Page:History of California, Volume 3 (Bancroft).djvu/132

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114
ECHEANDÍA AND THE PADRES.

One phase of this campaign demands further notice. One of the contemporary narratives, the diary of Piña, represents that at least six of the captives, including three or four women found alive in the second thicket, were put to death, most of them by the order or with the consent of the commander. Osio in his history tells us that some captured leaders were shot or hanged to trees, and Padre Duran made a complaint, to which no attention was paid. Vallejo in his official report says nothing respecting the death of the captives. At the time, however, Vallejo was accused by Padre Duran, but claimed to be innocent.[1] Echeandía ordered an investigation of the charge that three men and three women, not taken in battle, had been shot and then hanged;[2] and the investigation was made. From the testimony the fiscal decided that only one man and one woman had been killed, the latter unjustifiably by the soldier Joaquin Alvarado, whose punishment was recommended.[3] There is no doubt that in those, as in later times, to the Spaniards, as to other so-called civilized races, the life of an Indian was a slight affair, and in nearly all the expeditions outrages were committed; but it would require strong er evidence than exists in this case to justify any special blame to a particular officer.[4]

In June 1827 orders were sent to Echeandía from Mexico to found a fort on the northern frontier in the region of San Rafael or San Francisco Solano. The


    and Pacheco as the two killed under Sanchez, and says that Antonio Soto died of his wounds at S. José.

  1. Arch. Sta B., MS., xii. 178.
  2. Aug. 7, 1829. Dept. Rec., MS., vii. 213.
  3. Dept. St. Pap., Ben. Mil., MS., lxx. 13. Lieut Martinez was the fiscal to whom the case was intrusted.
  4. A few items of Indian affairs for 1830: April, sergeants Salazar and Rico sent with a force to prevent trouble at Sta Inés. Quiet restored in 3 days. Dept. St. Pap., Ben. Md., MS., lxxxviii. 1, 4. July-Sept., a grand paseo marítimo proposed by P. Duran, in which the vecinos of S. José were invited to join. The object was to visit the rivers and Tulares, and inspire respect among the gentiles by peaceable methods. The mission would pay the expense. S. José., Arch., MS., i. 38-9. Dec., Arrival of suspicious Indians at S. Fernando. Dept. St. Pap., Angeles, MS., i. 95.