San Gabriel is one of the string of 21 Missions founded by the Catholics back in the day and is an active Church today.
Mission San
Gabriel was founded on September 8, 1771 by Father Junipero Serra. The planned
site for the Mission was along the banks of the Río de los Temblores
(the River of the Earthquakes—the Santa
Ana River). The priests
chose an alternate site on a fertile plain located directly alongside the Rio Hondo in the Whittier Narrows.[11] The site of
the Misión Vieja (or "Old Mission") is located near the
intersection of San Gabriel Boulevard and Lincoln Avenue in Montebello, California (known to the
natives as Shevaanga). In 1776, a flash flood destroyed much of the
crops and ruined the Mission complex, which was subsequently relocated five
miles closer to the mountains in present-day San Gabriel (the native settlement
of 'Iisanchanga). The Mission is the base from which the pueblo that became the city of Los
Angeles was sent. On
December 9, 1812 (the "Feast Day of the Immaculate Conception of the
Blessed Virgin"), a series of massive earthquakes shook Southern
California. The 1812 Wrightwood earthquake caused the
three-bell campanario, located adjacent to the chapel's east façade, to
collapse. A larger, six-bell structure was subsequently constructed at the far
end of the capilla. While no pictorial record exists to document what
the original structure looked like, architectural historian Rexford
Newcomb deduced the
design and published a depiction in his 1916 work The Franciscan Mission
Architecture of Alta California.
Legend has it
that the founding expedition was confronted by a large group of native Tongva peoples whose intention
was to drive the strangers away. One of the padres laid a painting of "Our
Lady of Sorrows" on the ground for all to see, whereupon the natives,
designated by the settlers as the Gabrieliños, immediately made peace
with the missionaries, because they were so moved by the painting's beauty.[1] Today the
300-year-old work hangs in front of and slightly to the left of the old high
altar and reredos in the
Mission's sanctuary.
A large stone
cross stands in the center of the campo santo (cemetery), first
consecrated in 1778 and then again on January 29, 1939 by the Los Angeles
Archbishop John Cantwell. It serves as the final resting place for some 6,000
"neophytes;" a small stone marker denotes the gravesite of José de
Los Santos, the last American Indian to be buried on the grounds, at the age of
101 in February 1921. Also interred at the Mission are the bodies of numerous Franciscan fathers who
died during their time of service, as well as the remains of Reverend Raymond
Catalan, C.M.F., who undertook the restoration of the Mission's gardens.
Entombed at the foot of the altar are the remains of eight Franciscan priests
(listed in order of interment): Father Miguel Sánchez, Father Antonio Cruzado,
Father Francisco Dumetz, Father Roman Ulibarri, Father Joaquin
P. Nuez, Father Gerónimo Boscana, Father José Bernardo Sánchez, and Father Blas Ordaz. Buried among
the padres is centenarian Eulalia Perez de Guillén Mariné, the
"keeper of the keys" under Spanish rule; her grave is marked by a
bench dedicated in her memory.
Mission San
Gabriel Arcángel circa 1900. The trail in the foreground is part of the
original El Camino Real.
Well over
25,000 baptisms were conducted
at San Gabriel between 1771 and 1834, making it the most prolific in the
mission chain. In its heyday it furnished food and supplies to settlements and
other missions throughout California. A majority of the Mission structures fell
into ruins after it was secularized in November
1834. The once-extensive vineyards were falling to decay, with fences broken
down and animals roaming freely through it.[12]
The Mission's
chapel functioned as a parish church for the
City of San Gabriel from 1862 until 1908, when the Claretian Missionary Fathers came to San
Gabriel and began the job of rebuilding and restoring the Mission. On October
1, 1987 the Whittier Narrows Earthquake damaged the
property. A significant portion of the original complex has since been
restored.






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