Fort Romualdo Pacheco | |
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Location | West Bank of New River, 6 miles West of Imperial, California |
Coordinates | 32°50′41″N115°41′32″W / 32.84472222°N 115.692244444°W |
Built | 1825 |
Demolished | 1826 |
Designated | September 15, 1981 |
Reference no. | 944 [1] |
Fort Romualdo Pacheco also called Fuerte de Laguna Chapala was a Mexican (Mexico consumed his independence in 1821 from Spain) fort built in 1825 and was abandoned a year later in 1826. The fort was 100 feet square with thick stone and adobe walls. The fort was built by Lieutenant Alfrez Jose Antonio Romualdo Pacheco Sr. in response to the attacked on travelers on the route made by Juan Bautista de Anza's expedition in 1774 from Sonora to Alta California. The fort was built after Fernando Rivera y Moncada, many of his soldiers, Francisco Garcés and his local missionaries, were killed at Mission San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer in that is called the Yuma Revolt or Yuma Massacre on July 18, 1781. The attack was by the Apache Quechan Indians. The Yuma Massacre closed the overland transportation between northern Mexico and Alta California for 50 years. This halted the immigration of Mexicans to Alta California. Lieutenant Pacheco with soldiers and cavalry from the Presidio de San Diego built the fort in later 1825 and early 1826. The fort was built just north of the New River and south of the Bull Head Slough in what is now Imperial, California. The Fort was only used for a few months in 1826. Pacheco returned to San Diego and put Ignacio Delgado in charge of the Fort. On April 26, 1826, the San Sebastian Kumeyaay Indians attacked the fort. Pacheco had heard about rumors of the attack and arrived during the attack with reinforcements from San Diego. Pacheco and his 25 lancers fought off the attack. In the battle, three soldiers were killed and three injured. In the battle, 28 Indians were killed. But, now the fort was surrounded by many Kumeyaay and Quechan warriors. Vastly outnumbered the Fort was abandoned and all returned to San Diego. Archeologists did digs at the site in 1958 before Imperial Valley College Museum removed the remains. [2]
The site of the former fort is a California Historical Landmark number 944.
The California Historical Landmark reads:
The Yuma Massacre and Yuma Revolt were a series of attacks on New Spain in 1781 by Yumas Indians. The trail made by Juan Bautista de Anza's expedition in 1774 from Mexico to South California was called the El Camino del Diablo, or the Road of the Devil. The journey was difficult though the Sonoran Desert. The Spanish initially had a peaceful relations with Quechans, also called Yumas. But in 1781 the Yumas revolted. Francisco Garcés had made connections with the Yumas and had become their priest. Garcés and the leader of the Yumas, Salvador Palma, had a good relationship. But, General Teodoro de Croix broke the peace by building two pueblos towns on the Yumas land. Croix did not work with Garcés and no outreach missions were built near the pueblos. Croix also did not build any forts at the new pueblos. The 1781 uprising at Yuma Crossing on the Colorado River damaged the Spanish Arizona mission settlements of San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer and Puerto de Purísima Concepción. The attacks of July 18, 1781 killed Lieutenant Governor Fernando Rivera y Moncada, the mission Father of the Arizona mission, Francisco Garcés, and others. Yuma Revolt at the crossing and the pueblos resulted in the death of about 100 Spanish: about 60 men, 20 women, and 20 children. Of the men killed there were four friars, 36 soldiers and 20 civilians. The Yumas also took 74 as captives. Though Pedro Fages leadership a group took two visits to the Yumas and was able to get 72 of the captives released in 1781. [4]
Captain José Antonio Roméu was put in charge of a retaliatory force to attack the Yumas for the massacre. He and Governor Felipe de Neve led attacked the elusive warriors from September to October in 1782. The retaliatory force killed 108 Yumas, took 85 prisoners, and recover 1,048 stolen horses. But the operation was unable to defeat the Yumas and Anza Trail stayed close.
In December 1851 US Major Samuel P. Heintzelman and sixty US troops came to the Yuma Crossing from San Diego. They built Fort Yuma. In 1852 he was able to end hostilities with the Yumas and end the Yuma War. [5]
José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco Sr., also called Lieutenant Alfrez José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco and Captain José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco, was born in 1795 in Guanajuato, Mexico. His father was Mariano Pacheco and mother Maria Gertrudis Pacheco. He was an engineer and New Spain soldier. He was an overseas of the repair and construction of a few of the Alto California forts. He built Fort Fuerte de Laguna Chapala in 1825. The fort was to be built at the current Banning, California, but water at the New River made this his better choice. He called the small lake by the river, Laguna Chapala. He hired local Indians to help build the fort (before they were mistreated). He married Maria Ramona de la Luz Pacheco (Wilson). Pacheco had two children: Juan Mariano Martin Pacheco y Carrillo and José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco Jr. José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco Jr. became the 12th Governor of California in 1875. Pacheco was killed on December 6, 1831, at the Battle of Cahuenga Pass in Los Angeles, California in 1831. Pacheco shot Jose Maria Avila, who had attacked Alta California Governor Manuel Victoria with a lance, but Pacheco died when Avila's lance struck him. [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] Maria later married John Wilson of San Francisco. [11] [12]
Juan Bautista de Anza Bezerra Nieto was an expeditionary leader, military officer, and politician primarily in California and New Mexico under the Spanish Empire. He is credited as one of the founding fathers of Spanish California and served as an official within New Spain as Governor of the Province of New Mexico.
The Quechan, or Yuma, are a Native American tribe who live on the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation on the lower Colorado River in Arizona and California just north of the Mexican border. Despite their name, they are not related to the Quechua people of the Andes. Members are enrolled into the Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation. The federally recognized Quechan tribe's main office is located in Winterhaven, California. Its operations and the majority of its reservation land are located in California, United States.
The Kumeyaay, also known as 'Iipai-Tiipai or by the historical Spanish name Diegueño, is a tribe of Indigenous peoples of the Americas who live at the northern border of Baja California in Mexico and the southern border of California in the United States. They are an indigenous people of California.
Francisco Hermenegildo Tomás GarcésO.F.M. was a Spanish Franciscan friar who served as a missionary and explorer in the colonial Viceroyalty of New Spain. He explored much of the southwestern region of North America, including present day Sonora and Baja California in Mexico, and the U.S. states of Arizona and California. He was killed along with his companion friars during an uprising by the Native American population, and they have been declared martyrs for the faith by the Catholic Church. The cause for his canonization was opened by the Church.
Pedro Fages (1734–1794) was a Spanish soldier, explorer, first Lieutenant Governor of the Californias under Gaspar de Portolá. Fages claimed the governorship after Portolá's departure, acting as governor in opposition to the official governor Felipe de Barri, and later served officially as fifth (1782–91) Governor of the Californias.
The Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail is a 1,210-mile (1,950 km) trail extending from Nogales on the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona, through the California desert and coastal areas in Southern California and the Central Coast region to San Francisco. The trail commemorates the 1775–1776 land route that Spanish commander Juan Bautista de Anza took from the Sonora y Sinaloa Province of New Spain in Colonial Mexico through to Las Californias Province. The goal of the trip was to establish a mission and presidio on the San Francisco Bay. The trail was an attempt to ease the course of Spanish colonization of California by establishing a major land route north for many to follow. It was used for about five years before being closed by the Quechan (Yuma) Indians in 1781 and kept closed for the next 40 years. It is a National Historic Trail administered by the National Park Service and was also designated a National Millennium Trail.
José Darío Argüello (1753–1828) was a Querétaro-born Californio politician, soldier, and ranchero. He served as interim Governor of Alta California and then a term as Governor of Baja California.
Fernando Javier Rivera y Moncada was a Mexican-born soldier of the Spanish Empire who served in The Californias, the far north-western frontier of New Spain. He participated in several early overland explorations and later served as third Governor of The Californias, from 1774–1777.
Mission Puerto de Purísima Concepción was founded near what is now Yuma, Arizona, United States, on the California side of the Colorado River, in October 1780, by Father Francisco Garcés. The settlement was not part of the California mission chain but was administered as a part of the Spanish missions in Arizona. The Mission site and nearby pueblo were inadequately supported, and Spanish colonists seized the best lands, destroyed the Indians' crops, and generally ignored the rights of the local natives. In retaliation the Quechan (Yuma) Indians and their allies attacked and destroyed the installation and the neighboring Mission San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer over the three days from July 17 to 19, 1781.
Mission San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer was founded on January 7, 1781, by Spanish Padre Francisco Garcés, to protect the Anza Trail where it forded the Colorado River, between the Mexican provinces of Alta California and New Navarre.
The Free Company of Volunteers of Catalonia was a military company of the Spanish Army serving in the Spanish colonial empire.
José Antonio Roméu was sixth Spanish governor of Alta California, from 1791 to 1792.
Yuma Crossing is a site in Arizona and California that is significant for its association with transportation and communication across the Colorado River. It connected New Spain and Las Californias in the Spanish Colonial period in and also during the Western expansion of the United States. Features of the Arizona side include the Yuma Quartermaster Depot and Yuma Territorial Prison. Features on the California Side include Fort Yuma, which protected the area from 1850 to 1885.
The following timeline traces the territorial evolution of California, the thirty-first state admitted to the United States of America, including the process of removing Indigenous Peoples from their native lands, or restricting them to reservations.
The San Pasqual Band of Diegueño Mission Indians of California is a federally recognized tribe of Kumeyaay people, who are sometimes known as Mission Indians.
The Yuma War was the name given to a series of United States military operations conducted in southern California and what is today southwestern Arizona from 1850 to 1853. The Quechan were the primary opponent of the United States Army, though engagements were fought between the Americans and other native groups in the region.
Doña María Ygnacia López de Carrillo was a Californio ranchera. She was the founder of Santa Rosa. She married into the prominent Carrillo family of California and was the ancestor of numerous prominent Californians.
The Saint Thomas Indian Mission is a Catholic mission in Winterhaven, California. It was dedicated in 1923, and its design replicates the Mission Puerto de Purísima Concepción, which once stood on the site.
Vallecito, in San Diego County, California, is an oasis of cienegas and salt grass along Vallecito Creek and a former Kumeyaay settlement on the edge of the Colorado Desert in the Vallecito Valley. Its Spanish name is translated as "little valley". Vallecito was located at the apex of the gap in the Carrizo Badlands created by Carrizo Creek and its wash in its lower reach, to which Vallecito Creek is a tributary. The springs of Vallecito, like many in the vicinity, are a product of the faults that run along the base of the Peninsular Ranges to the west.