Guashna was a Tongva village located at Playa Vista, Los Angeles at the mouth of Ballona Creek. [1] [2] [3] The site has also been referred to as Sa'angna (or some variation thereof), with various sources debating whether Sa'angna, meaning "place of tar," was a regional referent rather than a village name or whether it was a separate nearby village. [1] The initial place name was said to be Sa'an; the village suffix "ngna" was added by Bernice Johnston to her 1962 map of Gabrieleño villages "despite her having found no mention of the term in baptismal records." [4] Sa'angna is also not to be confused with Suangna. [1] The Tongva referred to the Ballona Wetlands as Pwinukipar, meaning "full of water." [5] Another alternate name may Waachnga. [4]
Prior to the arrival of European settlers, tar located near the village, possibly at what was later renamed Baldwin Hill, was an important resource for the village in the construction of te'aats and for trade. [6] [7] [8] In 2004, four-hundred burials in the area were unearthed in the construction of a drainage ditch in the Playa Vista development. The Tongva had little power to prevent the desecration despite numerous protests. [8] [9]
Tar was reportedly an important resource of Guashna, which was used in trade with numerous neighboring villages and for the Tongva's production of te'aats to navigate the coastline. [1] [6]
The village was a point of departure to the island of Pimu (renamed Santa Catalina by the Spanish), which is located about twenty two miles from the village site, that had economic and cultural significance. Tongva's prosperous villages on the island would trade quarried soapstone, pierced white shell, abalone, and sea otter skins. Evidence of this trade can be found as far east as the native Pueblo peoples of what is now New Mexico. [1] [6] No other village throughout mainland Tovaangar was as important for coastal trade and connection with the islands. [10]
The coastal village of Puvunga was a major regional trading center located about 20 mi (32 km) down the coastline. [6]
Like other Tongva villages in the area, the village declined with the arrival of Spanish missionaries and soldiers. The villagers were brought to Mission San Gabriel, [6] where they were baptized and forced to work in conditions that were identified by third-party observers as being slavery "in every sense of the word." [11]
At Mission San Gabriel, there were a total of 7,854 baptisms (2,459 children) and 5,656 deaths (2,916 children) until secularization in 1834, indicating a very high rate of death. [12] Children often died very young at the missions. One missionary reported that three out of every four children born at nearby Mission San Gabriel died before reaching the age of two. [13]
In the 1820s, while the villagers were at Mission San Gabriel and the village had been depleted, the governor of Alta California granted the land area, referred to as Guaspita, a variant of Guashna, as "a land grant received by Antonio Ignacio Ávila, which later was combined with the Salinas land grant to become Rancho Sausal Redondo, present-day Westchester." [1] Mission registers of the era show a number of entries for people from Guasna and Guashna, or Guaspet, Guachpet, or Guashpet (-pet being a suffix that indicated someone was a person from a certain place.) [4]
In W. W. Robinson's 1939 history of the area he wrote: [14]
On old maps the cliffs of Ballona's easterly boundary are labeled Guacho, sometimes Huacho, an Indian term meaning high place, according to Cristobal Machado of Culver City, whose memory of La Ballona Valley goes back to Indian days. It was against these cliffs that the Indians built their brush-and-mud huts. From them the brown-skinned men went forth to gather clams and shell fish at the beach beyond the lagoon, to hunt small game in the marshes and to find edible berries, seeds and insects in the river growth and on hillside shrubs...The work of the ranch was done by the local Indians, one group of whom had their huts among the sycamores not far from Augustin's home [north of the creek at Overland, facing what is now Jefferson], another group having their village against the cliffs beneath the present-day Loyola University.
The village is identified as Gaucha on George W. Kirkman's Pictorial and Historical Map of Los Angeles County from 1938. [15]
Until the 1960s, the village site was primarily used for cropland by the Machado family, remaining a natural spreading floodplain of Ballona Creek. Developments increasingly encroached on the agricultural area where the village site was located as Los Angeles sprawled outward. [6]
In the 1990s, protests began to protect the village site from what was to be Dreamworks Studio at Playa Vista. After an environmentalist's hunger strike, director Steven Spielberg decided to not build the studio at that site. [6]
In 2004, the construction of a drainage ditch for the Playa Vista development unearthed four hundred ancestral remains or burials in the area. [8] California cemetery statutes that stem back to the 1850s, amidst the California Genocide, strategically excluded the protection of native cemeteries or burial grounds from desecration. The village site was disturbed for commercial and residential development without protection. As a non-federally recognized tribe, the Tongva had little control over their ancestral remains or artifacts to stop the development. [6]
In 2005, "Phase II" of the Playa Vista development threatened to destroy the site. [6] Continued developments in the area continue to threaten further destruction of the site as of 2021. [16]
Mission San Gabriel Arcángel is a Californian mission and historic landmark in San Gabriel, California. It was founded by the Spanish Empire on "The Feast of the Birth of Mary," September 8, 1771, as the fourth of what would become twenty-one Spanish missions in California. San Gabriel Arcángel was named after the Archangel Gabriel and often referred to as the "Godmother of the Pueblo of Los Angeles."
The Tongva are an Indigenous people of California from the Los Angeles Basin and the Southern Channel Islands, an area covering approximately 4,000 square miles (10,000 km2). In the precolonial era, the people lived in as many as 100 villages and primarily identified by their village rather than by a pan-tribal name. During colonization, the Spanish referred to these people as Gabrieleño and Fernandeño, names derived from the Spanish missions built on their land: Mission San Gabriel Arcángel and Mission San Fernando Rey de España. Tongva is the most widely circulated endonym among the people, used by Narcisa Higuera in 1905 to refer to inhabitants in the vicinity of Mission San Gabriel. Some people who identify as direct lineal descendants of the people advocate the use of their ancestral name Kizh as an endonym.
Playa Vista is a neighborhood in the Westside area of Los Angeles, California, United States. The area was the headquarters of Hughes Aircraft Company from 1941 to 1985 and the site of the construction of the Hughes H-4 Hercules "Spruce Goose" aircraft. The area began development in 2002 as a planned community with residential, commercial, and retail components. The community attracted businesses in technology, media and entertainment and is part of Silicon Beach.
Ballona Creek is an 8.5-mile (13.7 km) channelized stream in southwestern Los Angeles County, California, United States, that was once a "year-round river lined with sycamores and willows". The urban watercourse begins in the Mid-City neighborhood of Los Angeles, flows through Culver City and Del Rey, and passes the Ballona Wetlands Ecological Preserve, the sailboat harbor Marina del Rey, and the small beachside community of Playa del Rey before draining into Santa Monica Bay. The Ballona Creek drainage basin carries water from the Santa Monica Mountains on the north, from the Baldwin Hills to the south, and as far as the Harbor Freeway (I-110) to the east.
Ballona Wetlands Ecological Reserve is a protected area that once served as the natural estuary for neighboring Ballona Creek. The 577-acre (2.34 km2) site is located in Los Angeles County, California, just south of Marina del Rey. Ballona—the second-largest open space within the city limits of Los Angeles, behind Griffith Park—is owned by the state of California and managed by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The preserve is bisected generally east-west by the Ballona Creek channel and bordered by the 90 Marina freeway to the east.
The Hahamog'na, commonly anglicized to Hahamongna and spelled Xaxaamonga in their native language, are a tribe of the Tongva people of California. Their language belongs to the Uto-Aztecan family.
Puvunga is an ancient village and sacred site of the Tongva nation, the Indigenous people of the Los Angeles Basin, and the Acjachemen, the Indigenous people of Orange County. The site is now located within California State University, Long Beach and the surrounding area. The Tongva know Puvunga as the "place of emergence" and it is where they believed "their world and their lives began". Puvunga is an important ceremonial site and is the end to an annual pilgrimage for the Tongva, Acjachemen, and Chumash.
The Tongva Sacred Springs are a group of springs located on the campus of University High School in Los Angeles, California. The springs, called Koruuvanga by the native Gabrieleno Tongva people, were used as a source of natural fresh water by the Tongva people since at least the 5th century BC and continue to produce 22,000–25,000 US gallons (83,000–95,000 L) of water a day. The springs are also sometimes referred to as the Gabrieleno-Tongva Springs, the Tongva Holy Springs, and the Sacred Springs.
Alyeupkigna is a former Tongva-Gabrieleño Native American settlement in Los Angeles County, California.
Cahuenga ( or "place of the hill" is a former Tongva–Tataviam Native American settlement in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California. One source suggests kawe means mountain in Tongva language. Recent linguistic work suggests an alternative meaning of "place of the fox". The Tongva-language suffix -nga indicates place, and the suffix -bet or -bit indicates person from place; people from Cahuenga were recorded in mission registers as Capuebet.
Hahamongna and Hahamog-na are two historic Tongva village sites. They are located in the Verdugo Mountains of Southern California and bear the name of the local band of indiginous Tongva, "Hahamog'na." The sites are located in present-day Pasadena and Glendale in Los Angeles County, California. Hahamongna was one of the largest Tongva villages in the greater San Fernando Valley area, along with Cahuenga, Tujunga, and Siutcanga.
Harasgna is a former Tongva-Gabrieleño Native American settlement in Los Angeles County, California.
Isanthcogna is a former Tongva-Gabrieleño Native American settlement in Los Angeles County, California.
Maugna is a former Tongva-Gabrieleño Native American settlement, or ranchería, in Los Angeles County, California. It was located at Rancho Los Feliz, present day Hollywood.
Pasadena is a city in Los Angeles County, California, United States. Founded in 1874 and incorporated in 1886, the city is famous for its colorful history and for the hosting of both the Tournament of Roses Parade and the annual Rose Bowl game football game. It is also the home of the world-renowned California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)
Port Ballona is an archaic place name for an area near the center of Santa Monica Bay in coastal Los Angeles County, where Playa Del Rey and Del Rey Lagoon are located today. Port Ballona was a planned harbor and town site from circa 1859 to 1903. The name comes from the Rancho La Ballona Mexican land grant.
Kizh Kit’c are the Mission Indians of San Gabriel, according to Andrew Salas, Smithsonian Institution, Congress, the Catholic Church, the San Gabriel Mission, and other Indigenous communities.
Genga, alternative spelling Gengaa and Kengaa, was a Tongva and Acjachemen village located on Newport Mesa overlooking the Santa Ana River in the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, California area which included an open site now referred to as Banning Ranch. Archaeological evidence dates the village at over 9,000 years old. Villagers were recorded as Gebit in Spanish Mission records. The village may have been occupied as late as 1829 or 1830.
Tovaangar refers to the Tongva world or homelands. It includes the greater area of the Los Angeles Basin, including the San Gabriel Valley, San Fernando Valley, northern Orange County, parts of San Bernardino County and Riverside County, and the southern Channel Islands, including San Nicholas, Santa Catalina, Santa Barbara, and San Clemente. The homelands of the Chumash are to the northwest, the Tataviam to the north, the Serrano and Cahuilla to the east, and the Acjachemen and Payómkawichum to the south.
Comicranga was a coastal Tongva village located at what is now the area of Santa Monica, California. It is most notable as the home village in the early 19th century of Bartolomea, better known as Victoria Reid after her second marriage. She was a respected Indigenous woman in Mexican California, who was among the few indigenous people to receive a land grant. As a young widow, she married Scottish immigrant Hugo Reid, who became a naturalized Mexican citizen. The village is referred in various records and spellings to as Comigranga, Comicraibit, Comicrabit, and possibly Coronababit.
a clerk with the Jedediah Smith fur-trapping party spent considerable time observing his San Gabriel mission surroundings. He soon found himself unable to tolerate the site of the natives working in the nearby vineyards and fields. 'They are kept in great fear, and for the least offense they are corrected,' he confided in his diary. 'They are... complete slaves in every sense of the word.'