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Junípero Serra

Saint Junípero Serra Ferrer O.F.M. (/hˈnpər ˈsɛrə/; Spanish: [xuˈnipeɾo ˈsera]; November 24, 1713 – August 28, 1784), popularly known simply as Junipero Serra, was a Spanish Catholic priest and missionary of the Franciscan Order. He is credited with establishing the Franciscan Missions in the Sierra Gorda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. He founded a mission in Baja California and established eight [8] of the 21 Spanish missions in California from San Diego to San Francisco, in what was then Spanish-occupied Alta California in the Province of Las Californias, New Spain.


Junípero Serra

A portrait of Serra
Apostle of California
BornMiguel José Serra Ferrer[1]
(1713-11-24)November 24, 1713
Petra, Majorca, Spain[2]
DiedAugust 28, 1784(1784-08-28) (aged 70)
Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, Las Californias, New Spain, Spanish Empire[2]
BeatifiedSeptember 25, 1988, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II
CanonizedSeptember 23, 2015, Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception by Pope Francis
Major shrineMission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo, Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, United States
FeastAugust 28; July 1 in United States[3][4][5]
AttributesFranciscan habit, wearing a large crucifix, or holding a crucifix accompanied by a young Native American boy
Patronage

Serra was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 25 September 1988 in Vatican City. Amid denunciations from Native American tribes who accused Serra of presiding over a brutal colonial subjugation,[9][10][11] Pope Francis canonized Serra on 23 September 2015 at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., during his first visit to the United States.[12] Serra's missionary efforts earned him the title of "Apostle of California".[13][14]

Both before and after his canonization, Serra's reputation and missionary work during the Spanish occupation have been condemned by critics, who cite alleged mandatory conversions to Catholicism, followed by abuse of the Native American converts.[15][16]

Early life

 
Serra's birthplace in Petra on the island of Mallorca, in the Balearic Islands.

Serra was born Miquel Josep Serra i Ferrer[17] (this name is Catalan, in Castilian it is Miguel José Serra y Ferrer) in the village of Petra on the island of Mallorca (Majorca) in the Balearic Islands off the Mediterranean coast of Spain.[18] His father Antonio Nadal Serra and mother Margarita Rosa Ferrer were married in 1707.[19]

By age seven, Miquel was working the fields with his parents, helping cultivate wheat and beans, and tending the cattle. But he showed a special interest in visiting the local Franciscan friary at the church of San Bernardino within a block of the Serra family house. Attending the friars' primary school at the church, Miquel learned reading, writing, mathematics, Latin, religion and liturgical song, especially Gregorian chant. Gifted with a good voice, he eagerly took to vocal music. The friars sometimes let him join the community choir and sing at special church feasts. Miquel and his father Antonio often visited the friary for friendly chats with the Franciscans.[20]

At age 16, Miquel's parents enrolled him in a Franciscan school in the capital city, Palma de Majorca, where he studied philosophy. A year later, he became a novice in the Franciscan order.[21]

Joins Franciscan order

 
Memorial to Serra's baptism at the Church of Sant Pere de Petra.

On September 14, 1730, some two months before his 17th birthday, Serra entered the Franciscan Order at Palma,[22][23] specifically, the Alcantarine branch of the Friars Minor, a reform movement in the order. The slight and frail Serra now embarked on his novitiate period, a rigorous year of preparation to become a full member of the Franciscan Order. He was given the religious name of Junípero in honor of Brother Juniper, who had been among the first Franciscans and a companion of Francis of Assisi.[24] The young Junípero, along with his fellow novices, vowed to scorn property and comfort, and to remain celibate. He still had seven years to go to become an ordained Catholic priest. He immersed himself in rigorous studies of logic, metaphysics, cosmology, and theology.[25]

The daily routine at the friary followed a rigid schedule: prayers, meditation, choir singing, physical chores, spiritual readings, and instruction. The friars would wake up every midnight for another round of chants. Serra's superiors discouraged letters and visitors.[26] In his free time, he avidly read stories about Franciscan friars roaming the provinces of Spain and around the world to win new souls for the church, often suffering martyrdom in the process.

 
Monument to Serra in Palma de Mallorca.

In 1737, Serra became a priest, and three years later earned an ecclesiastical license to teach philosophy at the Convento de San Francisco. His philosophy course, including over 60 students, lasted three years. Among his students were fellow future missionaries Francisco Palóu and Juan Crespí.[27] When the course ended in 1743, Serra told his students: "I desire nothing more from you than this, that when the news of my death shall have reached your ears, I ask you to say for the benefit of my soul: 'May he rest in peace.' Nor shall I omit to do the same for you so that all of us will attain the goal for which we have been created."[28]

Serra was considered intellectually brilliant by his peers. He received a doctorate in theology from the Lullian College (founded in the 14th century by Ramon Lull for the training of Franciscan missionaries) in Palma de Majorca, where he also occupied the Duns Scotus chair of philosophy until he joined the missionary College of San Fernando de Mexico in 1749.[29]

During Serra's last five years on the island of Majorca, drought and plague afflicted his home village of Petra. Serra sometimes went home from Palma for brief visits to his parents—now separated—and gave them some financial support. On one occasion he was called home to anoint his seriously ill father with the last rites. In one of his final visits to Petra, Serra found his younger sister Juana María near death.[30]

In 1748, Serra and Palóu confided to each other their desire to become missionaries. Serra, now 35, was assured a prestigious career as priest and scholar if he stayed in Majorca; but he set his sights firmly on pagan lands. Applying to the colonial bureaucracy in Madrid, Serra requested that both he and Palóu embark on a foreign mission. After weathering some administrative obstacles, they received permission and set sail for Cádiz, the port of departure for Spain's colonies in the Americas.[31]

While waiting to set sail, Serra wrote a long letter to a colleague back in Majorca, urging him to console Serra's parents—now in their 70s—over their only son's pending departure. "They [my parents] will learn to see how sweet is His yoke," Serra wrote, "and that He will change for them the sorrow they may now experience into great happiness. Now is not the time to muse or fret over the happenings of life but rather to be conformed entirely to the will of God, striving to prepare themselves for that happy death which of all the things of life is our principal concern."[32] Serra asked his colleague to read this letter to his parents, who had never attended school.[33]

Ministry in the Americas

 
Serra monument in Jalpan de Serra, a city named after Serra in Querétaro, Mexico.

In 1749, Serra and the Franciscan missionary team landed in Veracruz, on the Gulf coast of New Spain (now Mexico). To get from Veracruz to Mexico City, Serra and his Franciscan companions took the Camino Real (English: royal path), a rough road stretching from sea level through tropical forests, dry plains, high plateaus and volcanic sierra mountains to an altitude of 7,400 feet (2,300 meters). Royal officials provided horses for the 20 Franciscan friars to ride up the Camino Real. All accepted the offer, except for Serra and one companion, a friar from Andalusia. Strictly following the rule of his patron saint Francis of Assisi that friars "must not ride on horseback unless compelled by manifest necessity or infirmity," Serra insisted on walking to Mexico City. He and his fellow friar set out on the Camino Real with no money or guide, carrying only their breviaries. They trusted in Providence and the hospitality of local people along the way.[citation needed]

During the trek Serra's left foot swelled up, and a burning itch tormented him. Arriving at a farm at day's end, he could hardly stand. He attributed the swelling to a mosquito bite. His discomfort caused him to stay over at the farm another night, during which he scratched his foot and leg to excess, desperately trying to relieve the itch. The next morning his leg was raw and bleeding. This wound plagued Serra for the rest of his life.[34]

Hobbling into Mexico City, Serra joined up with his fellow friars at the College of San Fernando de Mexico, a specialized training center and regional headquarters for Franciscan missionaries. Serra requested that he do his novitiate year again—despite his academic prestige, and the fact that the college's novices were far younger men. Though his request was declined, Serra insisted on living as a novice at San Fernando: "This learned university professor ... would often eat more sparingly in order to replace the student whose turn it was to read to the community. Or he would humbly carry trays and wait on tables with the lay brothers."[35]

Mission in the Sierra Gorda

 
Serra founded the five Missions of the Sierra Gorda in Querétaro, Mexico, between 1750 and 1760. (Santa María del Agua de Landa pictured).

The Sierra Gorda Indian missions, some 90 miles north of Santiago de Querétaro, were nestled in a vast region of jagged mountains, home of the Pame people and a scattering of Spanish colonists. The Pames—who centuries earlier had built a civilization with temples, idols and priests—lived mainly by gathering and hunting, but also pursued agriculture. Many groups among them, adopting mobile guerrilla tactics, had eluded conquest by the Spanish military.[citation needed]

Serra and Palóu, arriving at the village of Jalpan, found the mission in disarray: The parishioners, numbering fewer than a thousand, were attending neither confession nor Mass.[36] The two missionaries set about learning the Pame language from a Mexican who had lived among the Pames. But the statement by Palóu that Serra translated the catechism into the Pame language is questionable, as Serra himself later admitted he had great difficulties learning indigenous languages.[37]

Serra involved Pames parishioners in the ritual reenactment of Jesus' forced death march. Erecting 14 stations, Serra led the procession himself, carrying an extremely heavy cross. At each station, the procession paused for a prayer, and at the end Serra sermonized on the sufferings and death of Jesus. On Holy Thursday, 12 Pames elders reenacted the roles of the apostles. Serra, in the role of Jesus, washed their feet and then, after the service, dined with them.[38]

Serra also tackled the practical side of mission administration. Working with the college of San Fernando, he had cattle, goats, sheep, and farming tools brought to the Sierra Gorda mission. Palóu supervised the farm labor of men of the mission; the women learned spinning, sewing and knitting. Their products were collected and rationed to the mission residents, according to personal needs. Christian Pames sold their surplus products in nearby trading centers, under the friars' supervision to protect them from cheaters. Pames who adapted successfully to mission life received their own parcels of land to raise corn, beans and pumpkins, and sometimes received oxen and seeds as well.[39]

Within two years, Serra had made inroads against the Pames' traditional belief system. On his 1752 visit from the Sierra Gorda mission to the college of San Fernando in Mexico City, Serra joyfully carried a goddess statue presented to him by Christian Pames. The statue, showing the face of Cachum, mother of the sun, had been erected on a hilltop shrine where some Pame chiefs lay buried.[40]

 
Azulejos depicting the Sierra Gorda Missions, which Serra founded between 1750 and 1760.

Back in the Sierra Gorda, Serra faced a conflict between Spanish soldiers, settlers, and mission natives or "Indians". Following a Spanish military victory over the Pames in 1743, Spanish authorities had sent not only Franciscan missionaries, but also Spanish/Mexican soldiers and their families into the Sierra Gorda. The soldiers had the job of pursuing runaway mission Indians and securing the region for the Spanish crown. But the soldiers' land claims clashed with mission lands that Christian Pames were working.[citation needed]

Some of the soldiers' families tried to establish a town, and the officer in charge of their deployment approved their plan. The Pames objected, threatening to defend their lands by force if necessary. Soldiers and settlers let their cattle graze on Christian Pames' farmlands and bullied Pames into working for them. Serra and the College of San Fernando sided with the Pames—citing the Laws of the Indies, which banned colonial settlements in mission territories.[citation needed]

The viceroy, Spain's highest official in Mexico, suspended the intrusive colony. But the townspeople protested and stayed put. The government set up commissions and looked into alternative sites for the colony. It ordered the settlers to keep their cattle out of the Pames' fields, and to pay the Pames fairly for their labor (with the friars supervising payment). After a protracted legal struggle, the settlers moved out, and in 1755 the Pames and friars reclaimed their land.[41]

Crowning his Sierra Gorda mission, Serra oversaw the construction of a splendid church in Jalpan. Gathering masons, carpenters, and other skilled craftsmen from Mexico City, Serra employed Christian Pames in seasonal construction work over the course of seven years to complete the church. Serra pitched in himself, carrying wooden beams and applying mortar between the stones forming the church walls.[42]

Work for the Inquisition

 
Engraving depicting Serra's as an evangelizer from 1787.

During his 1752 visit to Mexico City, Serra sent a request from the college of San Fernando to the local headquarters of the Spanish Inquisition. He asked that an inquisitor be appointed to preside over the Sierra Gorda. The next day, Inquisition officials appointed Serra himself as inquisitor for the whole region—adding that he could exercise his powers anywhere he did missionary work in New Spain, as long as there was no regular Inquisition official in the region.[43]

In September 1752, Serra filed a report to the Spanish Inquisition in Mexico City from Jalpan, on "evidences of witchcraft in the Sierra Gorda missions." He denounced several Christian non-Indians who lived in and around the mission for "the most detestable and horrible crimes of sorcery, witchcraft and devil worship. ... If it is necessary to specify one of the persons guilty of such crimes, I accuse by name a certain Melchora de los Reyes Acosta, a married mulattress, an inhabitant of the said mission..... In these last days a certain Cayetana, a very clever Mexican woman of said mission, married to one Pérez, a mulatto, has confessed—she, being observed and accused of similar crimes, having been held under arrest by us for some days past—that in the mission there is a large congregation of [Christian non-Indians], although some Indians also join them, and that these persons, ... flying through the air at night, are in the habit of meeting in a cave on a hill near a ranch called El Saucillo, in the center of said missions, where they worship and make sacrifice to the demons who appear visibly there in the guise of young goats and various other things of that nature. ... If such evil is not attacked, the horrible corruption will spread among these poor [Indian] neophytes who are in our charge."[44]

According to modern Franciscan historians, this report by Serra to the Inquisition is the only letter of his that has survived from eight years of mission work in the Sierra Gorda.[45] Serra's first biographer, Francisco Palóu, wrote that Serra, in his role of inquisitor, had to work in many parts of Mexico and travel long distances. Yet the Archivo General de la Nación in Mexico City, with over a thousand volumes of indexed documents on the Inquisition, apparently contains only two references to Serra's work for the Inquisition following his 1752 appointment: his preaching in Oaxaca in 1764, and his partial handling of the case of a Sierra Gorda mulatto accused of sorcery in 1766.[46][47]

In 1758, Serra returned to the College of San Fernando. Over the next nine years he worked in the college's administrative offices, and as a missionary and inquisitor in the dioceses of Mexico, Puebla, Oaxaca, Valladolid, and Guadalajara.[48]

Physical self-punishment

 
Plaque honoring Serra at Mission San Miguel Concá in Arroyo Seco, Querétaro.

Emulating an earlier Franciscan missionary and saint, Francisco Solano, Serra made a habit of punishing himself physically, to purify his spirit. He wore a sackcloth spiked with bristles, or a coat interwoven with broken pieces of wire, under his gray friar's outer garment.[49] In his austere cell, Serra kept a chain of sharp pointed iron links hanging on the wall beside his bed, to whip himself at night when sinful thoughts ran through his mind. His nightly self-flagellations at the college of San Fernando caught the ears of some of his fellow friars. In his letters to his Franciscan companions, Serra often referred to himself as a "sinner" and a "most unworthy priest."[50]

In one of his sermons in Mexico City, while exhorting his listeners to repent their sins, Serra took out his chain, bared his shoulders and started whipping himself. Many parishioners, roused by the spectacle, began sobbing. Finally, a man climbed to the pulpit, took the chain from Serra's hand and began whipping himself, declaring: "I am the sinner who is ungrateful to God who ought to do penance for my many sins, and not the padre [Serra], who is a saint." The man kept whipping himself until he collapsed. After receiving the last sacraments, he later died from the ordeal.[51]

 
Plaza de Junípero Serra in Petra, Mallorca, Spain.

During other sermons on the theme of repentance, Serra would hoist a large stone in one hand and, while clutching a crucifix in the other, smash the stone against his chest. Many of his listeners feared that he would strike himself dead. Later, Serra suffered chest pains and shortness of breath; Palóu suggests that Serra's self-inflicted bruises were the cause. While preaching of hell and damnation, Serra would sear his flesh with a four-pronged candle flame—emulating a famed Franciscan preacher, John of Capistrano.[52] Palóu described this as "quite violent, painful, and dangerous towards wounding his chest."[53]

Serra did not stand alone among Catholic missionaries in displaying self-punishment at the pulpit. The more zealous Franciscan and Jesuit missionaries did likewise. But few took it to the extremes that Serra did. The regulations of the college of San Fernando said that self-punishment should never be carried to the point of permanently incapacitating oneself.[54]

King Carlos expels the Jesuits

 
Plaque at Serra's house in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

On June 24, 1767, the Viceroy of New Spain, Carlos Francisco de Croix, read a Spanish royal decree to Mexico's archbishop and assembled church officials: "Repair with an armed force to the houses of the Jesuits. Seize the persons of all of them and, within 24 hours, transport them as prisoners to the port of Veracruz. Cause to be sealed the records of said houses and records of such persons without allowing them to remove anything but their breviaries and such garments as are absolutely necessary for their journey. If after the embarkation there should be found one Jesuit in that district, even if ill or dying, you shall suffer the penalty of death."[55][56]

Spain's king Carlos III had plotted the expulsion of Jesuits throughout his empire five months earlier.

On the Baja California peninsula, newly appointed governor Gaspar de Portolá had to notify and remove the Jesuits from the chain of missions they had developed in forbidding territory over 70 years. By February 1768, Portolá gathered the 16 Baja Jesuit missionaries in Loreto, from where they sailed to mainland Mexico for deportation. Sympathetic to the Jesuits, Portolá treated them kindly even as he removed them under the king's orders.[57]

President of missions of the Californias

 
Gaspar de Portolá's appointment as Governor of the Californias in 1767 coincided with Serra's appointment as chief of the missions in the Californias.

Into the vacuum created by the Jesuits' expulsion from Mexico, stepped Franciscan missionaries. In July 1767, the guardian of the college of San Fernando appointed Serra president of the missions of Baja California, heading a group of 15 Franciscan friars; Francisco Palóu served as his second in command.[58] Jesuit priests had developed 13 missions on that long and arid peninsula over seven decades. Two Jesuits had died at the hands of Indians in the revolt of 1734–36.[citation needed]

In March 1768, Serra and his missionary team boarded a Spanish sloop at San Blas, on Mexico's Pacific coast. Sailing over 200 miles up the Gulf of California, they landed at Loreto two weeks later. Gaspar de Portolá, governor of Las Californias, welcomed them at the Loreto mission, founded by Jesuits in 1697. While he gave control of the church to Serra, Portolá controlled the living quarters and rationed out food to the friars, charging their costs to the mission.[59]

Serra and Palóu found—to their unpleasant surprise—that they ruled only on spiritual matters: everyday management of the mission remained in the hands of the military, who had occupied the Baja missions since evicting the Jesuits. In August 1768, New Spain's inspector general José de Gálvez, displeased with the sloppy military administration of the Baja missions, ordered them turned over fully to the Franciscan friars.[60]

The Franciscans found that the Indian population in the Baja California mission territories had dwindled to about 7,150. By the time the Franciscans had moved north and turned the missions over to Dominican friars in 1772, the Indian population had decreased to about 5,000. "If it goes on at this rate," wrote Palóu, "in a short time Baja California will come to an end." Epidemics, especially syphilis introduced by Spanish troops, were wasting the Indians.[61] But Palóu attributed the ravages of syphilis to God's retribution for the Indians' murder of the two Jesuit priests over 30 years earlier.[62]

In 1768 José de Gálvez, inspector general of New Spain, decided to send explorers and locate missions in Alta (upper) California. Gálvez aimed both to Christianize the extensive Indian populations and serve Spain's strategic interest by preventing Russian explorations and possible claims to North America's Pacific coast.[63] Gálvez chose Serra to head the missionary team in the California expedition. Serra, now 55, eagerly seized the chance to harvest thousands of pagan souls in lands previously untouched by the church.[citation needed]

 
Monument to Serra in Querétaro City.

But as the expedition gathered in Loreto, Serra's foot and leg infection had become almost crippling. The commander, Gaspar de Portolá, tried to dissuade him from joining the expedition, and wrote to Gálvez about Serra's condition. Serra's fellow friar and former student Francisco Palóu also became concerned, gently suggesting to Serra that he stay in Baja California and let the younger and stronger Palóu make the journey to San Diego in his place. Serra rebuffed both Portolá's and Palóu's doubts. He chided Palóu for his suggestion: "Let us not speak of that. I have placed all my confidence in God, of whose goodness I hope that He will grant me to reach not only San Diego to raise the standard of the Holy Cross in that port, but also Monterey."[64]

Serra suggested that the Portolá party set off without him; he would follow and meet up with them on the way to Alta California. He then assigned friar Miguel de la Campa as chaplain to the Portolá expedition, which set out from Loreto on March 9, 1769. Spending holy week at mission Loreto, Serra set out on March 28. "From my mission of Loreto," wrote Serra, "I took along no more provisions for so long a journey than a loaf of bread and a piece of cheese. For I was there [at mission Loreto] a whole year, in economic matters, as a mere guest to receive the crumbs of the royal soldier commissioner, whose liberality at my departure did not extend beyond the aforementioned articles."[65]

Two servants—one named José María Vergerano, a 20-year-old from Magdalena, the other a soldier guard—accompanied Serra on his journey from Loreto, as he rode on a feeble mule. On April 28, 1769, Serra arrived at mission San Borja, where he received a warm welcome from friar Fermín Lasuén. Founded just seven years before by the Jesuit Wenceslaus Linck, mission San Borja sat in an unusually arid region of Baja California. Continuing north, Serra stopped on May 5 to celebrate a Mass for the feast of the Ascension in the deserted church at Calamajué, scarcely more than a ruined hut. The next morning he arrived at Santa María, where he met up with Portolá, friar Miguel de la Campa and several members of their party. In this arid region, whose alkaline land resisted cultivation, lived the "poorest of all" the Indians Serra had encountered in Mexico. On Sunday May 7, Serra celebrated high Mass and preached a sermon at the mission church on the frontier of Spanish Catholicism.[66]

Founding Mission Velicatá

 
Serra prepared his evangelizing mission of Alta California at Mission Loreto, in Baja California, in 1768–69.

After leaving Mission Santa María, Serra urged Portolá to move ahead of the slow pack train, so they could reach Velicatá in time for Pentecost the next day. Portolá agreed, so the small group traveled all day May 13 to reach Velicatá by late evening. The advanced guard of the party greeted them there.[67]

On Pentecost day, May 14, 1769, Serra founded his first mission, Misión San Fernando Rey de España de Velicatá, in a mud hut that had served as a makeshift church when friar Fermín Lasuén had traveled up on Easter to conduct the sacraments for the Fernando Rivera expedition, the overland party that had preceded the Portolá party. The founding celebration took place "with all the neatness of holy poverty," in Serra's words. Smoke from the soldiers' guns, fired in repeated volleys, served as incense.[68]

The new mission lacked Indians to convert. A few days later, friar Miguel de la Campa notified Serra that a few natives had arrived. Serra joyously rushed out to welcome twelve Indian, men and boys. "Then I saw what I could hardly begin to believe when I read about it," wrote Serra. "... namely, that they go about entirely naked like Adam in paradise before the fall. ... We treated with them for a long time; and although they saw all of us clothed, they nevertheless showed not the least trace of shame in their manner of nudity." Serra placed both hands upon their heads as a token of paternal affection. He then handed them figs, which they ate immediately. One of the Indian men gave Serra roasted agave stalks and four fishes. In return, Portolá and his soldiers offered tobacco leaves and various food items.[69]

Through a Christian Indian interpreter, Serra told the Indians that de la Campa would stay at the mission to serve them. According to Stephen Hyslop, "[Serra's] goal and that of his fellow friars was not to confirm Indians in their seeming innocence, like 'Adam in the garden, before sin', but to make them aware of their sins and move them to repent."[70] The motive behind gifts of food, tobacco, and the like was, "in the words of Serra's colleague and biographer, Father Francisco Palóu, spiritual conquest meant enticing Indians with food and clothing, by which means they could be indoctrinated as Christians and 'gradually acquire a knowledge of what is spiritually good and evil' ".[71]

 
A statue of Serra by Douglas Tilden formerly installed in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco before it was removed during the George Floyd protests.

Back on the road, Serra found it very difficult to stay on his feet because "my left foot had become very inflamed, a painful condition which I have suffered for a year or more. Now this inflammation has reached halfway up my leg." Portolá again tried to persuade Serra to withdraw from the expedition, offering to "have you carried back to the first mission where you can recuperate, and we will continue our journey." Serra countered that "God ... has given me the strength to come so far. ... Even though I should die on the way, I shall not turn back. They can bury me wherever they wish and I shall gladly be left among the pagans, if it be God's will." Portolá had a stretcher prepared, so that Christian Indians traveling with the expedition could carry Serra along the trail.[72]

Not wishing to burden his traveling companies, Serra departed from his usual practice of avoiding medicines: he asked one of the muleteers, Juan Antonio Coronel, if he could prepare a remedy for his foot and leg wound. When Coronel objected that he knew only how to heal animals' wounds, Serra rejoined: "Well then, son, just imagine that I am an animal. ... Make me the same remedy that you would apply to an animal." Coronel then crushed some tallow between stones and mixed it with green desert herbs. After heating the mix, he applied it to Serra's foot and leg. The next morning, Serra felt "much improved and I celebrated Mass. ... I was enabled to make the daily trek just as if I did not have any ailment. ... There is no swelling but only the itching which I feel at times."[73]

The expedition still had 300 miles (480 kilometers) to travel to San Diego. They passed through desert terrain into oak savanna in June, often camping and sleeping under large oaks. From a high hill on June 20, their advance scouts saw the Pacific Ocean in the distance. Reaching its shores that evening, the party called the spot Ensenada de Todos Santos (All Saints' Cove, today simply Ensenada). They now had less than 80 miles (130 kilometers) to reach San Diego.[citation needed]

Pressing north, they stayed close to the ocean. On June 23, they came upon a large Indian village where they enjoyed a pleasant stopover. The natives appeared healthy, robust and friendly, immediately repeating the Spanish words they heard. Some danced for the party, offering them fish and mussels. "We were all enamored of them," wrote Serra. "In fact, all the pagans have pleased me, but these in particular have stolen my heart."[74]

The Indians now encountered by the party near the coast appeared well-fed and more eager to receive cloth than food. On June 25, as the party struggled to cross a series of ravines, they noticed many Indians following them. When they camped for the night, the Indians pressed close. Whenever Serra placed his hands on their heads, they placed theirs on his. Coveting cloth, some begged Serra for the friar's habit he wore. Several women passed Serra's spectacles around with delight from hand to hand, until one man dashed off with them. Serra's companions rushed to recover them, the only pair of spectacles Serra possessed.[75]

Arrival in San Diego

 
The Junípero Serra Museum at the Presidio of San Diego, California.

On June 28, sergeant José Ortega, who had ridden ahead to meet the Rivera party in San Diego, returned with fresh animals and letters to Serra from friars Juan Crespí and Fernando Parrón. Serra learned that two Spanish galleons dispatched from Baja to supply the new missions had arrived at San Diego Bay. One of the ships, the San Carlos, had sailed almost four months from La Paz, bypassing its destination by almost 200 miles before doubling back south to reach San Diego Bay.[76] By the time it dropped anchor on April 29, scurvy had so devastated its crew that they lacked the strength to lower a boat. Men on shore from the San Antonio, which had arrived three weeks earlier, had to board the San Carlos to help its surviving crew ashore.[77]

The Portolá/Serra party, having trekked 900 miles (1,400 kilometers) from Loreto and suffered dwindling food supplies along the way, arrived in San Diego on July 1, 1769. "It was a day of great rejoicing and merriment for all," wrote Serra, "because although each one in his respective journey had undergone the same hardships, their meeting ... now became the material for mutual accounts of their experiences."[78]

Between the overland and seafaring parties of the expedition, about 300 men had started on the trip from Baja California. But no more than half of them reached San Diego. Most of the Christian Indians recruited to the overland parties had died or deserted; military officers had denied them rations when food started running low. Half of those who made it to San Diego spent months unable to resume the expedition, due to illness.[79] Doctor Pedro Prat, who had also sailed on the San Carlos as the expedition's surgeon, struggled to treat the ill men, himself weakened from scurvy. Friar Fernando Parrón, who had sailed on the San Carlos as chaplain, had become weak with scurvy as well. Many men who had sailed on the San Antonio, including captain Juan Pérez, had also taken ill with scurvy.[80] Despite the efforts of Doctor Prat, many of the ill men died in San Diego.[citation needed]

Mission San Diego de Alcalá

 
Statue of Junipero Serra at Mission San Diego de Alcalá.

On July 16, 1769, Serra founded mission San Diego in honor of Didacus of Alcalá in a simple shelter on Presidio Hill serving as a temporary church. Tensions with the local Kumeyaay people made it difficult to attract converts. The Indians accepted the trinkets Serra offered as rewards for visiting the new mission. But their craving for Spanish cloth irritated the soldiers, who accused them of stealing. Some of the Kumeyaay teased and taunted the sick soldiers. To warn them away, soldiers fired their guns into the air. The Christian Indians from Baja who remained with the Spaniards did not know the Kumeyaay language.[81]

On August 15, the Feast of the Assumption, Serra and padre Sebastian Vizcaíno celebrated Mass at the new mission chapel, to which several Hispanics had gone for confession and Holy Communion. After Mass, four soldiers went down to the beach to bring padre Fernando Parrón back from the San Carlos, where he had been celebrating Mass.[citation needed]

Observing the mission and its neighboring huts sparsely protected, a group of over 20 Indians attacked with bows and arrows. The four remaining soldiers, aided by the blacksmith and carpenter, returned fire with muskets and pistols. Serra, clutching a Jesus figurine in one hand and a Mary figurine in the other, prayed to God to save both sides from casualties. The blacksmith, Chacón, ran about the Spanish huts unprotected by a leather jacket, shouting: "Long live the faith of Jesus Christ and may these dogs, enemies of that faith, die!"[82]

 
Illustration of Serra celebrating as the resupply ships the San Antonio and the San Carlos arrive at San Diego Bay on March 19, 1770.

Serra's young servant José María Vergerano ran into Serra's hut, his neck pierced by an arrow. "Father, absolve me," he beseeched, "for the Indians have killed me." "He entered my little hut with so much blood streaming from his temples and mouth that, shortly after, I gave him absolution and helped him to die well," wrote Serra. "He passed away at my feet, bathed in his blood."[83] Padre Vizcaíno, the blacksmith Chacón, and a Christian Indian from San Ignacio suffered wounds. That night Serra buried Vergerano secretly, concealing his death from the Indians.[citation needed]

The Indian warriors, suffering several dead and wounded, retreated with a new-found respect for the power of Spanish firearms. As local Indians cremated their dead, the wailing of their women sounded from local villages. Yet Serra wrote six months later, in a letter to the guardian of the college of San Fernando, that "both our men and theirs sustained wounds"—without mentioning any Indian deaths. He added: "It seems none of them died so they can still be baptized."[84] Tightening security, the soldiers built a stockade of poles around the mission buildings, banning Indians from entering.[citation needed]

A teenage boy from the Kumeyaay village of Kosa'aay (Cosoy, known today as Old Town, San Diego) who had often visited the mission before the outbreak of hostilities, resumed his visits with the friars. He soon learned enough Spanish for Serra to view him as an envoy to help convert the Kumeyaay. Serra urged the boy to persuade some parents to bring their young child to the mission, so that Serra could administer Catholic baptism to the child by pouring water over his head.[citation needed]

A few days later, a group of Indians arrived at the mission carrying a naked baby boy. The Spaniards interpreted their sign language as a desire to have the boy baptized. Serra covered the child with some clothing and asked the corporal of the guard to sponsor the baptism. Dressed in surplice and stole, Serra read the initial prayers and performed the ceremonies to prepare for baptism. But just as he lifted the baptismal shell, filled it with water and readied to pour it over the baby's head, some Indians grabbed the child from the corporal's arms and ran away to their village in fear. The other Kumeyaay visitors followed them, laughing and jeering. The frustrated Serra never forgot this incident; recounting it years later brought tears to his eyes. Serra attributed the Indians' behavior to his own sins.[85]

 
Monument marking the landing place of Serra in Monterey, California.

Over six months dragged on without a single Indian convert to mission San Diego. On January 24, 1770, the 74 exhausted men of the Portolá expedition returned from their exploratory journey up the coast to San Francisco. They had survived by slaughtering and eating their mules along the return trek south. Commander Gaspar de Portolá, engineer and cartographer Miguel Costansó, and friar Juan Crespí all arrived in San Diego with detailed diaries of their trip. They reported large populations of Indians living along the coast who seemed friendly and docile, ready to embrace the gospel. Serra fervently wrote to the guardian of the college of San Fernando, requesting more missionaries willing to face hardships in Alta California.[86]

Food remained scarce as the San Diego outpost awaited the return of the supply ship San Antonio. Weighing the risk of his soldiers dying of starvation, Portolá set a deadline of March 19, the feast of saint Joseph, patron of his expedition: If no ship arrived by that day—Portolá told Serra—he would march his men south the next morning. The anguished Serra, along with friar Juan Crespí, insisted on staying in San Diego in the event of the Portolá group's departure. Boarding the San Carlos (still anchored in San Diego Bay), Serra told captain Vicente Vila of Portolá's plan. Vila agreed to stay in the harbor until the relief ship arrived—and to welcome Serra and Crespí aboard if they got stranded by Portolá's departure.[citation needed]

On the morning of March 19, Serra celebrated Mass and preached a sermon at the forlorn mission on Presidio Hill. No ship appeared in the bay that morning. But around 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the sails of a ship—the San Antonio—came into view on the horizon. It sailed past San Diego Bay, destined for Monterey. When it got to the Santa Barbara Channel, its sailors made landfall to fetch fresh water. There they learned from Indians that the Portolá expedition had returned south. So the San Antonio also turned south, anchoring in San Diego Bay on March 23.[87]

Monterey

 
Father Serra Celebrates Mass at Monterey; painting by Léon Trousset, 1877.

Bolstered by the food unloaded from the San Antonio, Portolá and his men shifted their sights back north to Monterey, specified by José de Gálvez as the northern stake of Spain's empire in California. Friar Juan Crespí prepared to accompany the second Portolá expedition to Monterey. Leaving mission San Diego in the hands of friars Fernando Parrón and Francisco Gómez, Serra rode a launch out to board the San Antonio. He and Crespí would meet in Monterey. Since Serra planned to establish the mission there while having Crespí establish mission San Buenaventura, the two friars would be living over 200 miles apart. "Truly," wrote Serra to Palóu, "this state of solitude shall be ... the greatest of my hardships, but God in His infinite mercy will see me through."[88]

On April 16, 1770, the San Antonio set sail from San Diego Bay, carrying Serra, doctor Pedro Prat, engineer Miguel Costansó and a crew of sailors under captain Juan Pérez. Contrary winds blew the ship back south to the Baja peninsula, then as far north as the Farallon Islands. As the ship heaved against heavy winds, Pérez, Serra and sailors recited daily prayers, promising to make a novena and celebrate High Mass upon their safe arrival in Monterey.[89] Several sailors fell sick with scurvy. Serra described the six-week voyage as "somewhat uncomfortable."[90]

Meanwhile, the land expedition departed from San Diego on April 17 under the command of Portolá. His group included friar Crespí, captain Pedro Fages, twelve Spanish volunteers, seven leather-jacketed soldiers, two muleteers, five Baja Christian Indians, and Portolá's servant. Following the same route they had taken the year before, the expedition reached Monterey Bay on May 24, without losing a single man or suffering any serious illness.[91]

 
The Vizcaíno-Serra Oak, in Monterey, where Sebastián Vizcaíno celebrated mass in 1602 and Serra celebrated mass in 1770.

With the San Antonio nowhere in sight, Portolá, Crespí and a guard walked over the hills to Point Pinos, then to a beachside hill just south where their party had planted a large cross five months before on their journey back from San Francisco Bay. They found the cross surrounded by feathers and broken arrows driven into the ground, with fresh sardines and meat laid out before the cross. No Indians were in sight. The three men then walked along the rocky coast south to Carmel Bay. Several Indians approached them, and the two groups exchanged gifts.[92] On May 31, the San Antonio sailed into Monterey Bay and dropped anchor, reuniting the surviving men of the land and sea expeditions.[citation needed]

On Pentecost Sunday, June 3, 1770, Serra, Portolá and the whole expedition held a ceremony at a makeshift chapel erected next to a massive oak tree by Monterey Bay, to found mission San Carlos Borromeo. "The men of the land and sea expeditions coming from different directions met here at the same time," wrote Serra, "we singing the divine praises in our launch, while the gentlemen on land sang in their hearts." After the raising and planting of a large cross, which Serra blessed, "the standards of our Catholic monarch were also set up, the one ceremony ... accompanied by shouts of 'Long live the Faith!' and the other by 'Long live the King!' Added to this was the clangor of the bells, the volleys of the muskets, and the cannonading from the ship."[93] Both king Carlos III and viceroy Carlos de Croix had chosen to name the new mission after Carlo Borromeo.[94] The body of a sailor, Alexo Niño, who had died the day before aboard the San Antonio, was buried at the foot of the newly erected cross.[95]

Serra realized from the start that the new mission needed relocation: While the Laws of the Indies required missions to be located near Indian villages, there were no Indian settlements near the newly christened mission by Monterey Bay. "It might be necessary," wrote Serra to the guardian of the college of San Fernando, "to change the site of the mission toward the area of Carmel, a locality indeed more delightful and suitable because of the extent and excellent quality of the land and water supply necessary to produce very abundant harvests."[96]

On July 9, the San Antonio set sail from Monterey, bound for Mexico. Aboard were Portolá and Miguel Costansó, along with several letters from Serra. Forty men, including the two friars and five Baja Indians, remained to develop the mission on the Monterey peninsula. In San Diego, 450 miles (720 kilometers) south, 23 men remained to develop the mission there. Both groups would have to wait a year before receiving supplies and news from Mexico.[97]

Missions founded

 
Mission San Diego de Alcalá was founded by Serra in 1769, as the first of the California missions.
 
Mission San Carlos Borromeo del Río Caramelo, where Serra died, was founded in 1770.

When the party reached San Diego on July 1, Serra stayed behind to start the Mission San Diego de Alcalá, the first of the 21 California missions[29] (including the nearby Visita de la Presentación, also founded under Serra's leadership).

Junipero Serra moved to the area that is now Monterey in 1770, and founded Mission San Carlos Borroméo de Carmelo. He remained there as "Father Presidente" of the Alta California missions. In 1771, Serra relocated the mission to Carmel, which became known as "Mission Carmel" and served as his headquarters. Under his presidency were founded:[citation needed]

Serra was also present at the founding of the Presidio of Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, California) on April 21, 1782, but was prevented from locating the mission there because of the animosity of Governor Felipe de Neve.[citation needed]

 
Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, founded in 1771.

He began in San Diego on July 16, 1769, and established his headquarters near the Presidio of Monterey, but soon moved a few miles south to establish Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo in today's Carmel, California.[24]

 
Mission San Juan Capistrano, founded in 1776.

The missions were primarily designed to bring the Catholic faith to the native peoples. Other aims were to integrate the neophytes into Spanish society, to provide a framework for organizing the natives into a productive workforce in support of new extensions of Spanish power, and to train them to take over ownership and management of the land. As head of the order in California, Serra not only dealt with church officials, but also with Spanish officials in Mexico City and with the local military officers who commanded the nearby garrison.

In 1773, difficulties with Pedro Fages, the military commander, compelled Serra to travel to Mexico City to argue before Viceroy Antonio María de Bucareli y Ursúa for the removal of Fages as the Governor of California Nueva. At the capital of Mexico, by order of Viceroy Bucareli, he printed up Representación in 32 articles. Bucareli ruled in Serra's favor on 30 of the 32 charges brought against Fages, and removed him from office in 1774, after which time Serra returned to California. In 1778, Serra, although not a bishop, was given dispensation to administer the sacrament of confirmation for the faithful in California. After he had exercised his privilege for a year, Governor Felipe de Neve directed him to suspend administering the sacrament until he could present the papal brief. For nearly two years Serra refrained, and then Viceroy Majorga gave instructions to the effect that Serra was within his rights.[citation needed]

Franciscans saw the Indians as children of God who deserved the opportunity for salvation, and would make good Christians. Converted Indians were segregated from Indians who had not yet embraced Christianity, lest there be a relapse. To understand the impetus behind missionary efforts in the 18th century, one must take into account the era's views on the salvation of unbaptized infants. While there were many controversies in the Church's history, the fate of unbaptized infants has never been definitively settled by an ecumenical council of Bishops in the Catholic church.[citation needed]

 
Mission San Francisco de Asís, founded in 1776.

In the 18th century, most Catholic speculation regarding the ultimate end of unbaptized infants was still in line with the early Church Fathers such as Augustine of Hippo, who believed that unbaptized infants would receive the mildest chastisements in Hell, but no reward.[101] For Serra and his companions, therefore, instructing the natives so that their children might also be saved would have most likely been a great concern. From this came the determined efforts of missionaries to the detriment of native cultures, which few today would countenance.[102]

Discipline was strict, and the converts were not allowed to come and go at will. Indians who were baptized were required to live at the mission and conscripted into forced labor as plowmen, shepherds, cattle herders, blacksmiths, and carpenters on the mission. Disease, starvation, overwork, and torture decimated these tribes.[103]: 114  Serra successfully resisted the efforts of Governor Felipe de Neve to bring Enlightenment policies to missionary work, because those policies would have subverted the economic and religious goals of the Franciscans.[104]

Serra wielded this kind of influence because his missions served economic and political purposes as well as religious ends. The number of civilian colonists in Alta California never exceeded 3,200, and the missions with their Indian populations were critical to keeping the region within Spain's political orbit. Economically, the missions produced all of the colony's cattle and grain, and by the 1780s were even producing surpluses sufficient to trade with Mexico for luxury goods.[105]

In 1779, Franciscan missionaries under Serra's direction planted California's first sustained vineyard at Mission San Diego de Alcalá. Hence, he has been called the "Father of California Wine". The variety he planted, presumably descended from Spain, became known as the Mission grape and dominated California wine production until about 1880.[106]

Treatment of Native Californians

 
The statue of Serra by Ettore Cadorin is one of two statues representing California in the National Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capitol.

From his perspective, Serra's singular purpose was to save the souls of indigenous Americans. He believed that the death of an unconverted heathen was tragic, while the death of a baptized convert was a cause for joy.[107]: 39  He maintained a patriarchal or fatherly attitude towards the Native American population. He wrote, "That spiritual fathers should punish their sons, the Indians, with blows appears to be as old as the conquest of the Americas; so general in fact that the saints do not seem to be any exception to the rule."[105] Punishment made clear to the natives "that we, every one of us, came here for the single purpose of doing them good and their eternal salvation."[107]: 39 

Serra also led efforts to protect the natives from abuse under Spanish soldiers.[108] After a series of abuses on the native population by the hand of local soldiers, Serra and other missionaries protested against governor of Alta California Pedro Fages, who refused to reprimand his soldiers. Serra then departed for Mexico on October 17, 1772 to plead his case to the viceroy Antonio María de Bucareli y Ursúa. Bucareli requested Serra set his grievances in writing, which led to the drafting of the Representación. This document, which consisted of 32-points, also laid out the rights of Native Americans in Spanish California and protections against the soldiers, placing them under the governance of the missions. Mission Indians enjoyed rights as human beings under the protection of the Spanish monarchy, and were recognized as Hijos de Dios, or "Children of God."[109] According to professor George Yagi, this stood in contrast to the treatment of Natives on the east coast of America, where they were guaranteed no rights.[110]

Modern controversy

 
The Shrine to St. Junípero Serra in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, carved in 1922 by Jo Mora and removed from public space in 2020, following the George Floyd protests.

Toppling and decapitation of Serra statues

Native Americans objected to the Catholic Church's canonization of Serra, charging the priest "directed and approved of the torture and enslavement of Natives" at missions that served as both religious and military installations.[111]

In October 2015, a week after the Catholic Church canonized Serra, Serra's statue in Monterey was decapitated.[112]

On September 12, 2017, Santa Barbara police reported a statue of Serra located at southern California's Santa Barbara mission had been decapitated and covered with red paint.[112]

On November 3, 2017, the statue of Serra located at the Mission San Gabriel Arcángel was vandalized with red paint and suffered damage during a decapitation attempt with a reciprocating saw.[113][114] Though the perpetrator failed to decapitate the bronze statue of Serra, $3000 was needed to repair it as well.[113]

On June 19, 2020, during the worldwide civil unrest that occurred after the murder of George Floyd, activists in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park toppled a 30-foot replica of Serra, wrapped in a friar cloak and gripping a large cross. Once the statue fell red paint was poured on it and phrases including "Stolen Land," "Olone Land," and "Decolonize" were spray-painted on the pedestal where the founder of Spanish Missions previously stood.[115]

On June 20, 2020, a crowd of indigenous elders and young people gathered in downtown Los Angeles to witness the toppling of Serra's statue at Father Serra Park near Olvera Street. Burning sage, speaking of their ancestors and chanting "Take it down!" the crowd watched as activists tied a rope around Serra's statue to rip it from its pedestal. Erected by the Knights of Columbus in 1932, the group said that the statue of Serra had become a symbol of Spanish colonization in which Native Americans, prohibited from practicing their customs and religion, were beaten when they tried to escape the church-run missions.[116]

On July 4, 2020, a group of people toppled the statue of Serra located near the California State Capitol in Sacramento.[117] The group was among an estimated 200 protestors who marched through the streets of Sacramento.[117]

On October 12, 2020, a group of people toppled the statue of Serra located in front of Mission San Rafael Arcángel, in San Rafael, California.[118]

Formal renamings

On March 9, 2021, following a petition that began circulating after the murder of George Floyd in 2020, the San Diego Unified School Board formally renamed Serra High School and its Conquistador mascot because of Serra's associations with indigenous assimilation.[119]

Controversy over the missions Serra operated

The New York Times noted that some "Indian historians and authors blame Father Serra for the suppression of their culture and the premature deaths at the missions of thousands of their ancestors."[120] George Tinker, an Osage/Cherokee and professor at Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado,[121] cites evidence that Serra required the converted Indians to labor to support the missions. Tinker writes that while Serra's intentions in evangelizing were honest and genuine,[122] overwhelming evidence suggests that the "native peoples resisted the Spanish intrusion from the beginning".[123]

While administering Mission San Carlos Borromeo in Monterey, California, Serra had ongoing conflicts with Pedro Fages, who was military governor of Alta California. Fages worked his men very harshly and was seen as a tyrant. Serra intervened on the soldiers' behalf, and the two did not get along.[124][125] Serra moved the mission to Carmel due to better lands for farming, due to his conflicts with Fages, and in part to protect the Indian neophytes from the influence of Spanish soldiers.[126]

Mark A. Noll, a professor at Wheaton College in Illinois, wrote that Serra's attitude—that missionaries could, and should, treat their wards like children, including the use of corporal punishment—was common at the time.[127] Tinker argues that it is more appropriate to judge the beatings and whippings administered by Serra and others from the point of view of the Native Americans, who were the victims of the violence, and who did not punish their children with physical discipline.[128] Salvatore J. Cordileone, archbishop of San Francisco, acknowledges Native American concerns about Serra's whippings and coercive treatment, but argues that missionaries were also teaching school and farming.[120]

 
The Serra statue at the Presidio of Monterey was decapitated in 2015, but later repaired.

Iris Engstrand, emerita professor of history at the Catholic University of San Diego, described Serra as:

much nicer to the Indians, really, than even to the governors. He didn't get along too well with some of the military people, you know. His attitude was, 'Stay away from the Indians'. I think you really come up with a benevolent, hard-working person who was strict in a lot of his doctrinal leanings and things like that, but not a person who was enslaving Indians, or beating them, ever. ... He was a very caring person and forgiving. Even after the burning of the mission in San Diego, he did not want those Indians punished. He wanted to be sure that they were treated fairly.[24]

Serra wrote a letter in 1775 to Fernando Rivera y Moncada explicitly instructing the colonial commander to whip and shackle Indigenous men who had escaped from Mission San Carlos:[129][130]

I am sending them to you so that a period of exile and two or three whippings which Your Lordship may order applied to them on different days may serve, for them and for the rest, for a warning, and may be of spiritual benefit to all. ... If Your Lordship does not have shackles, with your permission they may be sent from here.

Deborah A. Miranda, a professor of American literature at Washington and Lee University and an enrolled member of the Ohlone/Costanoan Esselen Nation, stated that "Serra did not just bring us Christianity. He imposed it, giving us no choice in the matter. He did incalculable damage to a whole culture".[120]

 
The Father Serra statue in Ventura, California

Professor Edward Castillo, a Native American and director of Native American Studies at the Sonoma State University in California, said in a Firing Line episode with William F. Buckley Jr. that "... you pointed out [that] in my work I haven't cited Serra as oppressor. You can't put a whip in his hand. You can't put a smoking gun in his hand. And that is true. The man was an administrator."[131]

Corine Fairbanks of the American Indian Movement proclaimed: "For too long the mission system has been glorified as these wonderful moments of California's golden era. That is not true. They were concentration camps. They were places of death.".[132]

Pope Francis, in addition to his canonization of Serra during a visit to the United States, called on Catholics to "embark upon a new chapter of evangelization."[133] Francis further noted: "Instead of seeming to impose new obligations, (Christians) should appear as people who wish to share their joy, who point to a horizon of beauty and who invite others to a delicious banquet. It is not by proselytizing that the Church grows, but 'by attraction'."[134]

Catholic writers maintain that the attacks on Serra impose modern judgments about the appropriateness of Christian evangelization of non-Christians, and that much of the criticism leveled against Serra results from ahistorical value judgments and from ideologies that deny the validity of Christianity and Catholicism as a legitimate social and cultural force.[135][136][dubious ]

Support for canonization

 
Statue of Junípero Serra at Mission Santa Inés.

Despite these concerns, thousands of Native Americans in California maintain their Catholic faith,[137] and some supported efforts to canonize Serra.[138][139] James Nieblas—the first Native American priest to be ordained from the Juañeno Acjachemen Nation, a tribe evangelized by Serra—was chosen to meet with Pope Francis during his visit to Washington D.C.[140] Nieblas, a longtime supporter of Serra's canonization, stated during a 1986 interview with the Los Angeles Times that "Father Serra brought our people to this day. I think Serra would be proud ... canonization has the full support and backing of the Juaneno people."[141] Members of other tribes associated with the mission system also expressed support for Serra's canonization.


 
Serra's coffin at Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo.

Two members of California's Ohlone Tribe played roles in the canonization Mass by placing a relic of Serra's near the altar and reading a scripture in Chochenyo, a native language. One of the participants, Andrew Galvan, a member of the Ohlone Tribe and curator of Mission Dolores in San Francisco who sat on the Junípero Serra Cause for Canonization board, stated prior to the ceremony that the canonization "will be the culmination of a life's work for me. ... It will be a ceremonial opening of the door that will 'let us Indians in,' a moment I honestly didn't think I would live to see."[138][142]

Ruben Mendoza, an archeologist of Mexican Mestizo and Native Yaqui descent who has extensively excavated missions in California, stated during a March 2015 interview with the Los Angeles Times that "Serra endured great hardships to evangelize Native Californians. In the process, he orchestrated the development of a chain of missions that helped give birth to modern California. ... When I don't go along with the idea that the missions were concentration camps and that the Spanish brutalized every Indian they encountered, I'm seen as an adversary."[139][needs context]

In July 2015, Mendoza testified at a hearing on a proposal to remove a statue of Junipero Serra from the U.S. Capitol. In his remarks, he stated, "What greater symbol of empowerment than that offered by Fray Junípero Serra himself can we offer our youth? I ask that this legislative body seriously reconsider this politicized effort to minimize and erase one of the most substantive Hispanic and Latino contributions to our nation's history."[143]

Biographer Gregory Orfalea wrote of Serra: "I see his devotion to Native Californians as heartfelt, plain-spoken and borne out by continuous example."[144][145]

Death

 
Saint Junípero Serra's grave in Carmel-by-the-Sea.

During the remaining three years of his life, he once more visited the missions from San Diego to San Francisco, traveling more than 600 miles in the process, to confirm all who had been baptized. He suffered intensely from his disabled leg and from his chest, yet he would use no remedies. He confirmed 5,309 people, who, with but few exceptions, were California Indian neophytes converted during the fourteen years from 1770.[citation needed]

On August 28, 1784, at the age of 70, Junípero Serra died at Mission San Carlos Borromeo from tuberculosis. He is buried there under the sanctuary. Following Serra's death, leadership of the Franciscan missionary effort in Alta California passed to Fermín Lasuén.[citation needed]

Veneration

 
Serra's cenotaph at Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo.

The cause for Serra's beatification was formally opened on October 21, 1951, granting him the title of Servant of God.[146] Serra was beatified by Pope John Paul II on September 25, 1988.[147] The pope spoke before a crowd of 20,000 in a beatification ceremony for six; according to the pope's address in English, "He sowed the seeds of Christian faith amid the momentous changes wrought by the arrival of European settlers in the New World. It was a field of missionary endeavor that required patience, perseverance, and humility, as well as vision and courage."[148]

During Serra's beatification, questions were raised about how Indians were treated while Serra was in charge. The question of Franciscan treatment of Indians first arose in 1783. The famous historian of missions Herbert Eugene Bolton gave evidence favorable to the case in 1948, and the testimony of five other historians was solicited in 1986.[149][150][151]

Serra was canonized by Pope Francis on September 23, 2015, as a part of the pope's first visit to the United States,[152] the first canonization to take place on American soil.[153] During a speech at the Pontifical North American College in Rome on May 2, 2015, Pope Francis stated that "Friar Junípero ... was one of the founding fathers of the United States, a saintly example of the Church's universality and special patron of the Hispanic people of the country."[6] Junípero Serra is the second native saint of the Balearic Islands after Catherine of Palma.[152] He is also included among the Saints of the United States and México.[154]

Serra's feast day is celebrated on July 1 in the United States and on August 28 everywhere.[3][4][5] He is considered to be the patron saint of California, Hispanic Americans, and religious vocations.[citation needed]

The Mission in Carmel, California, containing Serra's remains has continued as a place of public veneration. The burial location of Serra is southeast of the altar and is marked with an inscription in the floor of the sanctuary. Other relics are remnants of the wood from Serra's coffin on display next to the sanctuary, and personal items belonging to Serra on display in the mission museums. A bronze and marble sarcophagus depicting Serra's life was completed in 1924 by the sculptor Jo Mora, but Serra's remains have never been transferred to that sarcophagus.[citation needed]

Legacy

 
Architectural medallion venerating Serra at Balboa Park in San Diego.

Many of Serra's letters and other documentation are extant, the principal ones being his "Diario" of the journey from Loreto to San Diego, which was published in Out West (March to June 1902) along with Serra's Representación.[155]

The Junípero Serra Collection (1713–1947) at the Santa Barbara Mission Archive-Library are their earliest archival materials. This library is part of the building complex of the Mission Santa Barbara, but is now a separate non-profit, independent educational and research institution. It continues to have ties to the Franciscans and the legacy of Serra.[156]

The chapel at Mission San Juan Capistrano, built in 1782, is thought to be the oldest standing building in California. Commonly referred to as "Father Serra's Church,"[157] it is the only remaining church in which Serra is known to have celebrated the rites of the Catholic Church (he presided over the confirmations of 213 people on October 12 and 13, 1783).[citation needed]

 
Statue at Junípero Serra High School in San Mateo.

Many cities in California have streets, schools, and other features named after Serra. Examples include Junipero Serra Boulevard, a major boulevard in and south of San Francisco; Serramonte, a large 1960s residential neighborhood on the border of Daly City and Colma in the suburbs south of San Francisco; Serra Springs, a pair of springs in Los Angeles; Serra Mesa, a community in San Diego; Junipero Serra Peak, the highest mountain in the Santa Lucia Mountains; Junipero Serra Landfill, a solid waste disposal site in Colma; and Serra Fault, a fault in San Mateo County. Schools named after Serra include Junípero Serra High School, a public school in the San Diego community of Tierrasanta renamed to Canyon Hills High School in 2021, and four Catholic high schools: Junípero Serra High School in Gardena, Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo, JSerra Catholic High School in San Juan Capistrano, and Serra Catholic High School in McKeesport, Pennsylvania. There are public elementary schools in San Francisco and Ventura, as well as a K-8 Catholic school in Rancho Santa Margarita.[158]

Both Spain and the United States have honored Serra with postage stamps.[159]

In 1884, the Legislature of California passed a concurrent resolution making August 29 of that year, the centennial of Serra's burial, a legal holiday.[160]

Serra International, a global lay organization that promotes religious vocations to the Catholic Church, was named in his honor. The group, founded in 1935, currently numbers a membership of about 20,000 worldwide. It also boasts over 1,000 chapters in 44 countries.[161]

 
St. Junípero Church in Camarillo.

Serra's legacy towards Native Americans has been a topic of discussion in the Los Angeles area in recent years. The Mexica Movement, an indigenous separatist group that rejects European influence in the Americas,[162] protested Serra's canonization at the Los Angeles Cathedral in February 2015.[163] The Huntington Library announcement of its 2013 exhibition on Serra made it clear that Serra's treatment of Native Americans would be part of the comprehensive coverage of his legacy.[164]

On September 27, 2015, in response to Serra's canonization, the San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo Mission was vandalized. The statue of Serra was toppled and splattered with paint, and the cemetery, the mission doors, a fountain, and a crucifix were as well. The message "Saint of Genocide" was put on Serra's tomb, and similar messages were painted elsewhere in the mission courtyard.[165][166] After the incident, law enforcement authorities launched a hate crime investigation since the only grave sites targeted for desecration were those of Europeans.[167]

In 2018, Spanish producer Pedro Alonso Pablos made an animation, medium-length film dedicated to the life and work of Fray Junípero called The call of Junipero, and although the Catholic Church had no formal role during the process of creating the film, the vision that the film offers coincides with that of the Church.[168]

In 2019, Stanford University renamed two buildings that had formerly been named after Serra: Serra House, where the Clayman Institute for Gender Research is located was renamed the Carolyn Lewis Attneave House, and a student dormitory located in the Lucie Stern Hall complex was renamed the Sally Ride House.[169] The university followed the recommendations of a committee headed by Paul Brest (former dean of Stanford Law School), which had concluded that

Because the mission system's violence against California Native Americans is part of the history and memory of current members of the community, we believe that features named for Junipero Serra, who was the architect and leader of the mission system, are in tension with (Stanford's) goal of full inclusion.

— [169]

Statuary and monuments

 
Statue at Mission San Francisco de Asís.
 
Statue in Querétaro City.
 
Plaque at St. Mary's College of California.
  • A statue of Junípero Serra is one of two statues that represent the state of California in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol. The work of Ettore Cadorin, it depicts Serra holding a cross and looking skyward. In February 2015, State Senator Ricardo Lara introduced a bill in the California legislature to remove the statue and replace it with one of astronaut Sally Ride. In May 2015, some California Catholics were organizing to keep Serra's statue in place. California Governor Jerry Brown supported retaining it when he visited the Vatican in July 2015.[170][171] On July 2, Lara announced that as a gesture of respect towards Pope Francis and people of faith, the vote on the bill would be postponed until the following year. Pope Francis canonized Serra as part of his September 2015 papal visit to the US.[172]
  • The statue of Serra in Ventura, California, standing 9 feet, 4 inches, was displayed in front of Ventura City Hall between 1936 and 2020. The original concrete statue was declared Ventura Historic Landmark No. 3 in 1974. A bronze cast replaced the concrete statue in 1989. A wooden replica, created by local carvers, was put on public display in the atrium of Ventura City Hall in 1988. In 2020, city, church, and tribal leaders agreed to move it off public land. Upon city council approval, the bronze cast was placed in storage. Council also voted to remove the wooden replica from public display.[173]
  • The Douglas Tilden statue of Serra, representing him as the apostolic preacher in a heroic scale, was toppled on June 19, 2020 at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. The tear-down was part of a Juneteenth protest.[174]
  • In 1899, Jane Elizabeth Lathrop Stanford, wife of Leland Stanford, governor and U.S. Senator from California, and a non-Catholic herself, commissioned a granite monument to Serra which was erected in Monterey in 1891. The figure of Serra was decapitated in October 2015, and the head not found until April 2, 2016, in Monterey Bay.[175]
  • When Interstate 280 was built in stages from Daly City to San Jose in the 1960s, it was named the Junipero Serra Freeway. A statue of Serra on a hill on the northbound side of the freeway in Hillsborough, California, points a finger towards the Santa Cruz Mountains and the Pacific.[176] After the freeway's Peninsula segment was finished in the mid-1970s, Caltrans erected small nonstandard wooden signs at each end of the segment (near the interchanges with State Route 1 in Daly City and Foothill Expressway in Cupertino) to proclaim: "The Junipero Serra Freeway [¶] The World's Most Beautiful Freeway." During the 1980s and 1990s, both signs were visible to travelers between San Francisco and San Jose, but were severely damaged by car accidents during the 2000s and were not replaced. The only indicator of the signs' existence is that one of two support posts remains standing at both former locations.
  • The statue of Serra located at Mission Santa Barbara was decapitated in September 2017.[112] Two months later, an attempt was made to decapitate the Serra state located at Mission San Gabriel Arcángel with a reciprocating saw.[113] However, the perpetrator instead settled for covering parts of the front area in red paint after the decapitation effort failed.[113]
  • A bronze statue of Serra standing over an outline of the State of California previously stood in the California State Capitol's Capitol Park. It faced a statue of Thomas Starr King, previously located in the National Statuary Hall Collection.[citation needed] It was later toppled by protestors on July 4, 2020.[177]
  • A statue of Serra is located in the courtyard of Mission Dolores, San Francisco's oldest remaining building.[178]
  • A life-size bronze statue of Serra, which was removed in June 2020, overlooked the entrance to Mission Plaza in San Luis Obispo, near the façade of Old Mission San Luis Obispo.[179]
  • Statues or other monuments to Father Serra are found on the grounds of several other mission churches, including those in San Diego and Santa Clara.[citation needed] A statue on Serra Avenue was removed by the city of Carmel on June 24, 2020 for safekeeping after some other statues in California were removed by protestors.[180]
  • A statue of Junipero Serra near the San Fernando Mission in the Mission Hills district of Los Angeles, California, was vandalized on August 17, 2017, as part of a larger movement to tear down monuments deemed offensive by activists.[181]

In popular culture

Fiction

Robert A. Heinlein featured Serra in his serialized short fiction Lost Legacy first published in November 1941 in Super Science Stories edited by Frederick Pohl.[182] The story is about a cache of ancient knowledge fictitiously discovered by Serra on Mt. Shasta. The fiction also features as a character Ambrose Bierce, the famous writer who disappeared and was declared dead in 1913 at age 72.

See also

References

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  159. ^ "Junipero serra postage stamps". www.google.com. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  160. ^ . Archived from the original on June 28, 2014. Retrieved August 27, 2014.
  161. ^ . Archived from the original on February 6, 2015. Retrieved February 6, 2015.
  162. ^ . www.mexica-movement.org. Archived from the original on September 9, 2023. Retrieved September 24, 2015.
  163. ^ Times, Los Angeles (February 2, 2015). "Protesters confront parishioners over Serra canonization". Los Angeles Times.
  164. ^ Johnson, Reed (August 16, 2013). "Junipero Serra exhibition at the Huntington seeks a full view" – via LA Times.
  165. ^ Stack, Liam (September 28, 201). "Vandals Desecrate Carmel Mission Where Junípero Serra Is Buried". The New York Times.
  166. ^ . September 8, 2020. Archived from the original on September 30, 2015.
  167. ^ Burbank, Keith (September 28, 2015). "Carmel saint statue vandalized in possible hate crime".
  168. ^ . April 4, 2018. Archived from the original on April 4, 2018. Retrieved April 5, 2018.
  169. ^ a b Green, Jason (2019). "Stanford renames buildings for Sally Ride, Carolyn Attneave". Mercurynews.com. Retrieved May 24, 2021.
  170. ^ Brittany Woolsey, "Catholics coalescing to save statue of Serra," Los Angeles Times, Monday, May 11, 2015, p. B4.
  171. ^ Siders, David. Jerry Brown says Junípero Serra statue will stay. Sacramento Bee, July 21, 2015.
  172. ^ White, Jeremy B. Pope's visit delays vote to ditch Junipero Serra statue. Sacramento Bee. July 2, 2015.
  173. ^ Wenner, Gretchen. "Demonstration at Father Serra statue in Ventura leaves it standing". Ventura County Star.
  174. ^ "Demonstrators Topple Statues in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park". NBC Bay Area. June 20, 2020. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  175. ^ "Decapitated head of Junipero Serra found during low tide". SF Gate. April 3, 2016. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
  176. ^ Simon, Mark (July 3, 2001). "Readers sound off on statue / Pointed opinions about statue". SFGATE. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  177. ^ KCRA Staff (July 5, 2020). "Junipero Serra statue taken down by protesters at Capitol, CHP says". KCRA.
  178. ^ "Father Junipero Serra, (sculpture)". siris-artinventories.si.edu. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
  179. ^ Fountain, Matt (June 22, 2020). "Catholic Church removes Junípero Serra statue from San Luis Obispo Mission". San Luis Obispo Tribune. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  180. ^ Herrera, James (June 24, 2020). "Serra statue removed in Carmel for safekeeping, local cities deciding fate of others". Monterey Herald.
  181. ^ "St. Junipero Serra statue vandalized in Mission Hills". LA Times. August 20, 2017. Retrieved August 21, 2017. [dead link]
  182. ^ Most recently re-published in The Virginia Edition compilation of RAH's complete works: vol. 32, pp. 120, 125.

Works cited

  • DeNevi, Don; Moholy, Noel Francis (1985). Junípero Serra: The Illustrated Story of the Franciscan Founder of California's Missions. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0060618766.

Further reading

  • Beebe, Rose Marie; Senkewicz, Robert M. (2015). Junípero Serra: California, Indians, and the Transformation of a Missionary. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806148687.
  • Castillo, Elias (2015). A Cross of Thorns: The Enslavement of California's Indians by the Spanish Missions. Quill Driver Books. ISBN 978-1-61035-242-0.
  • Clifford, Christian (2016). Who Was Saint Junípero Serra?. Tau Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61956-545-6.
  • Clifford, Christian (2015). Saint Junípero Serra: Making Sense of the History and Legacy. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1511862295.
  • Cook, Sherburne Friend (1943). The Conflict Between the California Indian and White Civilization. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520031425.; Cook did not discuss Serra but looked at the missions as a system
  • Deverell, William Francis; Deverell, William; Igler, David (2008). A Companion to California History. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-1-4051-6183-1.
  • Fitch, Abigail Hetzel (1914). Junipero Serra: The Man and His Work.
  • Fogel, Daniel (1988). Junipero Serra, the Vatican, and Enslavement Theology. ISM Press. ISBN 978-0-910383-25-7.
  • Geiger, Maynard J. The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra, OFM (2 vol 1959) 8 leading scholarly biography
  • Geiger, Maynard. "Fray Junípero Serra: Organizer and Administrator of the Upper California Missions, 1769–1784," California Historical Society Quarterly (1963) 42#3 pp 195–220.
  • Gleiter, Jan (1991). Junipero Serra.
  • Guest, Francis P. "Junipero Serra and His Approach to the Indians," Southern California Quarterly, (1985) 67#3 pp 223–261; favorable to Serra
  • Hackel, Steven W. "The Competing Legacies of Junípero Serra: Pioneer, saint, villain,"
  • Hackel, Steven W. Children of Coyote, Missionaries of St. Francis: Indian-Spanish Relations in Colonial California, 1769–1850 (2005)
  • Sandos, James A. (2004). Converting California: Indians and Franciscans in the Missions. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10100-3.
  • Luzbetak, Lewis J. "If Junipero Serra Were Alive: Missiological-Anthropological Theory Today," Americas, (1985) 42: 512–19, argues that Serra's intense commitment to saving the souls of the Indians would qualify him as an outstanding missionary by 20th century standards.
  • Orfalea, Gregory (2014). Journey to the Sun: Junipero Serra's Dream and the Founding of California. Scribner. ISBN 978-1-4516-4272-8.

Primary sources

  • Serra, Junipero. Writings of Junípero Serra, ed. and trans. by Antonine Tibesar, 4 vols. (Washington, D.C,. 1955–66).

External links

  • , at www.CaliforniaFrontier.net, a website dedicated to Junipero Serra and the California mission era.
  • , an article by Thomas Davis at the official website
  • Firing Line with William F. Buckley: Saint or Sinner: Junipero Serra (March 17, 1989) Edward Castillo and the Rev. Noel Maholy talk with William F. Buckley after Serra's beatification.
  • Official Santa Barbara Mission-Archive Library website
  •   Texts on Wikisource:
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Founding President-General
President-General of the Missions of Alta California
1769–1784
Succeeded by

junípero, serra, black, mirror, episode, junipero, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, serra, second, maternal, family, name, ferrer, saint, ferrer, spanish, xuˈnipeɾo, ˈsera, november, 1713, august, 1784, popularly, known, simply, junipero, serra, . For the Black Mirror episode see San Junipero In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Serra and the second or maternal family name is Ferrer Saint Junipero Serra Ferrer O F M h uː ˈ n iː p er oʊ ˈ s ɛr e Spanish xuˈnipeɾo ˈsera November 24 1713 August 28 1784 popularly known simply as Junipero Serra was a Spanish Catholic priest and missionary of the Franciscan Order He is credited with establishing the Franciscan Missions in the Sierra Gorda a UNESCO World Heritage Site He founded a mission in Baja California and established eight 8 of the 21 Spanish missions in California from San Diego to San Francisco in what was then Spanish occupied Alta California in the Province of Las Californias New Spain SaintJunipero SerraO F M A portrait of SerraApostle of CaliforniaBornMiguel Jose Serra Ferrer 1 1713 11 24 November 24 1713Petra Majorca Spain 2 DiedAugust 28 1784 1784 08 28 aged 70 Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo Las Californias New Spain Spanish Empire 2 BeatifiedSeptember 25 1988 Saint Peter s Square Vatican City by Pope John Paul IICanonizedSeptember 23 2015 Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception by Pope FrancisMajor shrineMission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo Carmel by the Sea California United StatesFeastAugust 28 July 1 in United States 3 4 5 AttributesFranciscan habit wearing a large crucifix or holding a crucifix accompanied by a young Native American boyPatronageVocationsHispanic Americans 6 California 7 Serra was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 25 September 1988 in Vatican City Amid denunciations from Native American tribes who accused Serra of presiding over a brutal colonial subjugation 9 10 11 Pope Francis canonized Serra on 23 September 2015 at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington D C during his first visit to the United States 12 Serra s missionary efforts earned him the title of Apostle of California 13 14 Both before and after his canonization Serra s reputation and missionary work during the Spanish occupation have been condemned by critics who cite alleged mandatory conversions to Catholicism followed by abuse of the Native American converts 15 16 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Joins Franciscan order 2 Ministry in the Americas 2 1 Mission in the Sierra Gorda 2 2 Work for the Inquisition 2 3 Physical self punishment 2 4 King Carlos expels the Jesuits 3 President of missions of the Californias 3 1 Founding Mission Velicata 3 2 Arrival in San Diego 3 3 Mission San Diego de Alcala 3 4 Monterey 3 5 Missions founded 4 Treatment of Native Californians 4 1 Modern controversy 4 1 1 Toppling and decapitation of Serra statues 4 1 2 Formal renamings 4 1 3 Controversy over the missions Serra operated 4 2 Support for canonization 5 Death 5 1 Veneration 6 Legacy 6 1 Statuary and monuments 7 In popular culture 7 1 Fiction 8 See also 9 References 10 Works cited 11 Further reading 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksEarly life nbsp Serra s birthplace in Petra on the island of Mallorca in the Balearic Islands Serra was born Miquel Josep Serra i Ferrer 17 this name is Catalan in Castilian it is Miguel Jose Serra y Ferrer in the village of Petra on the island of Mallorca Majorca in the Balearic Islands off the Mediterranean coast of Spain 18 His father Antonio Nadal Serra and mother Margarita Rosa Ferrer were married in 1707 19 By age seven Miquel was working the fields with his parents helping cultivate wheat and beans and tending the cattle But he showed a special interest in visiting the local Franciscan friary at the church of San Bernardino within a block of the Serra family house Attending the friars primary school at the church Miquel learned reading writing mathematics Latin religion and liturgical song especially Gregorian chant Gifted with a good voice he eagerly took to vocal music The friars sometimes let him join the community choir and sing at special church feasts Miquel and his father Antonio often visited the friary for friendly chats with the Franciscans 20 At age 16 Miquel s parents enrolled him in a Franciscan school in the capital city Palma de Majorca where he studied philosophy A year later he became a novice in the Franciscan order 21 Joins Franciscan order nbsp Memorial to Serra s baptism at the Church of Sant Pere de Petra On September 14 1730 some two months before his 17th birthday Serra entered the Franciscan Order at Palma 22 23 specifically the Alcantarine branch of the Friars Minor a reform movement in the order The slight and frail Serra now embarked on his novitiate period a rigorous year of preparation to become a full member of the Franciscan Order He was given the religious name of Junipero in honor of Brother Juniper who had been among the first Franciscans and a companion of Francis of Assisi 24 The young Junipero along with his fellow novices vowed to scorn property and comfort and to remain celibate He still had seven years to go to become an ordained Catholic priest He immersed himself in rigorous studies of logic metaphysics cosmology and theology 25 The daily routine at the friary followed a rigid schedule prayers meditation choir singing physical chores spiritual readings and instruction The friars would wake up every midnight for another round of chants Serra s superiors discouraged letters and visitors 26 In his free time he avidly read stories about Franciscan friars roaming the provinces of Spain and around the world to win new souls for the church often suffering martyrdom in the process nbsp Monument to Serra in Palma de Mallorca In 1737 Serra became a priest and three years later earned an ecclesiastical license to teach philosophy at the Convento de San Francisco His philosophy course including over 60 students lasted three years Among his students were fellow future missionaries Francisco Palou and Juan Crespi 27 When the course ended in 1743 Serra told his students I desire nothing more from you than this that when the news of my death shall have reached your ears I ask you to say for the benefit of my soul May he rest in peace Nor shall I omit to do the same for you so that all of us will attain the goal for which we have been created 28 Serra was considered intellectually brilliant by his peers He received a doctorate in theology from the Lullian College founded in the 14th century by Ramon Lull for the training of Franciscan missionaries in Palma de Majorca where he also occupied the Duns Scotus chair of philosophy until he joined the missionary College of San Fernando de Mexico in 1749 29 During Serra s last five years on the island of Majorca drought and plague afflicted his home village of Petra Serra sometimes went home from Palma for brief visits to his parents now separated and gave them some financial support On one occasion he was called home to anoint his seriously ill father with the last rites In one of his final visits to Petra Serra found his younger sister Juana Maria near death 30 In 1748 Serra and Palou confided to each other their desire to become missionaries Serra now 35 was assured a prestigious career as priest and scholar if he stayed in Majorca but he set his sights firmly on pagan lands Applying to the colonial bureaucracy in Madrid Serra requested that both he and Palou embark on a foreign mission After weathering some administrative obstacles they received permission and set sail for Cadiz the port of departure for Spain s colonies in the Americas 31 While waiting to set sail Serra wrote a long letter to a colleague back in Majorca urging him to console Serra s parents now in their 70s over their only son s pending departure They my parents will learn to see how sweet is His yoke Serra wrote and that He will change for them the sorrow they may now experience into great happiness Now is not the time to muse or fret over the happenings of life but rather to be conformed entirely to the will of God striving to prepare themselves for that happy death which of all the things of life is our principal concern 32 Serra asked his colleague to read this letter to his parents who had never attended school 33 Ministry in the Americas nbsp Serra monument in Jalpan de Serra a city named after Serra in Queretaro Mexico In 1749 Serra and the Franciscan missionary team landed in Veracruz on the Gulf coast of New Spain now Mexico To get from Veracruz to Mexico City Serra and his Franciscan companions took the Camino Real English royal path a rough road stretching from sea level through tropical forests dry plains high plateaus and volcanic sierra mountains to an altitude of 7 400 feet 2 300 meters Royal officials provided horses for the 20 Franciscan friars to ride up the Camino Real All accepted the offer except for Serra and one companion a friar from Andalusia Strictly following the rule of his patron saint Francis of Assisi that friars must not ride on horseback unless compelled by manifest necessity or infirmity Serra insisted on walking to Mexico City He and his fellow friar set out on the Camino Real with no money or guide carrying only their breviaries They trusted in Providence and the hospitality of local people along the way citation needed During the trek Serra s left foot swelled up and a burning itch tormented him Arriving at a farm at day s end he could hardly stand He attributed the swelling to a mosquito bite His discomfort caused him to stay over at the farm another night during which he scratched his foot and leg to excess desperately trying to relieve the itch The next morning his leg was raw and bleeding This wound plagued Serra for the rest of his life 34 Hobbling into Mexico City Serra joined up with his fellow friars at the College of San Fernando de Mexico a specialized training center and regional headquarters for Franciscan missionaries Serra requested that he do his novitiate year again despite his academic prestige and the fact that the college s novices were far younger men Though his request was declined Serra insisted on living as a novice at San Fernando This learned university professor would often eat more sparingly in order to replace the student whose turn it was to read to the community Or he would humbly carry trays and wait on tables with the lay brothers 35 Mission in the Sierra Gorda nbsp Serra founded the five Missions of the Sierra Gorda in Queretaro Mexico between 1750 and 1760 Santa Maria del Agua de Landa pictured The Sierra Gorda Indian missions some 90 miles north of Santiago de Queretaro were nestled in a vast region of jagged mountains home of the Pame people and a scattering of Spanish colonists The Pames who centuries earlier had built a civilization with temples idols and priests lived mainly by gathering and hunting but also pursued agriculture Many groups among them adopting mobile guerrilla tactics had eluded conquest by the Spanish military citation needed Serra and Palou arriving at the village of Jalpan found the mission in disarray The parishioners numbering fewer than a thousand were attending neither confession nor Mass 36 The two missionaries set about learning the Pame language from a Mexican who had lived among the Pames But the statement by Palou that Serra translated the catechism into the Pame language is questionable as Serra himself later admitted he had great difficulties learning indigenous languages 37 Serra involved Pames parishioners in the ritual reenactment of Jesus forced death march Erecting 14 stations Serra led the procession himself carrying an extremely heavy cross At each station the procession paused for a prayer and at the end Serra sermonized on the sufferings and death of Jesus On Holy Thursday 12 Pames elders reenacted the roles of the apostles Serra in the role of Jesus washed their feet and then after the service dined with them 38 Serra also tackled the practical side of mission administration Working with the college of San Fernando he had cattle goats sheep and farming tools brought to the Sierra Gorda mission Palou supervised the farm labor of men of the mission the women learned spinning sewing and knitting Their products were collected and rationed to the mission residents according to personal needs Christian Pames sold their surplus products in nearby trading centers under the friars supervision to protect them from cheaters Pames who adapted successfully to mission life received their own parcels of land to raise corn beans and pumpkins and sometimes received oxen and seeds as well 39 Within two years Serra had made inroads against the Pames traditional belief system On his 1752 visit from the Sierra Gorda mission to the college of San Fernando in Mexico City Serra joyfully carried a goddess statue presented to him by Christian Pames The statue showing the face of Cachum mother of the sun had been erected on a hilltop shrine where some Pame chiefs lay buried 40 nbsp Azulejos depicting the Sierra Gorda Missions which Serra founded between 1750 and 1760 Back in the Sierra Gorda Serra faced a conflict between Spanish soldiers settlers and mission natives or Indians Following a Spanish military victory over the Pames in 1743 Spanish authorities had sent not only Franciscan missionaries but also Spanish Mexican soldiers and their families into the Sierra Gorda The soldiers had the job of pursuing runaway mission Indians and securing the region for the Spanish crown But the soldiers land claims clashed with mission lands that Christian Pames were working citation needed Some of the soldiers families tried to establish a town and the officer in charge of their deployment approved their plan The Pames objected threatening to defend their lands by force if necessary Soldiers and settlers let their cattle graze on Christian Pames farmlands and bullied Pames into working for them Serra and the College of San Fernando sided with the Pames citing the Laws of the Indies which banned colonial settlements in mission territories citation needed The viceroy Spain s highest official in Mexico suspended the intrusive colony But the townspeople protested and stayed put The government set up commissions and looked into alternative sites for the colony It ordered the settlers to keep their cattle out of the Pames fields and to pay the Pames fairly for their labor with the friars supervising payment After a protracted legal struggle the settlers moved out and in 1755 the Pames and friars reclaimed their land 41 Crowning his Sierra Gorda mission Serra oversaw the construction of a splendid church in Jalpan Gathering masons carpenters and other skilled craftsmen from Mexico City Serra employed Christian Pames in seasonal construction work over the course of seven years to complete the church Serra pitched in himself carrying wooden beams and applying mortar between the stones forming the church walls 42 Work for the Inquisition nbsp Engraving depicting Serra s as an evangelizer from 1787 During his 1752 visit to Mexico City Serra sent a request from the college of San Fernando to the local headquarters of the Spanish Inquisition He asked that an inquisitor be appointed to preside over the Sierra Gorda The next day Inquisition officials appointed Serra himself as inquisitor for the whole region adding that he could exercise his powers anywhere he did missionary work in New Spain as long as there was no regular Inquisition official in the region 43 In September 1752 Serra filed a report to the Spanish Inquisition in Mexico City from Jalpan on evidences of witchcraft in the Sierra Gorda missions He denounced several Christian non Indians who lived in and around the mission for the most detestable and horrible crimes of sorcery witchcraft and devil worship If it is necessary to specify one of the persons guilty of such crimes I accuse by name a certain Melchora de los Reyes Acosta a married mulattress an inhabitant of the said mission In these last days a certain Cayetana a very clever Mexican woman of said mission married to one Perez a mulatto has confessed she being observed and accused of similar crimes having been held under arrest by us for some days past that in the mission there is a large congregation of Christian non Indians although some Indians also join them and that these persons flying through the air at night are in the habit of meeting in a cave on a hill near a ranch called El Saucillo in the center of said missions where they worship and make sacrifice to the demons who appear visibly there in the guise of young goats and various other things of that nature If such evil is not attacked the horrible corruption will spread among these poor Indian neophytes who are in our charge 44 According to modern Franciscan historians this report by Serra to the Inquisition is the only letter of his that has survived from eight years of mission work in the Sierra Gorda 45 Serra s first biographer Francisco Palou wrote that Serra in his role of inquisitor had to work in many parts of Mexico and travel long distances Yet the Archivo General de la Nacion in Mexico City with over a thousand volumes of indexed documents on the Inquisition apparently contains only two references to Serra s work for the Inquisition following his 1752 appointment his preaching in Oaxaca in 1764 and his partial handling of the case of a Sierra Gorda mulatto accused of sorcery in 1766 46 47 In 1758 Serra returned to the College of San Fernando Over the next nine years he worked in the college s administrative offices and as a missionary and inquisitor in the dioceses of Mexico Puebla Oaxaca Valladolid and Guadalajara 48 Physical self punishment nbsp Plaque honoring Serra at Mission San Miguel Conca in Arroyo Seco Queretaro Emulating an earlier Franciscan missionary and saint Francisco Solano Serra made a habit of punishing himself physically to purify his spirit He wore a sackcloth spiked with bristles or a coat interwoven with broken pieces of wire under his gray friar s outer garment 49 In his austere cell Serra kept a chain of sharp pointed iron links hanging on the wall beside his bed to whip himself at night when sinful thoughts ran through his mind His nightly self flagellations at the college of San Fernando caught the ears of some of his fellow friars In his letters to his Franciscan companions Serra often referred to himself as a sinner and a most unworthy priest 50 In one of his sermons in Mexico City while exhorting his listeners to repent their sins Serra took out his chain bared his shoulders and started whipping himself Many parishioners roused by the spectacle began sobbing Finally a man climbed to the pulpit took the chain from Serra s hand and began whipping himself declaring I am the sinner who is ungrateful to God who ought to do penance for my many sins and not the padre Serra who is a saint The man kept whipping himself until he collapsed After receiving the last sacraments he later died from the ordeal 51 nbsp Plaza de Junipero Serra in Petra Mallorca Spain During other sermons on the theme of repentance Serra would hoist a large stone in one hand and while clutching a crucifix in the other smash the stone against his chest Many of his listeners feared that he would strike himself dead Later Serra suffered chest pains and shortness of breath Palou suggests that Serra s self inflicted bruises were the cause While preaching of hell and damnation Serra would sear his flesh with a four pronged candle flame emulating a famed Franciscan preacher John of Capistrano 52 Palou described this as quite violent painful and dangerous towards wounding his chest 53 Serra did not stand alone among Catholic missionaries in displaying self punishment at the pulpit The more zealous Franciscan and Jesuit missionaries did likewise But few took it to the extremes that Serra did The regulations of the college of San Fernando said that self punishment should never be carried to the point of permanently incapacitating oneself 54 King Carlos expels the Jesuits nbsp Plaque at Serra s house in San Juan Puerto Rico On June 24 1767 the Viceroy of New Spain Carlos Francisco de Croix read a Spanish royal decree to Mexico s archbishop and assembled church officials Repair with an armed force to the houses of the Jesuits Seize the persons of all of them and within 24 hours transport them as prisoners to the port of Veracruz Cause to be sealed the records of said houses and records of such persons without allowing them to remove anything but their breviaries and such garments as are absolutely necessary for their journey If after the embarkation there should be found one Jesuit in that district even if ill or dying you shall suffer the penalty of death 55 56 Spain s king Carlos III had plotted the expulsion of Jesuits throughout his empire five months earlier On the Baja California peninsula newly appointed governor Gaspar de Portola had to notify and remove the Jesuits from the chain of missions they had developed in forbidding territory over 70 years By February 1768 Portola gathered the 16 Baja Jesuit missionaries in Loreto from where they sailed to mainland Mexico for deportation Sympathetic to the Jesuits Portola treated them kindly even as he removed them under the king s orders 57 President of missions of the Californias nbsp Gaspar de Portola s appointment as Governor of the Californias in 1767 coincided with Serra s appointment as chief of the missions in the Californias Into the vacuum created by the Jesuits expulsion from Mexico stepped Franciscan missionaries In July 1767 the guardian of the college of San Fernando appointed Serra president of the missions of Baja California heading a group of 15 Franciscan friars Francisco Palou served as his second in command 58 Jesuit priests had developed 13 missions on that long and arid peninsula over seven decades Two Jesuits had died at the hands of Indians in the revolt of 1734 36 citation needed In March 1768 Serra and his missionary team boarded a Spanish sloop at San Blas on Mexico s Pacific coast Sailing over 200 miles up the Gulf of California they landed at Loreto two weeks later Gaspar de Portola governor of Las Californias welcomed them at the Loreto mission founded by Jesuits in 1697 While he gave control of the church to Serra Portola controlled the living quarters and rationed out food to the friars charging their costs to the mission 59 Serra and Palou found to their unpleasant surprise that they ruled only on spiritual matters everyday management of the mission remained in the hands of the military who had occupied the Baja missions since evicting the Jesuits In August 1768 New Spain s inspector general Jose de Galvez displeased with the sloppy military administration of the Baja missions ordered them turned over fully to the Franciscan friars 60 The Franciscans found that the Indian population in the Baja California mission territories had dwindled to about 7 150 By the time the Franciscans had moved north and turned the missions over to Dominican friars in 1772 the Indian population had decreased to about 5 000 If it goes on at this rate wrote Palou in a short time Baja California will come to an end Epidemics especially syphilis introduced by Spanish troops were wasting the Indians 61 But Palou attributed the ravages of syphilis to God s retribution for the Indians murder of the two Jesuit priests over 30 years earlier 62 In 1768 Jose de Galvez inspector general of New Spain decided to send explorers and locate missions in Alta upper California Galvez aimed both to Christianize the extensive Indian populations and serve Spain s strategic interest by preventing Russian explorations and possible claims to North America s Pacific coast 63 Galvez chose Serra to head the missionary team in the California expedition Serra now 55 eagerly seized the chance to harvest thousands of pagan souls in lands previously untouched by the church citation needed nbsp Monument to Serra in Queretaro City But as the expedition gathered in Loreto Serra s foot and leg infection had become almost crippling The commander Gaspar de Portola tried to dissuade him from joining the expedition and wrote to Galvez about Serra s condition Serra s fellow friar and former student Francisco Palou also became concerned gently suggesting to Serra that he stay in Baja California and let the younger and stronger Palou make the journey to San Diego in his place Serra rebuffed both Portola s and Palou s doubts He chided Palou for his suggestion Let us not speak of that I have placed all my confidence in God of whose goodness I hope that He will grant me to reach not only San Diego to raise the standard of the Holy Cross in that port but also Monterey 64 Serra suggested that the Portola party set off without him he would follow and meet up with them on the way to Alta California He then assigned friar Miguel de la Campa as chaplain to the Portola expedition which set out from Loreto on March 9 1769 Spending holy week at mission Loreto Serra set out on March 28 From my mission of Loreto wrote Serra I took along no more provisions for so long a journey than a loaf of bread and a piece of cheese For I was there at mission Loreto a whole year in economic matters as a mere guest to receive the crumbs of the royal soldier commissioner whose liberality at my departure did not extend beyond the aforementioned articles 65 Two servants one named Jose Maria Vergerano a 20 year old from Magdalena the other a soldier guard accompanied Serra on his journey from Loreto as he rode on a feeble mule On April 28 1769 Serra arrived at mission San Borja where he received a warm welcome from friar Fermin Lasuen Founded just seven years before by the Jesuit Wenceslaus Linck mission San Borja sat in an unusually arid region of Baja California Continuing north Serra stopped on May 5 to celebrate a Mass for the feast of the Ascension in the deserted church at Calamajue scarcely more than a ruined hut The next morning he arrived at Santa Maria where he met up with Portola friar Miguel de la Campa and several members of their party In this arid region whose alkaline land resisted cultivation lived the poorest of all the Indians Serra had encountered in Mexico On Sunday May 7 Serra celebrated high Mass and preached a sermon at the mission church on the frontier of Spanish Catholicism 66 Founding Mission Velicata nbsp Serra prepared his evangelizing mission of Alta California at Mission Loreto in Baja California in 1768 69 After leaving Mission Santa Maria Serra urged Portola to move ahead of the slow pack train so they could reach Velicata in time for Pentecost the next day Portola agreed so the small group traveled all day May 13 to reach Velicata by late evening The advanced guard of the party greeted them there 67 On Pentecost day May 14 1769 Serra founded his first mission Mision San Fernando Rey de Espana de Velicata in a mud hut that had served as a makeshift church when friar Fermin Lasuen had traveled up on Easter to conduct the sacraments for the Fernando Rivera expedition the overland party that had preceded the Portola party The founding celebration took place with all the neatness of holy poverty in Serra s words Smoke from the soldiers guns fired in repeated volleys served as incense 68 The new mission lacked Indians to convert A few days later friar Miguel de la Campa notified Serra that a few natives had arrived Serra joyously rushed out to welcome twelve Indian men and boys Then I saw what I could hardly begin to believe when I read about it wrote Serra namely that they go about entirely naked like Adam in paradise before the fall We treated with them for a long time and although they saw all of us clothed they nevertheless showed not the least trace of shame in their manner of nudity Serra placed both hands upon their heads as a token of paternal affection He then handed them figs which they ate immediately One of the Indian men gave Serra roasted agave stalks and four fishes In return Portola and his soldiers offered tobacco leaves and various food items 69 Through a Christian Indian interpreter Serra told the Indians that de la Campa would stay at the mission to serve them According to Stephen Hyslop Serra s goal and that of his fellow friars was not to confirm Indians in their seeming innocence like Adam in the garden before sin but to make them aware of their sins and move them to repent 70 The motive behind gifts of food tobacco and the like was in the words of Serra s colleague and biographer Father Francisco Palou spiritual conquest meant enticing Indians with food and clothing by which means they could be indoctrinated as Christians and gradually acquire a knowledge of what is spiritually good and evil 71 nbsp A statue of Serra by Douglas Tilden formerly installed in Golden Gate Park San Francisco before it was removed during the George Floyd protests Back on the road Serra found it very difficult to stay on his feet because my left foot had become very inflamed a painful condition which I have suffered for a year or more Now this inflammation has reached halfway up my leg Portola again tried to persuade Serra to withdraw from the expedition offering to have you carried back to the first mission where you can recuperate and we will continue our journey Serra countered that God has given me the strength to come so far Even though I should die on the way I shall not turn back They can bury me wherever they wish and I shall gladly be left among the pagans if it be God s will Portola had a stretcher prepared so that Christian Indians traveling with the expedition could carry Serra along the trail 72 Not wishing to burden his traveling companies Serra departed from his usual practice of avoiding medicines he asked one of the muleteers Juan Antonio Coronel if he could prepare a remedy for his foot and leg wound When Coronel objected that he knew only how to heal animals wounds Serra rejoined Well then son just imagine that I am an animal Make me the same remedy that you would apply to an animal Coronel then crushed some tallow between stones and mixed it with green desert herbs After heating the mix he applied it to Serra s foot and leg The next morning Serra felt much improved and I celebrated Mass I was enabled to make the daily trek just as if I did not have any ailment There is no swelling but only the itching which I feel at times 73 The expedition still had 300 miles 480 kilometers to travel to San Diego They passed through desert terrain into oak savanna in June often camping and sleeping under large oaks From a high hill on June 20 their advance scouts saw the Pacific Ocean in the distance Reaching its shores that evening the party called the spot Ensenada de Todos Santos All Saints Cove today simply Ensenada They now had less than 80 miles 130 kilometers to reach San Diego citation needed Pressing north they stayed close to the ocean On June 23 they came upon a large Indian village where they enjoyed a pleasant stopover The natives appeared healthy robust and friendly immediately repeating the Spanish words they heard Some danced for the party offering them fish and mussels We were all enamored of them wrote Serra In fact all the pagans have pleased me but these in particular have stolen my heart 74 The Indians now encountered by the party near the coast appeared well fed and more eager to receive cloth than food On June 25 as the party struggled to cross a series of ravines they noticed many Indians following them When they camped for the night the Indians pressed close Whenever Serra placed his hands on their heads they placed theirs on his Coveting cloth some begged Serra for the friar s habit he wore Several women passed Serra s spectacles around with delight from hand to hand until one man dashed off with them Serra s companions rushed to recover them the only pair of spectacles Serra possessed 75 Arrival in San Diego nbsp The Junipero Serra Museum at the Presidio of San Diego California On June 28 sergeant Jose Ortega who had ridden ahead to meet the Rivera party in San Diego returned with fresh animals and letters to Serra from friars Juan Crespi and Fernando Parron Serra learned that two Spanish galleons dispatched from Baja to supply the new missions had arrived at San Diego Bay One of the ships the San Carlos had sailed almost four months from La Paz bypassing its destination by almost 200 miles before doubling back south to reach San Diego Bay 76 By the time it dropped anchor on April 29 scurvy had so devastated its crew that they lacked the strength to lower a boat Men on shore from the San Antonio which had arrived three weeks earlier had to board the San Carlos to help its surviving crew ashore 77 The Portola Serra party having trekked 900 miles 1 400 kilometers from Loreto and suffered dwindling food supplies along the way arrived in San Diego on July 1 1769 It was a day of great rejoicing and merriment for all wrote Serra because although each one in his respective journey had undergone the same hardships their meeting now became the material for mutual accounts of their experiences 78 Between the overland and seafaring parties of the expedition about 300 men had started on the trip from Baja California But no more than half of them reached San Diego Most of the Christian Indians recruited to the overland parties had died or deserted military officers had denied them rations when food started running low Half of those who made it to San Diego spent months unable to resume the expedition due to illness 79 Doctor Pedro Prat who had also sailed on the San Carlos as the expedition s surgeon struggled to treat the ill men himself weakened from scurvy Friar Fernando Parron who had sailed on the San Carlos as chaplain had become weak with scurvy as well Many men who had sailed on the San Antonio including captain Juan Perez had also taken ill with scurvy 80 Despite the efforts of Doctor Prat many of the ill men died in San Diego citation needed Mission San Diego de Alcala nbsp Statue of Junipero Serra at Mission San Diego de Alcala On July 16 1769 Serra founded mission San Diego in honor of Didacus of Alcala in a simple shelter on Presidio Hill serving as a temporary church Tensions with the local Kumeyaay people made it difficult to attract converts The Indians accepted the trinkets Serra offered as rewards for visiting the new mission But their craving for Spanish cloth irritated the soldiers who accused them of stealing Some of the Kumeyaay teased and taunted the sick soldiers To warn them away soldiers fired their guns into the air The Christian Indians from Baja who remained with the Spaniards did not know the Kumeyaay language 81 On August 15 the Feast of the Assumption Serra and padre Sebastian Vizcaino celebrated Mass at the new mission chapel to which several Hispanics had gone for confession and Holy Communion After Mass four soldiers went down to the beach to bring padre Fernando Parron back from the San Carlos where he had been celebrating Mass citation needed Observing the mission and its neighboring huts sparsely protected a group of over 20 Indians attacked with bows and arrows The four remaining soldiers aided by the blacksmith and carpenter returned fire with muskets and pistols Serra clutching a Jesus figurine in one hand and a Mary figurine in the other prayed to God to save both sides from casualties The blacksmith Chacon ran about the Spanish huts unprotected by a leather jacket shouting Long live the faith of Jesus Christ and may these dogs enemies of that faith die 82 nbsp Illustration of Serra celebrating as the resupply ships the San Antonio and the San Carlos arrive at San Diego Bay on March 19 1770 Serra s young servant Jose Maria Vergerano ran into Serra s hut his neck pierced by an arrow Father absolve me he beseeched for the Indians have killed me He entered my little hut with so much blood streaming from his temples and mouth that shortly after I gave him absolution and helped him to die well wrote Serra He passed away at my feet bathed in his blood 83 Padre Vizcaino the blacksmith Chacon and a Christian Indian from San Ignacio suffered wounds That night Serra buried Vergerano secretly concealing his death from the Indians citation needed The Indian warriors suffering several dead and wounded retreated with a new found respect for the power of Spanish firearms As local Indians cremated their dead the wailing of their women sounded from local villages Yet Serra wrote six months later in a letter to the guardian of the college of San Fernando that both our men and theirs sustained wounds without mentioning any Indian deaths He added It seems none of them died so they can still be baptized 84 Tightening security the soldiers built a stockade of poles around the mission buildings banning Indians from entering citation needed A teenage boy from the Kumeyaay village of Kosa aay Cosoy known today as Old Town San Diego who had often visited the mission before the outbreak of hostilities resumed his visits with the friars He soon learned enough Spanish for Serra to view him as an envoy to help convert the Kumeyaay Serra urged the boy to persuade some parents to bring their young child to the mission so that Serra could administer Catholic baptism to the child by pouring water over his head citation needed A few days later a group of Indians arrived at the mission carrying a naked baby boy The Spaniards interpreted their sign language as a desire to have the boy baptized Serra covered the child with some clothing and asked the corporal of the guard to sponsor the baptism Dressed in surplice and stole Serra read the initial prayers and performed the ceremonies to prepare for baptism But just as he lifted the baptismal shell filled it with water and readied to pour it over the baby s head some Indians grabbed the child from the corporal s arms and ran away to their village in fear The other Kumeyaay visitors followed them laughing and jeering The frustrated Serra never forgot this incident recounting it years later brought tears to his eyes Serra attributed the Indians behavior to his own sins 85 nbsp Monument marking the landing place of Serra in Monterey California Over six months dragged on without a single Indian convert to mission San Diego On January 24 1770 the 74 exhausted men of the Portola expedition returned from their exploratory journey up the coast to San Francisco They had survived by slaughtering and eating their mules along the return trek south Commander Gaspar de Portola engineer and cartographer Miguel Costanso and friar Juan Crespi all arrived in San Diego with detailed diaries of their trip They reported large populations of Indians living along the coast who seemed friendly and docile ready to embrace the gospel Serra fervently wrote to the guardian of the college of San Fernando requesting more missionaries willing to face hardships in Alta California 86 Food remained scarce as the San Diego outpost awaited the return of the supply ship San Antonio Weighing the risk of his soldiers dying of starvation Portola set a deadline of March 19 the feast of saint Joseph patron of his expedition If no ship arrived by that day Portola told Serra he would march his men south the next morning The anguished Serra along with friar Juan Crespi insisted on staying in San Diego in the event of the Portola group s departure Boarding the San Carlos still anchored in San Diego Bay Serra told captain Vicente Vila of Portola s plan Vila agreed to stay in the harbor until the relief ship arrived and to welcome Serra and Crespi aboard if they got stranded by Portola s departure citation needed On the morning of March 19 Serra celebrated Mass and preached a sermon at the forlorn mission on Presidio Hill No ship appeared in the bay that morning But around 3 o clock in the afternoon the sails of a ship the San Antonio came into view on the horizon It sailed past San Diego Bay destined for Monterey When it got to the Santa Barbara Channel its sailors made landfall to fetch fresh water There they learned from Indians that the Portola expedition had returned south So the San Antonio also turned south anchoring in San Diego Bay on March 23 87 Monterey nbsp Father Serra Celebrates Mass at Monterey painting by Leon Trousset 1877 Bolstered by the food unloaded from the San Antonio Portola and his men shifted their sights back north to Monterey specified by Jose de Galvez as the northern stake of Spain s empire in California Friar Juan Crespi prepared to accompany the second Portola expedition to Monterey Leaving mission San Diego in the hands of friars Fernando Parron and Francisco Gomez Serra rode a launch out to board the San Antonio He and Crespi would meet in Monterey Since Serra planned to establish the mission there while having Crespi establish mission San Buenaventura the two friars would be living over 200 miles apart Truly wrote Serra to Palou this state of solitude shall be the greatest of my hardships but God in His infinite mercy will see me through 88 On April 16 1770 the San Antonio set sail from San Diego Bay carrying Serra doctor Pedro Prat engineer Miguel Costanso and a crew of sailors under captain Juan Perez Contrary winds blew the ship back south to the Baja peninsula then as far north as the Farallon Islands As the ship heaved against heavy winds Perez Serra and sailors recited daily prayers promising to make a novena and celebrate High Mass upon their safe arrival in Monterey 89 Several sailors fell sick with scurvy Serra described the six week voyage as somewhat uncomfortable 90 Meanwhile the land expedition departed from San Diego on April 17 under the command of Portola His group included friar Crespi captain Pedro Fages twelve Spanish volunteers seven leather jacketed soldiers two muleteers five Baja Christian Indians and Portola s servant Following the same route they had taken the year before the expedition reached Monterey Bay on May 24 without losing a single man or suffering any serious illness 91 nbsp The Vizcaino Serra Oak in Monterey where Sebastian Vizcaino celebrated mass in 1602 and Serra celebrated mass in 1770 With the San Antonio nowhere in sight Portola Crespi and a guard walked over the hills to Point Pinos then to a beachside hill just south where their party had planted a large cross five months before on their journey back from San Francisco Bay They found the cross surrounded by feathers and broken arrows driven into the ground with fresh sardines and meat laid out before the cross No Indians were in sight The three men then walked along the rocky coast south to Carmel Bay Several Indians approached them and the two groups exchanged gifts 92 On May 31 the San Antonio sailed into Monterey Bay and dropped anchor reuniting the surviving men of the land and sea expeditions citation needed On Pentecost Sunday June 3 1770 Serra Portola and the whole expedition held a ceremony at a makeshift chapel erected next to a massive oak tree by Monterey Bay to found mission San Carlos Borromeo The men of the land and sea expeditions coming from different directions met here at the same time wrote Serra we singing the divine praises in our launch while the gentlemen on land sang in their hearts After the raising and planting of a large cross which Serra blessed the standards of our Catholic monarch were also set up the one ceremony accompanied by shouts of Long live the Faith and the other by Long live the King Added to this was the clangor of the bells the volleys of the muskets and the cannonading from the ship 93 Both king Carlos III and viceroy Carlos de Croix had chosen to name the new mission after Carlo Borromeo 94 The body of a sailor Alexo Nino who had died the day before aboard the San Antonio was buried at the foot of the newly erected cross 95 Serra realized from the start that the new mission needed relocation While the Laws of the Indies required missions to be located near Indian villages there were no Indian settlements near the newly christened mission by Monterey Bay It might be necessary wrote Serra to the guardian of the college of San Fernando to change the site of the mission toward the area of Carmel a locality indeed more delightful and suitable because of the extent and excellent quality of the land and water supply necessary to produce very abundant harvests 96 On July 9 the San Antonio set sail from Monterey bound for Mexico Aboard were Portola and Miguel Costanso along with several letters from Serra Forty men including the two friars and five Baja Indians remained to develop the mission on the Monterey peninsula In San Diego 450 miles 720 kilometers south 23 men remained to develop the mission there Both groups would have to wait a year before receiving supplies and news from Mexico 97 Missions founded nbsp Mission San Diego de Alcala was founded by Serra in 1769 as the first of the California missions nbsp Mission San Carlos Borromeo del Rio Caramelo where Serra died was founded in 1770 When the party reached San Diego on July 1 Serra stayed behind to start the Mission San Diego de Alcala the first of the 21 California missions 29 including the nearby Visita de la Presentacion also founded under Serra s leadership Junipero Serra moved to the area that is now Monterey in 1770 and founded Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo He remained there as Father Presidente of the Alta California missions In 1771 Serra relocated the mission to Carmel which became known as Mission Carmel and served as his headquarters Under his presidency were founded citation needed Mission Basilica San Diego de Alcala July 16 1769 present day San Diego California Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo June 3 1770 present day Carmel by the Sea California Mission San Antonio de Padua July 14 1771 near present day Jolon California was later converted into a parish church and no longer provides any missions 98 99 Mission San Gabriel Arcangel September 8 1771 present day San Gabriel California Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa September 1 1772 present day city of San Luis Obispo California Mission San Juan Capistrano November 1 1776 present day San Juan Capistrano Mission San Francisco de Asis June 29 1776 present day San Francisco California chain of missions Mission Santa Clara de Asis January 12 1777 present day city of Santa Clara California and Mission San Buenaventura March 31 1782 present day Ventura California Converted into a parish by 2020 100 Serra was also present at the founding of the Presidio of Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California on April 21 1782 but was prevented from locating the mission there because of the animosity of Governor Felipe de Neve citation needed nbsp Mission San Gabriel Arcangel founded in 1771 He began in San Diego on July 16 1769 and established his headquarters near the Presidio of Monterey but soon moved a few miles south to establish Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo in today s Carmel California 24 nbsp Mission San Juan Capistrano founded in 1776 The missions were primarily designed to bring the Catholic faith to the native peoples Other aims were to integrate the neophytes into Spanish society to provide a framework for organizing the natives into a productive workforce in support of new extensions of Spanish power and to train them to take over ownership and management of the land As head of the order in California Serra not only dealt with church officials but also with Spanish officials in Mexico City and with the local military officers who commanded the nearby garrison In 1773 difficulties with Pedro Fages the military commander compelled Serra to travel to Mexico City to argue before Viceroy Antonio Maria de Bucareli y Ursua for the removal of Fages as the Governor of California Nueva At the capital of Mexico by order of Viceroy Bucareli he printed up Representacion in 32 articles Bucareli ruled in Serra s favor on 30 of the 32 charges brought against Fages and removed him from office in 1774 after which time Serra returned to California In 1778 Serra although not a bishop was given dispensation to administer the sacrament of confirmation for the faithful in California After he had exercised his privilege for a year Governor Felipe de Neve directed him to suspend administering the sacrament until he could present the papal brief For nearly two years Serra refrained and then Viceroy Majorga gave instructions to the effect that Serra was within his rights citation needed Franciscans saw the Indians as children of God who deserved the opportunity for salvation and would make good Christians Converted Indians were segregated from Indians who had not yet embraced Christianity lest there be a relapse To understand the impetus behind missionary efforts in the 18th century one must take into account the era s views on the salvation of unbaptized infants While there were many controversies in the Church s history the fate of unbaptized infants has never been definitively settled by an ecumenical council of Bishops in the Catholic church citation needed nbsp Mission San Francisco de Asis founded in 1776 In the 18th century most Catholic speculation regarding the ultimate end of unbaptized infants was still in line with the early Church Fathers such as Augustine of Hippo who believed that unbaptized infants would receive the mildest chastisements in Hell but no reward 101 For Serra and his companions therefore instructing the natives so that their children might also be saved would have most likely been a great concern From this came the determined efforts of missionaries to the detriment of native cultures which few today would countenance 102 Discipline was strict and the converts were not allowed to come and go at will Indians who were baptized were required to live at the mission and conscripted into forced labor as plowmen shepherds cattle herders blacksmiths and carpenters on the mission Disease starvation overwork and torture decimated these tribes 103 114 Serra successfully resisted the efforts of Governor Felipe de Neve to bring Enlightenment policies to missionary work because those policies would have subverted the economic and religious goals of the Franciscans 104 Serra wielded this kind of influence because his missions served economic and political purposes as well as religious ends The number of civilian colonists in Alta California never exceeded 3 200 and the missions with their Indian populations were critical to keeping the region within Spain s political orbit Economically the missions produced all of the colony s cattle and grain and by the 1780s were even producing surpluses sufficient to trade with Mexico for luxury goods 105 In 1779 Franciscan missionaries under Serra s direction planted California s first sustained vineyard at Mission San Diego de Alcala Hence he has been called the Father of California Wine The variety he planted presumably descended from Spain became known as the Mission grape and dominated California wine production until about 1880 106 Treatment of Native CaliforniansFurther information Spanish missions in California nbsp The statue of Serra by Ettore Cadorin is one of two statues representing California in the National Statuary Hall at the U S Capitol From his perspective Serra s singular purpose was to save the souls of indigenous Americans He believed that the death of an unconverted heathen was tragic while the death of a baptized convert was a cause for joy 107 39 He maintained a patriarchal or fatherly attitude towards the Native American population He wrote That spiritual fathers should punish their sons the Indians with blows appears to be as old as the conquest of the Americas so general in fact that the saints do not seem to be any exception to the rule 105 Punishment made clear to the natives that we every one of us came here for the single purpose of doing them good and their eternal salvation 107 39 Serra also led efforts to protect the natives from abuse under Spanish soldiers 108 After a series of abuses on the native population by the hand of local soldiers Serra and other missionaries protested against governor of Alta California Pedro Fages who refused to reprimand his soldiers Serra then departed for Mexico on October 17 1772 to plead his case to the viceroy Antonio Maria de Bucareli y Ursua Bucareli requested Serra set his grievances in writing which led to the drafting of the Representacion This document which consisted of 32 points also laid out the rights of Native Americans in Spanish California and protections against the soldiers placing them under the governance of the missions Mission Indians enjoyed rights as human beings under the protection of the Spanish monarchy and were recognized as Hijos de Dios or Children of God 109 According to professor George Yagi this stood in contrast to the treatment of Natives on the east coast of America where they were guaranteed no rights 110 Modern controversy nbsp The Shrine to St Junipero Serra in Carmel by the Sea California carved in 1922 by Jo Mora and removed from public space in 2020 following the George Floyd protests Toppling and decapitation of Serra statues See also List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests Genocide of indigenous peoples Native Americans objected to the Catholic Church s canonization of Serra charging the priest directed and approved of the torture and enslavement of Natives at missions that served as both religious and military installations 111 In October 2015 a week after the Catholic Church canonized Serra Serra s statue in Monterey was decapitated 112 On September 12 2017 Santa Barbara police reported a statue of Serra located at southern California s Santa Barbara mission had been decapitated and covered with red paint 112 On November 3 2017 the statue of Serra located at the Mission San Gabriel Arcangel was vandalized with red paint and suffered damage during a decapitation attempt with a reciprocating saw 113 114 Though the perpetrator failed to decapitate the bronze statue of Serra 3000 was needed to repair it as well 113 On June 19 2020 during the worldwide civil unrest that occurred after the murder of George Floyd activists in San Francisco s Golden Gate Park toppled a 30 foot replica of Serra wrapped in a friar cloak and gripping a large cross Once the statue fell red paint was poured on it and phrases including Stolen Land Olone Land and Decolonize were spray painted on the pedestal where the founder of Spanish Missions previously stood 115 On June 20 2020 a crowd of indigenous elders and young people gathered in downtown Los Angeles to witness the toppling of Serra s statue at Father Serra Park near Olvera Street Burning sage speaking of their ancestors and chanting Take it down the crowd watched as activists tied a rope around Serra s statue to rip it from its pedestal Erected by the Knights of Columbus in 1932 the group said that the statue of Serra had become a symbol of Spanish colonization in which Native Americans prohibited from practicing their customs and religion were beaten when they tried to escape the church run missions 116 On July 4 2020 a group of people toppled the statue of Serra located near the California State Capitol in Sacramento 117 The group was among an estimated 200 protestors who marched through the streets of Sacramento 117 On October 12 2020 a group of people toppled the statue of Serra located in front of Mission San Rafael Arcangel in San Rafael California 118 Formal renamings See also List of name changes due to the George Floyd protests On March 9 2021 following a petition that began circulating after the murder of George Floyd in 2020 the San Diego Unified School Board formally renamed Serra High School and its Conquistador mascot because of Serra s associations with indigenous assimilation 119 Controversy over the missions Serra operated The New York Times noted that some Indian historians and authors blame Father Serra for the suppression of their culture and the premature deaths at the missions of thousands of their ancestors 120 George Tinker an Osage Cherokee and professor at Iliff School of Theology in Denver Colorado 121 cites evidence that Serra required the converted Indians to labor to support the missions Tinker writes that while Serra s intentions in evangelizing were honest and genuine 122 overwhelming evidence suggests that the native peoples resisted the Spanish intrusion from the beginning 123 While administering Mission San Carlos Borromeo in Monterey California Serra had ongoing conflicts with Pedro Fages who was military governor of Alta California Fages worked his men very harshly and was seen as a tyrant Serra intervened on the soldiers behalf and the two did not get along 124 125 Serra moved the mission to Carmel due to better lands for farming due to his conflicts with Fages and in part to protect the Indian neophytes from the influence of Spanish soldiers 126 Mark A Noll a professor at Wheaton College in Illinois wrote that Serra s attitude that missionaries could and should treat their wards like children including the use of corporal punishment was common at the time 127 Tinker argues that it is more appropriate to judge the beatings and whippings administered by Serra and others from the point of view of the Native Americans who were the victims of the violence and who did not punish their children with physical discipline 128 Salvatore J Cordileone archbishop of San Francisco acknowledges Native American concerns about Serra s whippings and coercive treatment but argues that missionaries were also teaching school and farming 120 nbsp The Serra statue at the Presidio of Monterey was decapitated in 2015 but later repaired Iris Engstrand emerita professor of history at the Catholic University of San Diego described Serra as much nicer to the Indians really than even to the governors He didn t get along too well with some of the military people you know His attitude was Stay away from the Indians I think you really come up with a benevolent hard working person who was strict in a lot of his doctrinal leanings and things like that but not a person who was enslaving Indians or beating them ever He was a very caring person and forgiving Even after the burning of the mission in San Diego he did not want those Indians punished He wanted to be sure that they were treated fairly 24 Serra wrote a letter in 1775 to Fernando Rivera y Moncada explicitly instructing the colonial commander to whip and shackle Indigenous men who had escaped from Mission San Carlos 129 130 I am sending them to you so that a period of exile and two or three whippings which Your Lordship may order applied to them on different days may serve for them and for the rest for a warning and may be of spiritual benefit to all If Your Lordship does not have shackles with your permission they may be sent from here Deborah A Miranda a professor of American literature at Washington and Lee University and an enrolled member of the Ohlone Costanoan Esselen Nation stated that Serra did not just bring us Christianity He imposed it giving us no choice in the matter He did incalculable damage to a whole culture 120 nbsp The Father Serra statue in Ventura California Professor Edward Castillo a Native American and director of Native American Studies at the Sonoma State University in California said in a Firing Line episode with William F Buckley Jr that you pointed out that in my work I haven t cited Serra as oppressor You can t put a whip in his hand You can t put a smoking gun in his hand And that is true The man was an administrator 131 Corine Fairbanks of the American Indian Movement proclaimed For too long the mission system has been glorified as these wonderful moments of California s golden era That is not true They were concentration camps They were places of death 132 Pope Francis in addition to his canonization of Serra during a visit to the United States called on Catholics to embark upon a new chapter of evangelization 133 Francis further noted Instead of seeming to impose new obligations Christians should appear as people who wish to share their joy who point to a horizon of beauty and who invite others to a delicious banquet It is not by proselytizing that the Church grows but by attraction 134 Catholic writers maintain that the attacks on Serra impose modern judgments about the appropriateness of Christian evangelization of non Christians and that much of the criticism leveled against Serra results from ahistorical value judgments and from ideologies that deny the validity of Christianity and Catholicism as a legitimate social and cultural force 135 136 dubious discuss Support for canonization nbsp Statue of Junipero Serra at Mission Santa Ines Despite these concerns thousands of Native Americans in California maintain their Catholic faith 137 and some supported efforts to canonize Serra 138 139 James Nieblas the first Native American priest to be ordained from the Juaneno Acjachemen Nation a tribe evangelized by Serra was chosen to meet with Pope Francis during his visit to Washington D C 140 Nieblas a longtime supporter of Serra s canonization stated during a 1986 interview with the Los Angeles Times that Father Serra brought our people to this day I think Serra would be proud canonization has the full support and backing of the Juaneno people 141 Members of other tribes associated with the mission system also expressed support for Serra s canonization nbsp Serra s coffin at Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo Two members of California s Ohlone Tribe played roles in the canonization Mass by placing a relic of Serra s near the altar and reading a scripture in Chochenyo a native language One of the participants Andrew Galvan a member of the Ohlone Tribe and curator of Mission Dolores in San Francisco who sat on the Junipero Serra Cause for Canonization board stated prior to the ceremony that the canonization will be the culmination of a life s work for me It will be a ceremonial opening of the door that will let us Indians in a moment I honestly didn t think I would live to see 138 142 Ruben Mendoza an archeologist of Mexican Mestizo and Native Yaqui descent who has extensively excavated missions in California stated during a March 2015 interview with the Los Angeles Times that Serra endured great hardships to evangelize Native Californians In the process he orchestrated the development of a chain of missions that helped give birth to modern California When I don t go along with the idea that the missions were concentration camps and that the Spanish brutalized every Indian they encountered I m seen as an adversary 139 needs context In July 2015 Mendoza testified at a hearing on a proposal to remove a statue of Junipero Serra from the U S Capitol In his remarks he stated What greater symbol of empowerment than that offered by Fray Junipero Serra himself can we offer our youth I ask that this legislative body seriously reconsider this politicized effort to minimize and erase one of the most substantive Hispanic and Latino contributions to our nation s history 143 Biographer Gregory Orfalea wrote of Serra I see his devotion to Native Californians as heartfelt plain spoken and borne out by continuous example 144 145 Death nbsp Saint Junipero Serra s grave in Carmel by the Sea During the remaining three years of his life he once more visited the missions from San Diego to San Francisco traveling more than 600 miles in the process to confirm all who had been baptized He suffered intensely from his disabled leg and from his chest yet he would use no remedies He confirmed 5 309 people who with but few exceptions were California Indian neophytes converted during the fourteen years from 1770 citation needed On August 28 1784 at the age of 70 Junipero Serra died at Mission San Carlos Borromeo from tuberculosis He is buried there under the sanctuary Following Serra s death leadership of the Franciscan missionary effort in Alta California passed to Fermin Lasuen citation needed Veneration nbsp Serra s cenotaph at Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo The cause for Serra s beatification was formally opened on October 21 1951 granting him the title of Servant of God 146 Serra was beatified by Pope John Paul II on September 25 1988 147 The pope spoke before a crowd of 20 000 in a beatification ceremony for six according to the pope s address in English He sowed the seeds of Christian faith amid the momentous changes wrought by the arrival of European settlers in the New World It was a field of missionary endeavor that required patience perseverance and humility as well as vision and courage 148 During Serra s beatification questions were raised about how Indians were treated while Serra was in charge The question of Franciscan treatment of Indians first arose in 1783 The famous historian of missions Herbert Eugene Bolton gave evidence favorable to the case in 1948 and the testimony of five other historians was solicited in 1986 149 150 151 Serra was canonized by Pope Francis on September 23 2015 as a part of the pope s first visit to the United States 152 the first canonization to take place on American soil 153 During a speech at the Pontifical North American College in Rome on May 2 2015 Pope Francis stated that Friar Junipero was one of the founding fathers of the United States a saintly example of the Church s universality and special patron of the Hispanic people of the country 6 Junipero Serra is the second native saint of the Balearic Islands after Catherine of Palma 152 He is also included among the Saints of the United States and Mexico 154 Serra s feast day is celebrated on July 1 in the United States and on August 28 everywhere 3 4 5 He is considered to be the patron saint of California Hispanic Americans and religious vocations citation needed The Mission in Carmel California containing Serra s remains has continued as a place of public veneration The burial location of Serra is southeast of the altar and is marked with an inscription in the floor of the sanctuary Other relics are remnants of the wood from Serra s coffin on display next to the sanctuary and personal items belonging to Serra on display in the mission museums A bronze and marble sarcophagus depicting Serra s life was completed in 1924 by the sculptor Jo Mora but Serra s remains have never been transferred to that sarcophagus citation needed Legacy nbsp Architectural medallion venerating Serra at Balboa Park in San Diego Many of Serra s letters and other documentation are extant the principal ones being his Diario of the journey from Loreto to San Diego which was published in Out West March to June 1902 along with Serra s Representacion 155 The Junipero Serra Collection 1713 1947 at the Santa Barbara Mission Archive Library are their earliest archival materials This library is part of the building complex of the Mission Santa Barbara but is now a separate non profit independent educational and research institution It continues to have ties to the Franciscans and the legacy of Serra 156 The chapel at Mission San Juan Capistrano built in 1782 is thought to be the oldest standing building in California Commonly referred to as Father Serra s Church 157 it is the only remaining church in which Serra is known to have celebrated the rites of the Catholic Church he presided over the confirmations of 213 people on October 12 and 13 1783 citation needed nbsp Statue at Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo Many cities in California have streets schools and other features named after Serra Examples include Junipero Serra Boulevard a major boulevard in and south of San Francisco Serramonte a large 1960s residential neighborhood on the border of Daly City and Colma in the suburbs south of San Francisco Serra Springs a pair of springs in Los Angeles Serra Mesa a community in San Diego Junipero Serra Peak the highest mountain in the Santa Lucia Mountains Junipero Serra Landfill a solid waste disposal site in Colma and Serra Fault a fault in San Mateo County Schools named after Serra include Junipero Serra High School a public school in the San Diego community of Tierrasanta renamed to Canyon Hills High School in 2021 and four Catholic high schools Junipero Serra High School in Gardena Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo JSerra Catholic High School in San Juan Capistrano and Serra Catholic High School in McKeesport Pennsylvania There are public elementary schools in San Francisco and Ventura as well as a K 8 Catholic school in Rancho Santa Margarita 158 Both Spain and the United States have honored Serra with postage stamps 159 In 1884 the Legislature of California passed a concurrent resolution making August 29 of that year the centennial of Serra s burial a legal holiday 160 Serra International a global lay organization that promotes religious vocations to the Catholic Church was named in his honor The group founded in 1935 currently numbers a membership of about 20 000 worldwide It also boasts over 1 000 chapters in 44 countries 161 nbsp St Junipero Church in Camarillo Serra s legacy towards Native Americans has been a topic of discussion in the Los Angeles area in recent years The Mexica Movement an indigenous separatist group that rejects European influence in the Americas 162 protested Serra s canonization at the Los Angeles Cathedral in February 2015 163 The Huntington Library announcement of its 2013 exhibition on Serra made it clear that Serra s treatment of Native Americans would be part of the comprehensive coverage of his legacy 164 On September 27 2015 in response to Serra s canonization the San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo Mission was vandalized The statue of Serra was toppled and splattered with paint and the cemetery the mission doors a fountain and a crucifix were as well The message Saint of Genocide was put on Serra s tomb and similar messages were painted elsewhere in the mission courtyard 165 166 After the incident law enforcement authorities launched a hate crime investigation since the only grave sites targeted for desecration were those of Europeans 167 In 2018 Spanish producer Pedro Alonso Pablos made an animation medium length film dedicated to the life and work of Fray Junipero called The call of Junipero and although the Catholic Church had no formal role during the process of creating the film the vision that the film offers coincides with that of the Church 168 In 2019 Stanford University renamed two buildings that had formerly been named after Serra Serra House where the Clayman Institute for Gender Research is located was renamed the Carolyn Lewis Attneave House and a student dormitory located in the Lucie Stern Hall complex was renamed the Sally Ride House 169 The university followed the recommendations of a committee headed by Paul Brest former dean of Stanford Law School which had concluded that Because the mission system s violence against California Native Americans is part of the history and memory of current members of the community we believe that features named for Junipero Serra who was the architect and leader of the mission system are in tension with Stanford s goal of full inclusion 169 Statuary and monuments See also List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests Junipero Serra nbsp Statue at Mission San Francisco de Asis nbsp Statue in Queretaro City nbsp Plaque at St Mary s College of California A statue of Junipero Serra is one of two statues that represent the state of California in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol The work of Ettore Cadorin it depicts Serra holding a cross and looking skyward In February 2015 State Senator Ricardo Lara introduced a bill in the California legislature to remove the statue and replace it with one of astronaut Sally Ride In May 2015 some California Catholics were organizing to keep Serra s statue in place California Governor Jerry Brown supported retaining it when he visited the Vatican in July 2015 170 171 On July 2 Lara announced that as a gesture of respect towards Pope Francis and people of faith the vote on the bill would be postponed until the following year Pope Francis canonized Serra as part of his September 2015 papal visit to the US 172 The statue of Serra in Ventura California standing 9 feet 4 inches was displayed in front of Ventura City Hall between 1936 and 2020 The original concrete statue was declared Ventura Historic Landmark No 3 in 1974 A bronze cast replaced the concrete statue in 1989 A wooden replica created by local carvers was put on public display in the atrium of Ventura City Hall in 1988 In 2020 city church and tribal leaders agreed to move it off public land Upon city council approval the bronze cast was placed in storage Council also voted to remove the wooden replica from public display 173 The Douglas Tilden statue of Serra representing him as the apostolic preacher in a heroic scale was toppled on June 19 2020 at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco The tear down was part of a Juneteenth protest 174 In 1899 Jane Elizabeth Lathrop Stanford wife of Leland Stanford governor and U S Senator from California and a non Catholic herself commissioned a granite monument to Serra which was erected in Monterey in 1891 The figure of Serra was decapitated in October 2015 and the head not found until April 2 2016 in Monterey Bay 175 When Interstate 280 was built in stages from Daly City to San Jose in the 1960s it was named the Junipero Serra Freeway A statue of Serra on a hill on the northbound side of the freeway in Hillsborough California points a finger towards the Santa Cruz Mountains and the Pacific 176 After the freeway s Peninsula segment was finished in the mid 1970s Caltrans erected small nonstandard wooden signs at each end of the segment near the interchanges with State Route 1 in Daly City and Foothill Expressway in Cupertino to proclaim The Junipero Serra Freeway The World s Most Beautiful Freeway During the 1980s and 1990s both signs were visible to travelers between San Francisco and San Jose but were severely damaged by car accidents during the 2000s and were not replaced The only indicator of the signs existence is that one of two support posts remains standing at both former locations The statue of Serra located at Mission Santa Barbara was decapitated in September 2017 112 Two months later an attempt was made to decapitate the Serra state located at Mission San Gabriel Arcangel with a reciprocating saw 113 However the perpetrator instead settled for covering parts of the front area in red paint after the decapitation effort failed 113 A bronze statue of Serra standing over an outline of the State of California previously stood in the California State Capitol s Capitol Park It faced a statue of Thomas Starr King previously located in the National Statuary Hall Collection citation needed It was later toppled by protestors on July 4 2020 177 A statue of Serra is located in the courtyard of Mission Dolores San Francisco s oldest remaining building 178 A life size bronze statue of Serra which was removed in June 2020 overlooked the entrance to Mission Plaza in San Luis Obispo near the facade of Old Mission San Luis Obispo 179 Statues or other monuments to Father Serra are found on the grounds of several other mission churches including those in San Diego and Santa Clara citation needed A statue on Serra Avenue was removed by the city of Carmel on June 24 2020 for safekeeping after some other statues in California were removed by protestors 180 A statue of Junipero Serra near the San Fernando Mission in the Mission Hills district of Los Angeles California was vandalized on August 17 2017 as part of a larger movement to tear down monuments deemed offensive by activists 181 In popular cultureFiction Robert A Heinlein featured Serra in his serialized short fiction Lost Legacy first published in November 1941 in Super Science Stories edited by Frederick Pohl 182 The story is about a cache of ancient knowledge fictitiously discovered by Serra on Mt Shasta The fiction also features as a character Ambrose Bierce the famous writer who disappeared and was declared dead in 1913 at age 72 See also nbsp Biography portal Junipero Serra Museum Vizcaino Serra Oak Saint Junipero Serra patron saint archiveReferences Junipero Serra Santo 1713 1784 bne es Biblioteca Nacional de Espana Retrieved March 18 2024 a b St Junipero Serra britannica com Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved March 18 2024 a b Saint Junipero Serra FaithND University of Notre Dame Retrieved July 2 2020 a b Saint Junipero Serra CatholicSaints Info April 13 2010 Retrieved July 2 2020 a b Blessed Junipero Serra Roman Catholic Saints Retrieved July 2 2020 a b Pope Francis celebrates Junipero Serra at Rome s North American College Retrieved September 24 2015 Patron Saints and their feast days Archived from the original on June 22 2015 Retrieved June 15 2015 The Somerset Herald 15 Sep 1846 Tue Page 1 Burke Daniel ed September 23 2015 Pope Francis canonizes controversial saint CNN Religion Retrieved June 21 2020 Blakemore Erin Why Are Native Groups Protesting Catholicism s Newest Saint Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved June 21 2020 Yuhas Alan January 25 2015 Junipero Serra s road to sainthood is controversial for Native Americans The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved June 21 2020 Pope to Canonize Evangelizer of the West During U S Trip National Catholic Register Archived from the original on September 27 2015 Retrieved January 21 2015 Saint Junipero Serra Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved September 8 2018 The Apostle of California Father Junipero Serra University of the Pacific Archived from the original on September 8 2018 Retrieved September 8 2018 PBS The West Junipero Serra www pbs org Retrieved June 21 2020 Gumbel Andrew September 23 2015 Junipero Serra s brutal story in spotlight as pope prepares for canonisation The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved June 21 2020 Fray Junipero Serra apostol de Sierra Gorda y California www franciscanos org Retrieved April 20 2024 Junipero Serra A few hours after birth he was baptized in the village church Dictionary of Hispanic Biography Detroit Gale 1996 Retrieved via Biography in Context database January 27 2018 Hackel Steven W 2013 Junipero Serra California s Founding Father New York Hill and Wang p 16 ISBN 978 0809095315 Geiger Maynard 1959 The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra O F M The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History vol 1 p 10 Hackel 2013 pp 27 31 Hackel 2013 p 31 Weber F 2003 Junipero Serra New Catholic Encyclopedia Detroit Gale Retrieved via Biography in Context database January 27 2018 a b c Blessed Junipero Serra 1713 1784 Serra Club of Bethlehem Pennsylvania Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved May 24 2013 Hackel 2013 p 40 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 15 Geiger Maynard 1959 The Life and Times of Padre Serra Richmond William Byrd Press p 26 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra O F M The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 2 p 375 a b Catholic Encyclopedia Junipero Serra newadvent org Archived from the original on February 4 2015 Retrieved January 21 2015 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 28 29 Hackel 2013 p 59 Junipero Serra letter to Francesch Serra Cadiz August 20 1749 Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar O F M editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 p 5 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 4 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 86 87 Geiger discussed Serra s wound with three medical doctors one of them Mexican to fact check this account from Serra and his first biographer Francisco Palou Serra s wound may have been caused either by a mosquito bite or infestation by a chigger more precisely a chigoe flea Eric O Brien O F M The Life of Padre Serra Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 p xxxii DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 pp 49 50 Rose Marie Beebe Robert M Senkewicz Junipero Serra California Indians and the Transformation of a Missionary University of Oklahoma Press 2015 Google Books DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 501 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra O F M The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 116 117 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 52 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 pp 55 56 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 55 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra O F M The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 115 Report to the Inquisition of Mexico City Xalpan September 1 1752 Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar O F M editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 pp 19 21 HathiTrust Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar O F M editor Acadummy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 p 410 reference note Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 149 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 56 Geiger Maynard 1948 The Franciscan Mission to San Fernando College Mexico 1749 The Americas 5 1 48 60 doi 10 2307 978132 ISSN 0003 1615 JSTOR 978132 S2CID 143923654 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 146 147 Fogel Daniel 1988 Junipero Serra the Vatican and enslavement theology San Francisco Calif ISM Press p 48 ISBN 978 0 910383 25 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 171 172 drawing on Francisco Palou s account DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 59 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 172 173 James J Rawls and Walton Bean California An Interpretive History 8th edition McGraw Hill 2003 p 34 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 pp 6 7 Tumacacori Mailing Address P O Box 8067 Us AZ 85640 Phone 520 377 5060 Contact Jesuit Expulsion Tumacacori National Historical Park U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved May 9 2024 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 182 183 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 183 184 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 192 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 pp 64 68 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 66 Francisco Palou November 24 1769 report to the guardian of the college of San Fernando MM 1847 f 273 Bancroft Library Berkeley California DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 pp 69 72 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 75 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 211 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 78 Stephen G Hyslop Contest for California From Spanish Colonization to the American Conquest Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2019 33 38 ISBN 978 0806166148 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 79 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 80 Hyslop 35 36 Francisco Palou Palou s Life of Fray Junipero Serra trans Maynard J Geiger Washington DC Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 pp 232 275 quoted in Hyslop 36 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 219 220 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 220 221 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 p 84 DeNevi amp Moholy 1985 pp 85 86 Pedro Fages and Miguel Costanso Two Early Letters From San Diego in 1769 Journal of San Diego History vol 21 no 2 spring 1975 Translated and edited by Iris Wilson Engstrand Retrieved June 29 2023 James J Rawls and Walton Bean California An Interpretive History 8th ed McGraw Hill 2003 pp 35 36 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 227 James J Rawls and Walton Bean California An Interpretive History 8th edition McGraw Hill 2003 p 36 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 231 Don DeNevi and Noel Francis Moholy Junipero Serra The Illustrated Story of the Franciscan Founder of California s Missions Harper amp Row 1985 pp 93 34 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 234 Serra s letter to Juan Andres at the college of San Fernando February 10 1770 Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar O F M editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 p 151 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 235 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 233 235 236 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 237 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 240 241 Junipero Serra letter to Francisco Palou April 16 1770 Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar O F M editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 p 163 Don DeNevi and Noel Francis Moholy Junipero Serra The Illustrated Story of the Franciscan Founder of California s Missions Harper amp Row 1985 p 103 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 246 247 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 246 Don DeNevi and Noel Francis Moholy Junipero Serra The Illustrated Story of the Franciscan Founder of California s Missions Harper amp Row 1985 p 99 Serra s letter to Juan Andres June 12 1770 Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar O F M editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 pp 169 171 Don DeNevi and Noel Francis Moholy Junipero Serra The Illustrated Story of the Franciscan Founder of California s Missions Harper amp Row 1985 p 100 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 p 248 Serra s letter to Juan Andres June 12 1770 Writings of Junipero Serra Antonine Tibesar editor Academy of American Franciscan History 1955 vol 1 p 171 Maynard Geiger The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra The Man Who Never Turned Back Academy of American Franciscan History 1959 vol 1 pp 252 253 San Antonio de Padua California Missions Mission San Antonio de Padua the History of our Mission Archived from the original on June 16 2020 Retrieved July 8 2020 Demonstration at Father Serra statue in Ventura leaves it standing The Hope of Salvation for Infants Who Die Without Being Baptised www vatican va Retrieved July 29 2018 Lumen Gentium 16 Pritzker Barry M 2000 A Native American Encyclopedia History Culture and Peoples Oxford u a Oxford Univ Press ISBN 978 0 19 513877 1 Francis P Guest Junipero Serra and His Approach to the Indians Southern California Quarterly 1985 67 3 pp 223 261 a b Junipero Serra pbs org Retrieved October 20 2015 LaMar Jim Professional Friends of Wine Wine 101 History Archived January 11 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on April 6 2007 a b Nugent Walter 1999 Into the West The Story of its People New York Knopf ISBN 978 0679454793 Saint Junipero Serra Biography amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved July 6 2020 Senkewicz Robert January 1 2010 The Representation of Junipero Serra in California History History Retrieved July 6 2020 Junipero Serra The Missionary Who Fought to End the Abuse of Native Americans by Spanish Soldiers MilitaryHistoryNow com September 18 2016 Retrieved July 6 2020 American Indian Movement Chapter amp Allies to Rally Serra Canonization on Easter Sunday Native News Online March 23 2015 Archived from the original on June 20 2020 Retrieved June 21 2020 a b c Scheibe John Iconic statue of Father Junipero Serra vandalized in Santa Barbara Ventura County Star Retrieved June 21 2020 a b c d Serra Statue in San Gabriel Vandalized with Paint November 3 2017 Video Man tries to decapitate St Junipero Serra statue at Mission San Gabriel November 3 2017 Steve Rubenstien Swan Rachel June 21 2020 Historical Statues toppled as rage spills into San Francisco s Golden Gate Park San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved June 21 2020 At Los Angeles toppling of Junipero Serra statue activists want full history told Los Angeles Times June 21 2020 Retrieved June 21 2020 a b Junipero Serra statue taken down by protesters at Capitol CHP says July 6 2020 San Rafael demonstrators topple Junipero Serra statue Marin Independent Journal October 12 2020 Retrieved October 12 2020 Taketa Kristen March 10 2021 San Diego Unified changes name of Junipero Serra High School removes conquistador mascot San Diego Union Tribune Retrieved March 10 2021 a b c Pogash Carol January 21 2015 To Some in California Founder of Church Missions Is Far From Saint The New York Times Tinker George E 1993 Missionary Conquest The Gospel and Native American Cultural Genocide Fortress Press pp 42 amp 61 ISBN 978 1 4514 0840 9 Tinker 1993 p 42 Tinker 1993 p 59 Walton John 2003 Storied Land Community and Memory in Monterey Berkeley University of California Press pp 15ff ISBN 978 0520935679 Retrieved September 5 2016 Paddison p 23 Fages regarded the Spanish installations in California as military institutions first and religious outposts second Breschini Gary S 2000 Mission San Carlos Borromeo Carmel Monterey County Historical Museum Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved June 22 2013 Noll Mark A 1992 A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada pp 15 16 Grand Rapids Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Tinker 1993 p 58 Serra Saint Junipero 1966 Writings of Junipero Serra Academy of American Franciscan History ISBN 978 0883820032 Hyslop Stephen G 2019 Contest for California From Spanish Colonization to the American Conquest University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 6614 8 Southern Educational Communications Association SECA March 17 1989 Firing Line with William F Buckley Saint or Sinner Junipero Serra via Internet Archive Easter Sunday protest over Serra planned at Carmel Mission Archived from the original on November 10 2016 Retrieved November 9 2016 Lind Dara September 24 2015 Junipero Serra was a brutal colonialist So why did Pope Francis just make him a saint Vox Retrieved September 26 2017 Evangelii Gaudium Apostolic Exhortation on the Proclamation of the Gospel in Today s World 15 24 November 2013 w2 vatican va Retrieved July 29 2018 Reese Thomas May 15 2015 Junipero Serra saint or not National Catholic Reporter Archived from the original on September 27 2017 Retrieved September 26 2017 Orfalea Gregory January 24 2015 Sainthood and Serra His virtues outdistance his sins Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 26 2017 Cultural Diversity in the Catholic Church in the United States PDF Retrieved June 29 2023 a b Audi Tamara September 24 2015 Pope Francis Honors First Hispanic Saint in U S Wall Street Journal a b Times Los Angeles March 17 2015 Often criticized Serra gets a reappraisal from historians Los Angeles Times Bharath Deepa September 23 2015 Orange County and Pope Francis Native American priest to meet pope for Father Serra canonization Kopetman Roxana October 12 1986 Bells Sound at Ordination of First Juaneno via Los Angeles Times Harrington Caitlin March 20 2016 The Lesser Told Story Of The California Missions hoodline San Francisco Retrieved July 31 2021 Catholic San Francisco Archived from the original on September 27 2015 Retrieved September 26 2015 Gregory Orfaleo Journey to the Sun Junipero Serra s Dream and the Founding of California 2014 pp 340 359 Times Los Angeles January 24 2015 Sainthood and Serra His virtues outdistance his sins Los Angeles Times Index ac status causarum beatificationis servorum dei et canonizationis beatorum in Latin Typis polyglottis vaticanis January 1953 p 130 Chawkins Steve August 28 2009 Junipero Serra advocates need just one more miracle Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 23 2013 Terry Leonard Pope beatifies founder of missions Associated Press story published in the Santa Barbara News Press September 26 1988 p A4 James A Sandos Junipero Serra Canonization and the California Indian Controversy Journal of Religious History 1989 15 3 pp 311 329 James A Sandos Junipero Serra s Canonization and the Historical Record American Historical Review 1988 93 5 pp 1253 1269 in JSTOR Guest Francis P Junipero Serra and His Approach to the Indians Southern California Quarterly 1985 67 3 pp 223 261 a b Ayuso Miguel September 23 2015 Junipero Serra el franciscano espanol que divide a Estados Unidos Junipero Serra the Spanish Franciscan who divides the United States El Confidencial in Spanish Retrieved May 26 2021 Zapor Patricia January 15 2015 Pope s canonization announcement surprises even Serra s promoters Catholic News Service Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 15 2015 San Francisco Archdiocese of October 19 2022 Holy Heroes Saints in the United States Archdiocese of San Francisco Retrieved April 15 2024 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Junipero Serra www newadvent org Retrieved April 20 2024 Santa Barbara Mission Archive Library Archived from the original on November 27 2019 Retrieved January 21 2015 Interior of Father Serra s Church California Missions Resource Center Archived from the original on September 27 2015 Retrieved September 26 2015 About Us St Junipero Serra Catholic School www serraschool org Retrieved April 20 2024 Junipero serra postage stamps www google com Retrieved July 29 2018 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Junipero Serra Archived from the original on June 28 2014 Retrieved August 27 2014 History of Serra in America and Australia Serra Council of Australia New Zealand and the South Pacific Archived from the original on February 6 2015 Retrieved February 6 2015 Mexica movement org www mexica movement org Archived from the original on September 9 2023 Retrieved September 24 2015 Times Los Angeles February 2 2015 Protesters confront parishioners over Serra canonization Los Angeles Times Johnson Reed August 16 2013 Junipero Serra exhibition at the Huntington seeks a full view via LA Times Stack Liam September 28 201 Vandals Desecrate Carmel Mission Where Junipero Serra Is Buried The New York Times statue of st junipero serra defaced at californias carmel mission September 8 2020 Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Burbank Keith September 28 2015 Carmel saint statue vandalized in possible hate crime La vida de Fray Junipero Serra en una pelicula de animacion April 4 2018 Archived from the original on April 4 2018 Retrieved April 5 2018 a b Green Jason 2019 Stanford renames buildings for Sally Ride Carolyn Attneave Mercurynews com Retrieved May 24 2021 Brittany Woolsey Catholics coalescing to save statue of Serra Los Angeles Times Monday May 11 2015 p B4 Siders David Jerry Brown says Junipero Serra statue will stay Sacramento Bee July 21 2015 White Jeremy B Pope s visit delays vote to ditch Junipero Serra statue Sacramento Bee July 2 2015 Wenner Gretchen Demonstration at Father Serra statue in Ventura leaves it standing Ventura County Star Demonstrators Topple Statues in San Francisco s Golden Gate Park NBC Bay Area June 20 2020 Retrieved June 20 2020 Decapitated head of Junipero Serra found during low tide SF Gate April 3 2016 Retrieved April 13 2016 Simon Mark July 3 2001 Readers sound off on statue Pointed opinions about statue SFGATE Retrieved November 27 2023 KCRA Staff July 5 2020 Junipero Serra statue taken down by protesters at Capitol CHP says KCRA Father Junipero Serra sculpture siris artinventories si edu Retrieved April 20 2024 Fountain Matt June 22 2020 Catholic Church removes Junipero Serra statue from San Luis Obispo Mission San Luis Obispo Tribune Retrieved June 29 2023 Herrera James June 24 2020 Serra statue removed in Carmel for safekeeping local cities deciding fate of others Monterey Herald St Junipero Serra statue vandalized in Mission Hills LA Times August 20 2017 Retrieved August 21 2017 dead link Most recently re published in The Virginia Edition compilation of RAH s complete works vol 32 pp 120 125 Works citedDeNevi Don Moholy Noel Francis 1985 Junipero Serra The Illustrated Story of the Franciscan Founder of California s Missions Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0060618766 Further readingMain article Bibliography of California history Beebe Rose Marie Senkewicz Robert M 2015 Junipero Serra California Indians and the Transformation of a Missionary University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806148687 Castillo Elias 2015 A Cross of Thorns The Enslavement of California s Indians by the Spanish Missions Quill Driver Books ISBN 978 1 61035 242 0 Clifford Christian 2016 Who Was Saint Junipero Serra Tau Publishing ISBN 978 1 61956 545 6 Clifford Christian 2015 Saint Junipero Serra Making Sense of the History and Legacy CreateSpace ISBN 978 1511862295 Cook Sherburne Friend 1943 The Conflict Between the California Indian and White Civilization University of California Press ISBN 978 0520031425 Cook did not discuss Serra but looked at the missions as a system Deverell William Francis Deverell William Igler David 2008 A Companion to California History John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 6183 1 Fitch Abigail Hetzel 1914 Junipero Serra The Man and His Work Fogel Daniel 1988 Junipero Serra the Vatican and Enslavement Theology ISM Press ISBN 978 0 910383 25 7 Geiger Maynard J The Life and Times of Fray Junipero Serra OFM 2 vol 1959 8 leading scholarly biography Geiger Maynard Fray Junipero Serra Organizer and Administrator of the Upper California Missions 1769 1784 California Historical Society Quarterly 1963 42 3 pp 195 220 Gleiter Jan 1991 Junipero Serra Guest Francis P Junipero Serra and His Approach to the Indians Southern California Quarterly 1985 67 3 pp 223 261 favorable to Serra Hackel Steven W The Competing Legacies of Junipero Serra Pioneer saint villain Common Place 2005 5 2 Hackel Steven W Children of Coyote Missionaries of St Francis Indian Spanish Relations in Colonial California 1769 1850 2005 Sandos James A 2004 Converting California Indians and Franciscans in the Missions Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10100 3 Luzbetak Lewis J If Junipero Serra Were Alive Missiological Anthropological Theory Today Americas 1985 42 512 19 argues that Serra s intense commitment to saving the souls of the Indians would qualify him as an outstanding missionary by 20th century standards Orfalea Gregory 2014 Journey to the Sun Junipero Serra s Dream and the Founding of California Scribner ISBN 978 1 4516 4272 8 Primary sources Serra Junipero Writings of Junipero Serra ed and trans by Antonine Tibesar 4 vols Washington D C 1955 66 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Junipero Serra Who Was Junipero Serra at www CaliforniaFrontier net a website dedicated to Junipero Serra and the California mission era The Humanity of Junipero Serra an article by Thomas Davis at the Serra International official website Firing Line with William F Buckley Saint or Sinner Junipero Serra March 17 1989 Edward Castillo and the Rev Noel Maholy talk with William F Buckley after Serra s beatification Official Santa Barbara Mission Archive Library website nbsp Texts on Wikisource Junipero Miguel Jose Serra Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1892 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Junipero Serra Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Junipero Miguel Jose Serra Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Catholic Church titles Preceded byFounding President General President General of the Missions of Alta California1769 1784 Succeeded byFrancisco Palou Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Junipero Serra amp oldid 1223095048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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