Page:History of California, Volume 3 (Bancroft).djvu/489

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
PATRIOTIC DECREES.
471

plan was unanimously adopted by the diputacion, and being submitted on motion of Castro to the leaders of the pronunciados, was by them also approved, without much opposition, it may be supposed, since those leaders were Castro and Alvarado. Next day President Castro issued the first of a series of decrees emanating from the diputacion in its new capacity, in which the people are duly informed "that the said supreme legislative body has decreed as follows: 'The constituent congress of the free and sovereign state of Alta California is hereby declared legitimately installed.'"[1] On the 13th, as 'commander of the vanguard of the division of operations,' Castro issued a printed proclamation to the people, congratulating then on their escape from tyranny, exhorting them not to falter in the good work, reminding them that death was preferable to servitude, and that federalism must become the system of the nation. "Viva la federacion! Viva la libertad! Viva el estado libre y soberano de Alta California!"[2]

The next record carries us forward to the time when Vallejo, having arrived from Sonoma, assumed the military command, tendered him, as we have seen, by the diputacion on the 7th. Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo was a young man of about thirty years, who had recently received a lieutenant's commission in the Mexican army, and was comandante of the northern


    ent most excellent diputacion declaring itself constituent. 3. The religion will be the catholic apostolic Roman, without admitting the public worship of any other; but the government will molest no one for his private religious opinions. 4. A constitution shall regulate all branches of the administration provisionally, so far as possible in accordance with the said (federal?) constitution. 5. While the provisions of the preceding articles are being carried out Don Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo will be called to the comandancia general. 6. The necessary communications will be made to the municipalities of the territory by the president of the excelentísima diputacion.

  1. Castro, Decretos de la Exᵐᵃ Diputacion erigida en Congreso Constituyente, por su Presidente, no. 1-10, 1836, in Earliest Printing. Nos 1-4 are signed by Castro as diputado presidente, and by Juan B. Alvarado as diputado secretario; nos 5-9 by Castro and by J. A. de la Guerra as sec.; and no. 10 by Alvarado as gov. and Cosme Peña as sec. It is possible that this series was continued, but I have found no later numbers. Nov. 10th, Castro to comisario de policía at Branciforte, forwarding the bases adopted by the diputacion to be sworn at the villa. Sta Cruz, Arch., MS., 74.
  2. Dept. St. Pap., Angeles, MS., x. 14-16.