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Junípero Serra
Born at Petra, Island of Majorca, 24 November, 1713; died at Monterey, California, 28 August, 1784.
On 14 September, 1730, he entered the Franciscan Order. For his
proficiency in studies he was appointed lector of philosophy before his
ordination to the priesthood. Later he received the degree of Doctor of
Theology from the Lullian University at Palma, where he also occupied
the Duns Scotus chair of philosophy until he joined the missionary
college of San Fernando, Mexico (1749). While traveling on foot from
Vera Cruz to the capital, he injured his leg in such a way that he
suffered from it throughout his life, though he continued to make his
journeys on foot whenever possible. At his own request he was assigned
to the Sierra Gorda Indian Missions some thirty leagues north of Querétaro.
He served there for nine years, part of the time as superior, learned the
language of the Pame Indians, and translated the catechism into their
language. Recalled to Mexico, he became famous as a most fervent and
effective preacher of missions. His zeal frequently led him to employ
extraordinary means in order to move the people to penance. He would
pound his breast with a stone while in the pulpit, scourge himself,
or apply a lighted torch to his bare chest. In 1767 he was appointed
superior of a band of fifteen Franciscans for the Indian Missions of
Lower California. Early in 1769 he accompanied Portolá's land expedition
to Upper California. On the way (14 May) he established the Mission San
Fernando de Velicatá, Lower California. He arrived at San Diego on 1
July, and on 16 July founded the first of the twenty-one California
missions which accomplished the conversions of all the natives on the
coast as far as Sonoma in the north. Those established by Father Serra
or during his administration were San Carlos (3 June, 1770); San Antonio
(14 July, 1771); San Gabriel (8 September, 1771); San Luis Obispo
(1 September, 1772); San Francisco de Asis (8 October, 1776); San Juan
Capistrano (1 Nov. 1776); Santa Clara (12 January, 1777); San Buenaventura
(31 March, 1782). He was also present at the founding of the presidio of
Santa Barbara (21 April, 1782), and was prevented from locating the mission
there at the time only through the animosity of Governor Philipe de Neve.
Difficulties with Pedro Fages, the military commander, compelled Father
Serra in 1773 to lay the case before Viceroy Bucareli. At the capital of
Mexico, by order of the viceroy, he drew up his Representación
in
thirty-two articles. Everything save two minor points was decided in his
favour; he then returned to California, late in 1774. In 1778 he received
the faculty to administer the Sacrament of Confirmation. After he had
exercised his privilege for a year, Governor Neve directed him to suspend
administering the sacrament until he could present the papal Brief. For
nearly two years Father Serra refrained, and then Viceroy Majorga gave
instructions to the effect that Father Serra was within his rights. During
the remaining three years of his life he once more visited the missions
from San Diego to San Francisco, six hundred miles, in order to confirm
all who had been baptized. He suffered intensely from his crippled leg
and from his chest, yet he would use no remedies. He confirmed 5309
persons, who, with but few exceptions, were Indians converted during
the fourteen years from 1770. Besides extraordinary fortitude, his most
conspicuous virtues were insatiable zeal, love of mortification, self-denial,
and absolute confidence in God. His executive abilities has been especially
noted by non-Catholic writers. The esteem in which his memory is held by all
classes in California may be gathered from the fact that Mrs. Stanford, not
a Catholic, had a granite monument erected to him at Monterey. A bronze
statute of heroic size represents him as the apostolic preacher in Golden
Gate Park, San Francisco. In 1884 the Legislature of California passed a
concurrent resolution making 29 August of that year, the centennial of
Father Serra's burial, a legal holiday. Of his writings many letters and
other documentation are extant. The principal ones are his Diario
of
the journey from Loreto to San Diego, which was published in Out West
(March to June, 1902), and the Representación
before mentioned.
PALOU, Noticias de la Nueva California (San Francisco, 1774); IDEM, Relacion historica de la vida y apostolicas tarcas del Ven. P. Fr. Junípero Serra (Mexico City, 1787); Santa Barbara Mission Archives; San Carlos Mission Records; ENGELHARDT, Missions and Missionaries of California, I (San Francisco, 1886); GLEESON, Catholic Church in California, II (San Francisco, 1871); HITTELL, History of California, I (San Francisco, 1885); JAMES, In and Out of the Missions (New York, 1905).
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