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Joseph P. Sánchez - Explorers, traders, and slavers: forging the old Spanish Trail, 1678-1850

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    Explorers, traders, and slavers: forging the old Spanish Trail, 1678-1850
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The origins of the Old Spainsh Trail are obscure, except that it first came into the historical limelight when Yuta guides led Spanish colonial frontiersmen in New Mexico northwest from Santa Fe beyond Abiquiu through the Utah Canyonlands to present Utah Lake. Only then did the Yuta country become part of the Spanish claim to New Mexico. The land, with its many rivers, valleys, ridges, and mountains, became a geographic stage for the Hispanic quest for trade in the Great Basin and a route from New Mexico to California.This proclivity for trade formed the driving force paving the way to the Yuta country. In opposition, development of the OST was hindered by the Indian policy by Spanish officials that prohibited New Mexican frontiersmen from going to Yuta country. Despite the official policy, New Mexicans persisted in a clandestine trade that ran from early 1700s to the 1850s.Historically, the main account of the Old Spanish Trail is Hafens Old Spanish Trail: (1954). The Hafens, however, overlooked Hispanic efforts to open the trail. This book corrects that oversight. Joseph P. Sanchez describes the Spanish search for mythical Teguayo and the Spanish-Mexican explorers, traders, and slavers who traveled through the Yuta country.The route taken by Armijo in 1829 connecting Santa Fe with Los Angeles was forged by earlier explorers. Among them were Juan Maria Antonio Rivera, Pedro Fages, Francisco Hermenegildo Garces, and countless others who risked their lives in that rugged land. Their efforts connected two other major emigrant trails: the Camino Real de Tierra Adentro from Mexico City to Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Trail from Missouri to New Mexico. The two routes converged at Santa Fe where, after 1829, they joined settlers bound for California.This book demonstrates the significance of the OST as not just a sidebar to Anglo western expansion, but as an integral page of our national story.The author is Dir. of the Spanish Colonial Research Center, Albuquerque.

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title Explorers Traders and Slavers Forging the Old Spanish Trail - photo 1

title:Explorers, Traders, and Slavers : Forging the Old Spanish Trail, 1678-1850
author:Snchez, Joseph P.
publisher:University of Utah Press
isbn10 | asin:
print isbn13:9780874805260
ebook isbn13:9780585133874
language:English
subjectOld Spanish Trail--History, Southwest, New--Discovery and exploration--Spanish, Indian traders--Southwest, New--History, Slave traders--Southwest, New--History.
publication date:1997
lcc:F799.S26 1997eb
ddc:979.01
subject:Old Spanish Trail--History, Southwest, New--Discovery and exploration--Spanish, Indian traders--Southwest, New--History, Slave traders--Southwest, New--History.
Page i
Explorers, Traders, and Slavers
Page iii
Explorers, Traders, and Slavers
Forging the Old Spanish Trail, 1678-1850
Joseph P. Sanchez
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS SALT LAKE CITY
Page iv
1997 by the University of Utah Press.
All rights reserved.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Snchez, Joseph P.
Explorers, traders, and slavers : forging the old Spanish Trail, 1678-1850 / Joseph P. Snchez.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-87480-526-0 (alk. paper)
I. Old Spanish Trail-History. 2. Southwest, New-Discovery and exploration-Spanish. 3. Indian traders-Southwest, New-History. 4. Slave traders-Southwest, New-History. I. Title.
F799.S26 1996 96-39357
Page v
For my wife, Clara,
and my sons, Joseph and Paul,
who accompanied me on several segments
of the Old Spanish Trail
Page vi
Contents
Preface
ix
Maps
xii
Chapter I
Cartographical Pathways to the Old Spanish Trail: The Road to Mythical Teguayo
3
Chapter II
Spanish Colonial Indian Policy and the Origins of the Historical Route to the Yuta Country: The First Expedition of Juan Maria Antonio Rivera, June 1765
17
Chapter III
The Search for the Ro delTzon: Rivera's Second Expedition to the Yutas, October 1765
29
Chapter IV
Fages, Garcs, Moraga and Muoz: Early California and the Southern Route of the Old Spanish Trail, 1769-1806
41
Chapter V
From Santa Fe to the Green River: The First Phase of the Dominguez-Escalante Expedition, 1776
55
Chapter VI
The New Eden: Beyond the Rio San Buenaventura to Utah Lake and the Grand Canyon
69

Page vii
Chapter VII
Juan Bautista de Anza's Expedition to the San Luis Valley in 1779
81
Chapter VIII
New Mexican Traders and Slavers: Illegal Trade and the Yuta Country, 1778-1821
91
Chapter IX
Antonio Armijo and Jos Maria Chaves: Two Men on the Old Spanish Trail, 1821-1848
103
Chapter X
Mountain Men and Hispanic Traders on the Old Spanish Trail 1822-1853
119
Chapter XI
Epilogue
135
Appendix A
Translation of Incomplete and Untitled Copy of Juan Maria Antonio Rivera's Original Diary of the First Expedition, 23 June 1765
137
Appendix B
Translation of Juan Maria Antonio Rivera's Second Diary, 20 November 1765
149
Notes
159
Bibliography
175
Index
181

Page ix
Preface
THIS BOOK IS by no means a definitive history of the efforts of Hispanic frontiersmen to develop trade routes to the Great Basin between 1678 and 1850. Nor is the book an attempt to present a comprehensive study of the Hispanic dream to found a direct emigration route from New Mexico to California between 1776 and 1850. Rather, this book endeavors to identify salient themes and historical personages in the early history of the Old Spanish Trail and its many variants. A definitive history would be impossible, for the origins of the Old Spanish Trail begin in an unspecified antiquity when Native Americans first blazed a rough trail from an unknown geographic point. It was they who conceived a route running from the Great Salt Lake to the pueblos on the Rio Grande and later to the Spanish settlements of New Mexico. Also, it was they who traveled southwest to California's San Joaquin Valley for trade or war with tribes in those remote areas. Like all trails throughout the Western Hemisphere that evolved into modern highways, the Old Spanish Trail developed from a series of Indian trails that ran from the upper Rio Grande to the Great Basin via the Great Salt Lake.
When Ute traders first realized that a "new" peoplethe Spanishhad settled among the Pueblo Indians of the Rio Grande in 1598, the various routes they had used to the Pueblo lands took on added significance. Later, in the 1670s, when Spanish colonials in New Mexico became more aware of the presence of "Yutas" among them, the historical trail began to evolve, but its origins were from the northwest in Utah, not from New Mexico.
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