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Mission Santa Catalina
By David Kier

Mission Santa Catalina

By David Kier

Santa Catalina Mission
1929 photo of Santa Catalina mission ruins by Peveril Meigs.
Santa Catalina Mission

Padre Juan Crisóstomo Gómez was serving as the Dominican President from 1790 to 1793. He had recently completed the construction of the great stone church of Mission San Ignacio and had practiced immunization to halt the spread of disease among the Indians. Gómez authorized three mountain missions be founded to secure the inland areas of the northern peninsula and to Christianize the natives. Immediately after the founding of the first mountain mission at San Pedro Mártir, the search for the second mission site began in the region instructed by the Viceroy.

In October of 1794, Sergeant José Manuel Ruiz and Padre Tomás Valdellón examined the place named Santa Catalina midway between the mission of San Vicente and the Colorado River. The most important aspect of a mission site was a reliable year-round source of water. A year later, Ensign Alférez Bernal led an expedition and explored the region. Governor Borica provided Bernal with a list of ‘prime essentials’ a mission site must possess. The list included: a constant source of water, land for raising wheat and maize, near-by firewood and pasture, and numerous available Native People.

Lieutenant-Governor José Joaquín de Arrillaga, traveling north from his home in Loreto, left Mission San Vicente on September 5, 1796 to examine Santa Catalina and the route to the Colorado River. This was but one of four expeditions that year to determine if a land route to Sonora was feasible. Arrillaga had met hostile Indians at the Colorado River and returned to San Vicente by way of San Diego. In an October, 1797 letter, Arrillaga determined that a garrison of soldiers should be stationed in the delta region with a presidio at the head of the gulf and a detachment at Sonoita and San Felipe, thus securing a sea route of escape. The first order of business however, was to establish a mission at Santa Catalina.

Santa Catalina Mission
2007 by archeologist Lee Panich and his team.
Santa Catalina Mission

The order for a new mission was placed by the Viceroy and the governor. The mission was to be strongly fortified as it was known to be in dangerous territory. Santa Catalina would also be the last mission built on the peninsula that was authorized by the Spanish government. No other mission site was so greatly researched by repeated expeditions than Santa Catalina.

Lieutenant-Governor Arrillaga had desired to separate California into two political districts, and his 1796 expedition was to be influential in that happening. Governor Borica also favored the plan, yet nothing of it came for several more years. Governor Borica died in July, 1800, shortly after leaving Alta California for Durango. Arrillaga was made governor but was allowed to remain at his residence in Loreto.

On August 6, 1797, building was begun at the future mission site for the church, priest’s house, and a guardhouse. November 12, 1797 was the day that Mission Santa Catalina Virgen y Mártir was officially founded by Padres José Loriénte and Tomás Valdellón. It was the 7th Dominican California mission, the 25th mission on the peninsula, and the 42nd mission in all of California. The location was locally called Jaca-Tobojol, which means “place where the water falls over stones” at an elevation of 3,900 feet above sea level.

Santa Catalina Mission
1949 photo of the Pai-pai at mission ruins by Marquis McDonald.
Santa Catalina Mission

In 1798, an adobe house with two rooms was built. In 1799, another adobe house was constructed to serve as a shelter for girls and single women. Santa Catalina had a population of 133 Indians in 1800. Another house was also built that year. In 1802, an adobe structure with two rooms was constructed and may have served as a workshop.

Eight Dominicans are named serving Santa Catalina: José Loriénte, Tomás Valdellón, Jacinto Fiol, Manuel de Aguila. Antonio Fernández. José Duro, Manuel Saiz, and Padre Félix Caballero who was perhaps the last Dominican in charge at Santa Catalina (1819-1839).

California was officially divided into two districts on March 26, 1804. Arrillaga was made governor of Upper (Alta) California, and Captain Felipe de Goycoechea was appointed to be governor of Lower (Baja) California. Alta California also was called Nueva (New) California, and Baja California was called Antigua (Old) California. These names (Nueva and Antigua) appeared on documents describing the two regions of California for many years. The idea for a third mountain mission, ordered by Padre Gómez, was abandoned.

In a letter written in Loreto on December 23, 1808, the Dominican Padre Ramon López wrote: “The two missions in the hills, Santa Catalina and San Pedro, cannot give what they don’t have. The minister at Santa Catalina formerly was able to send something, but now he struggles just to make ends meet.”

The population at Santa Catalina was reported as more than 600 in 1824 then down to 250 in 1834. This would have made Santa Catalina the most populous of the Dominican missions. In October of 1839, the Santa Catalina mission was attacked, burned, and 16 neophytes were slain. Padre Caballero, nor any other Dominican, ever returned to rebuild Santa Catalina.

Santa Catalina Mission
The mission site plan as drawn by Peveril Meigs, in 1929.
Santa Catalina Mission

The walls have melted back to the ground leaving almost nothing to visualize the once important mission. Archeologists in recent years have excavated to the stone foundation at a corner of a mission room, and accurately mapped the site with sophisticated equipment. The Pai-pai Indians are still living near the mission. Their village is called Santa Catarina which is a slightly different spelling than the mission’s name.

To reach the Santa Catalina mission site by Santa Catarina, use the Ensenada-San Felipe highway (Mexico #3) and drive to the town of Ejido de los Héroes de la Independencia, Km. 91. Go east, on a concrete road. Near the 5 mile mark from Hwy. 3, the concrete ends and take the dirt road curving to the left and go downhill passing the town church, then work left through the little town of Santa Catarina soon going over a hill to the cemetery. Turn left and go up the hill, above the cemetery. The mission site is 5.5 miles from Highway 3. You may need to park and walk up the hill if not in an Off-Road vehicle.

GPS data and satellite views of the mission sites in Baja California can be seen at Viva Baja.


About David

David Kier is a veteran Baja traveler, author of 'Baja California - Land Of Missions' and co-author of 'The Old Missions of Baja and Alta California 1697-1834'. Visit the Old Missions website.

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