417 626 3 Douglass William A Douglass Bilbao J 2005 1975 Amerikanuak Basques in the New World Reno NV University of Nevada Press p 190 ISBN 0 87417 625 5 Retrieved 16 February 2014 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link permanent dead link Kessell John L 2013 Miera y Pacheco A Renaissance Spaniard in Eighteenth Century New Mexico Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press p 155 ISBN 978 0 8061 4377 4 Garate Donald T 2003 Juan Bautista de Anza Basque Explorer in the New World 1693 1740 p 229 ISBN 9780874175059 Web de Anza The Basque surname was simply Anza without de Archived 2016 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Stockel Henrietta 15 September 2022 Salvation Through Slavery Chiricahua Apaches and Priests on the Spanish Colonial Frontier University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 4327 7 de Anza Juan Bautista 1776 Diary of Juan Bautista de Anza October 23 1775 June 1 1776 Anza 1776 Colonizing Diary Archived from the original on 2009 11 25 Retrieved 2009 12 14 Accessed September 8 2009 University of Oregon Web de Anza pages Edward F O Day October 1926 The Founding of San Francisco San Francisco Water Spring Valley Water Authority Archived from the original on July 27 2010 Retrieved February 7 2013 Thomas Alfred Barnaby ed 1932 Governor Anza s Expedition against the Comanche 1779 Forgotten Frontiers A Study of the Spanish Indian Policy of Don Juan Bautista de Anza Governor of New Mexico 1777 1787 University of Oklahoma Press Norman Oklahoma pp 66 71 OCLC 68116825 A full translation of the treaty is set out at Thomas Alfred Barnaby ed 1932 The Spanish Comanche Peace Treaty of 1786 Forgotten Frontiers A Study of the Spanish Indian Policy of Don Juan Bautista de Anza Governor of New Mexico 1777 1787 University of Oklahoma Press Norman Oklahoma pp 329 332 OCLC 68116825 National Park Service Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space de Anza Trail Puente Hills Habitat Authority Archived 2009 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Tour Anza Borrego Desert CaliforniaResortLife Archived from the original on 2015 12 22 Retrieved 2015 12 15 Patterson Tom Landmarks of Riverside and the Stories Behind Them The Press Enterprise Company Riverside CA 1964 pp 174 175 Statue in Lake Merced Painted Decoration Goodhue Building Los Angeles Public Library Retrieved 1 October 2023 Imharnish 13 June 2022 Mary Mallory Hollywood Heights Central Library Murals L A Daily Mirror Retrieved 1 October 2023 Further reading editJ N Bowman and R F Heizer Anza and the Northwest Frontier of New Spain Southwest Museum Papers No 20 Los Angeles CA 1967 Carlos R Herrera Juan Bautista de Anza The King s Governor in New Mexico Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2015 Wilfred Martinez Anza and Cuerno Verde Decisive Battle External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Juan Bautista de Anza Anza Borrego Desert State Park Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail Official U S National Park Service website U of Oregon Diary of Juan Bautista de Anza de Anza online resources An Interactive Study Environment on Spanish Exploration and Colonization of Alta California 1774 1776 Ninth Grade Social Studies Students HyperStudio Projects Using Web de Anza Resources an interesting high school project Preceded byFrancisco Trevre acting Governor of New Mexico1778 1788 Succeeded byFernando de la Concha Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Juan Bautista de Anza amp oldid 1220378202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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