(Redirected from Padre Francisco Garcés)'Francisco Hermenegildo Tomás Garcés' (
April 12,
1738–
July 18,
1781) was a Spanish
Franciscan missionary who explored much of the southwestern part of North America, including what are now
Arizona, southern
California, and northeastern
Baja California. Garcés was born in Monte del Conde in
Aragon and was ordained in 1763. He served at the Franciscan college of Santa Cruz in
Querétaro. In 1768, when the King of Spain expelled the
Jesuits from their extensive mission fields in northwestern New Spain (present-day southwestern USA), Garcés was among their replacements, assigned to
Mission San Xavier del Bac near present-day
Tucson,
Arizona.
The expulsion of the Jesuits by the Spanish king set in motion a sequence of dramatic events in the missions. While the
Franciscans from the Querétaro college took over responsibility in
Sonora and southern Arizona, other Franciscans from the college of San Fernando in Mexico City, under the leadership of
Junípero Serra, were assigned to replace the Jesuits in Baja California. Serra's Baja California Franciscans were also charged with spearheading a bold advance of the Spanish missionary frontier northward into Alta
California, beginning in 1769. In 1773, control of the Baja California missions passed to the
Dominicans. The Franciscans in Alta California, like the Jesuits in Baja California before them, recognized the desirability of establishing on overland connection with New Spain through the region of the lower
Colorado River. Garcés became a key player in that effort. He conducted extensive explorations in the intervening, unsettled region of the Colorado and Mojave deserts and northern Arizona, sometimes on his own and sometimes in conjunction with the soldier-explorer
Juan Bautista de Anza. The missionary met with and produced accounts of several Indian tribes, including the
Havasupai.
In 1779 Garcés was assigned to ill-fated hybrid mission/colonies being established on the Colorado River among the
Quechan. The warlike native peoples soon clashed with the disruptive Spanish settlers, and in July of 1781 Garcés and his fellow missionaries were among those killed at the
Mission San Pedro y San Pablo de Bicuñer in a general uprising and massacre. Garcés' body was later re-interred at
Mission San Pedro y San Pablo del Tubutama. He is considered to be a martyr.
[1]
There are two memorials to Father Garcés in
Bakersfield, California: a statue is located at the Garces Circle on Chester Avenue and the City's Catholic high school,
Garces Memorial High School.
Garcés Circle "Curse"
Long-term residents of Bakersfield report more accidents at the Circle than any other stretch of road in town. A local legend has grown up stating that the statue of Fray Garcés will attempt to warn those who "run the circle", by either waving or pointing at those involved in the upcoming accidents, though this may simply be the result of people looking at the statue rather than road.
"Bakersfield rallies around Garcés"
The statue was to be relocated in either 2007-2008 to make way for a new two-story freeway; however citizens so objected to the move that the City finally relented late in 2006 and moved to leave the statue right where it stands.
Notes
1. Garcés 1900, p. xxiv.
References
★ Garcés, Francisco. 1900.
''On the Trail of a Spanish Pioneer: The Diary and Itinerary of Francisco Garcés''. Edited by Elliott Coues. Two vols. Francis P. Harper, New York, NY.
★ Garcés, Francisco. 1967.
''A Record of Travels in Arizona and California, 1775-1776''. Edited by John Galvin. John Howell, San Francisco.