Mexican California
In 1821, Mexico gained independence from Spain, which ended
the period of Spanish colonization (see the Spanish
Colonization section). During the
11-year war, California was mostly uninvolved because it was
a remote northern province. Life after Mexican independence
changed slowly for Central Californians. The missions had never
been meant as permanent institutions and under the constitution
of the Republic of Mexico, all races were equal; therefore,
the missions' use of Natives as laborers was considered unconstitutional.
In response to public demands, the missions slowly became secularized
as they lost land and power to the new government.
News of Mexico's 1821 independence from Spain did not reach
Santa Cruz until 1822. In 1827, the Mexican government declared
Santa Cruz a port of entry, and between 1820 and 1830, foreigners
of all types – trappers, traders, and adventurers – came
through the port.
The missionaries held onto their land and power for twelve years
after the independence of Mexico from Spain (Hynding 1982). By
1833, anti-mission sentiment among settlers and politicians had
reached a high point, and the Mexican Congress passed a secularization
law that allowed the government to seize church lands and distribute
them to private individuals.
In 1834, the government issued an order for all missions to
secularize. During the next twelve years, the government gave
away more than 500 grants totaling about 13 million acres. Many
multiple grants were given to single owners and others were granted
in excess of a stipulation limiting single families to less than
76 thousand acres. These ranchos were granted to a few wealthy
families who became California's rancho elite. Although Mexican
administrators had been directed to give the former Mission Native
laborers one half of the mission resources, this did not occur.
Surviving Natives who had lived and worked at the missions were
now laboring for the rancho owners. Ranchos employed from about
20 Natives to several hundred per ranch, with a total of about
4,000 throughout the region. Workers received only food, clothing,
and shelter in return for tending fields and herds. They were
coerced to stay through persuasion, economic pressure, and violence.
During the 1830s, the Santa Cruz Mission lands were given over
to authorities at the Villa de Branciforte. In 1845, an earthquake
destroyed the Mission tower, and in 1886 remaining buildings were
leveled to make room for new development (Koch 1973).
Politics in California during this time were turbulent. An appointed
governor from Mexico City ruled the territory and although there
was a legislature in Monterey, its powers were strictly limited.
Native-born Californios (Spanish and other European descendants)
were restless under Mexican rule and wanted greater self-governance.
A short-lived secession occurred in 1836 in Monterey. Meanwhile,
the economy of California was predominantly based on cattle produced
by the huge rancheros.
Mexican authorities made many large land grants in Santa Cruz
County. In what would later be called Aptos, Soquel and the
surrounding areas, over 55,000 acres of land was granted to members
of the Castro family (Koch 1973). The first large scale timber
harvest is believed to have occurred during the Mexican occupation
from the land grant areas of Rancho Corralitos, Rancho Aptos,
and San Andres Rancho in the southern half of the future county.
On the San Mateo Peninsula, ranchos were tiny compared to elsewhere.
The largest was about thirty five thousand acres, and no others
were more than twenty thousand acres. The former mission lands
were divided into 18 private ranchos. Many new landholders (rancheros)
were of Mexican peasant stock. Some were Mestizos (mixed Native
and Spanish) who were descended from the pioneers who had arrived
with the Spanish (Hynding 1982). The rancheros had mostly been
born and raised on the Peninsula and had no strong ties to Mexico
or Spain. Their allegiance was to family and fellow Californios.
These ties were strengthened by intermarriage and established
a ruling elite. Many rancheros obtained and occupied land years
before they actually gained title.
The local population declined because there was no new influx
of settlers and disease had killed most of the Natives. Because
the area was so remote, there were not many women, and local births
were few. The Mexican government was too far away to govern
effectively, so locals predominated. There were few new colonists. Government involvement
in infrastructural development on the peninsula dwindled and the
area became vulnerable to foreign influence. Mexico did not spend
money to build cities, roads, hospitals, or to develop
agriculture further. By 1845, there were probably fewer than 500 people
including Natives on the San Mateo Peninsula (Hynding 1982).
The cattle actually outnumbered the people. There was no room
for other agriculture because the cattle needed grasslands to
graze. Ranchos became dependent on trade to secure provisions,
and trade became their chief activity. Life centered on rodeos,
cattle slaughtering days, and trade. Although the rancheros were
land-rich, they had little money.
United States settlers were constantly arriving, lured by reports
of California's bountiful natural resources and agreeable climate.
Both the Spanish and the Mexicans had used one of the ranchos,
Rancho Canada Raymundo, to produce timber, but not excessively.
It became very active in the early 1840s when foreign men who
had deserted their ships in Monterey and San Francisco Bays populated
it. Two small ports were developed during this time to help handle
the transport of lumber at Ravenswood (today's East Palo Alto) and Redwood City. The sawyers used oxen for power and dragged
the timber to the slough where it was tied together to form rafts.
The rafts of lumber floated out with the tide and were escorted
by boats to San Francisco (Hynding 1982).
The growing foreign population and lumber trade in Rancho Canada
Raymundo worried Mexican officials, so they taxed sales and prohibited
exports. As tensions with the United States increased, Mexican
officials tried to drive the foreigners out. They arrested at
least 100 and deported more than 40 foreigners, but did not deport
any Americans. The community continued to grow until the outbreak
of the Mexican War. By the 1840s, the US was openly interested
in obtaining California, and in 1846 the United States formally
declared war on Mexico. United States policy and public opinion
had been driven by the notion of "manifest destiny," that it
was the right and duty of the United States government to extend
its sphere of influence west to the Pacific Ocean. At that time,
United States Marines, assisted by volunteers from the American
settlers, invaded Rancho Canada Raymundo.
Hostilities in California were over in 1847 and the war officially
ended in 1848 with the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
In it, Mexico ceded 525,000 square miles to the United States
government. This land was further subdivided to become California,
Nevada, Utah, most of Arizona and New Mexico, and parts of Colorado
and Wyoming. Thus, in 1850, the era of California
Statehood began (go to the section on California
Statehood).
References
Hynding, A. 1982. From Frontier to Suburb:
The Story of the San Mateo Peninsula. Belmont, CA: Star Publishing Company.
Koch, M. 1973. Santa Cruz County Parade
of the Past. Santa Cruz,
CA: Otter B Books.
General Reference
Rawls, J.J. 2000. California History Online [Web site]. California
Historical Society [cited October 22, 2003]. View
on-line source.
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