California Mission
San Luis Rey De Francia
4050 Mission Avenue San Luis Rey, CA 92068
Native Life
Mission San Luis Rey de Francia was established in the ancestral territory of the Luiseno peoples. Today this area is known as Northern San Diego, Riverside and Southern Orange counties. Tribes thrived in this region, due to the mild climate and accessible abundance of natural resources. Luiseno food staples included deer, antelope, rabbits, wood rats, ducks, quail, seafood, wild berries, grapes, seeds, acorns and more. Wii wish, is a traditional food of the Luiseno, it is a carefully processed acorn meal and is rich in protein. Luiseno used dugout and balsa canoes for harvesting, trade and travel. They also perfected the art of coiled basketry. Today Luiseno tribes are working diligently in language revitalization, actively teaching younger generations and increasing fluency.
Cultural Impacts
The Spanish attempted to force Indians to assimilate into Spanish culture and give up their traditional way of life. Indians were forced to change their religious beliefs, diet, and daily routines, though many Indians resisted. Missionaries required Indians to study Christianity, Spanish language, and Spanish customs in order to assimilate into Spanish life. California Indians were forbidden from speaking in their native languages, practicing traditional religious ceremonies, and eating traditional foods. Sugar and milk was introduced to the diet of Indians working the missions, leading to tooth decay, life threatening infections, diabetes and other health issues. Within two years of living in the missions, many Indians lost all of their teeth.
Indians also struggled with the livestock and diseases that the Spanish brought to California. Indians used various techniques, like burning small areas of the forest to restore nutrients to the soil, in order to work the land and harvest plants for food and medicine. Cows, goats, pigs, and chickens overgrazed the lands tended by Indians, turning Indian crops into trampled wilderness. Livestock forced native animals to compete for food, throwing the ecosystem out of balance. The Spanish also brought diseases like Measles, Influenza and Small Pox to California. Unlike the Spanish, the native peoples did not have the opportunity to build up natural immunities to these diseases. The introduction of European diseases devastated native populations, wiping out entire villages.
Colonization & Governance
The Spanish plan for governance and maintenance of the missions in California was supposed to be carried out over a ten year period. The plan called for the missionaries to “convert” the Indians to Christianity and “train” them to perform manual labor. After a period of ten years it was anticipated that the Franciscan missionaries would turn their missions over to parish priests and the Indians in the missions would live “assimilated” into Spanish culture in Indian “pueblos” or towns. This ten year plan was actually carried out over the course of fifty years. There were many factors that contributed to things not going as they had planned. There were large scale resistance efforts by California Indian tribes. The rate of disease and death was high among populations of Indians at the missions. Thus the military and church expended vast resources on continual expeditions to “capture” Indians in the regions of California that had thus far been untouched by disease. Additionally, California Indians did not adopt religious practices and Spanish culture in a way that was satisfactory to the church and government authorities. Thus, the Indian people would have to be forced to maintain the lifestyle the Spanish planned to assimilated them to under a colonial authority.
Pablo Tac, one of the few natives to write about his experience in the mission and study at the Vatican, lived in Mission San Luis Rey. You can read more about Pablo Tac in the Biographies section.
Resistance
California Indians engaged in widespread resistance to Spanish colonization. Resistance came in many forms. Large scale revolts were organized simultaneously among multiple Indians at several missions. Many individuals and groups attempted to escape. Stock raids were organized with other tribal groups. Others refused to work, attend church services, or bear children fathered by Spanish soldiers. Some groups continued to practice their traditions and ceremonies in secret. Indians were punished by the missionaries for exercising these forms of resistance. Native accounts of punishment describe executions, whippings, shackling, confinement, being made to wear wooden collars with metal hooks and many other forms of physical and psychological humiliation and cruelty.
Secularizations
Mexico won their independence from Spain in 1821 and took control of California. The Mexican government passed laws in 1834 to secularize the missions, meaning that the government took control over the missions away from the priests and gave it to the Indians. The initial plan was for the secularized missions to become Indians towns, or pueblos, and to divide half of the land for the Indians and the other half for the priests. The Indians were also instructed to tend the common area between the two pieces of land. A Mexican government administrator was assigned to each mission to inventory property, livestock and other items of value. Upon the completion of the inventory the official was in charge of distributing the land and valuables to the Indians. Five Indian pueblos were established in total: Flores, Pala, San Dieguito, San Juan Capistrano and San Pasqual.
Many Indians did not receive the lands they were promised and were made to serve Mexican settlers on their ranchos. Settlers and retired soldiers stripped the missions of livestock, supplies and lands and designated Indians as individuals of the lowest social and economic standing. The secularization period is often referred to as the “sacking of the missions” because a majority of the items of value at the missions were seized by corrupt soldiers, government officials, priests, and settlers.
California Indians responded to secularization by accepting it, fleeing, or resisting servitude. About 15,000 Indians experienced secularization at the missions. Some sought refuge from the ranchos by fleeing into the interior of California, while others stayed in pueblos or local Mexican settlements near former mission lands. California Indians who remained near the missions continued to raid livestock and other supplies from the ranchos and fight back against violence perpetuated by the Mexican land owners in certain areas.
General Information
San Luis Rey de Francia
CA aboriginal people:
The Takic speaking people associated with Mission San Luis Rey have been called Luiseno since the Spanish occupation. The native term for these people is the Payomkowishum. The descendants of the Indian people at the mission’s asistencia, San Antonio de Pala, now call themselves the Pala Band of Mission Indians.
Current CA Indian tribe(s) in area:
Campo Band of the Kumeyaay Nation (FR)
36190 Church Road, Suite 1
Campo, CA 91906
(619) 478-9046 Phone
(619) 478-5818 Fax
Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians (Diegueno) (FR)
P.O. Box 908
Alpine, CA 91903
(619) 445-3810 Phone
(619) 445-5337 Fax
Barona Band of Mission Indians (Diegueno) (FR)
1095 Barona Road
Lakeside, CA 92040
(619) 443-6612 Phone
(619) 443-0681 Fax
San Pasqual Band of Indians (FR)
27458 North Lake Wohlford Road
Valley Center, CA 92082
(619) 749-3200 Phone
(619) 749-3876 Fax
Inaja Cosmit Indian Reservation.