Opening October 13, 2017, the California Historical
Society (CHS) will welcome Alexander
Hamilton: Treasures from the New-York Historical Society. In conjunction
with this exhibition, CHS will present Meanwhile
out West: Colonizing California, 1769–1821, exploring the colonial history
of the region now known as California with books, manuscripts, maps, paintings,
and artifacts drawn chiefly from the CHS Collection. The shift from an Atlantic
Coast narrative focused on the founder of the United States’ financial system—and
freshly memorialized thanks to the beloved Broadway musical—to the Pacific Coast
promises to draw contrasts and connections between the two regions as they
existed in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
The same year that the founding fathers signed the
Declaration of Independence in a first assertion of shedding their British
dependency, Spanish soldiers established El Presidio Real de San Francisco, now
referred to simply as the Presidio, at the far northern edge of the San
Francisco Peninsula in view of the Golden Gate. Four years earlier, in 1772, the
Spanish King Charles III delineated his specifications for military garrisons
in New Spain, affirming their role as not only military but physical representations
of Spanish unity and power. In these regulations, known as the Reglamento of
1772, the King expressed the importance of claiming militarily strategic
positions, building according to uniform architectural plans, and providing
adequate food and clothing for soldiers in an effort to, in his words, “defend the lives and
estates of my vassals on the frontier from the attacks of the barbarous tribes,”
as well as from other European powers exploring Pacific waters. According to
archaeologist Barbara Voss, the Crown was actively interested in how location
and presentation would affect “the frontier.” This reflected the Spaniards’
concern that the more politically non-centralized organization of Native
peoples stood in direct opposition to the “colonial view of a proper civilized
lifestyle” (Voss, The Archaeology of
Ethnogenesis, p. 51). The King’s insistence on well-regulated presidios,
therefore, was a way to aid in the overarching goal of establishing “civilized”
Spanish settlements to Christianize and Hispanicize indigenous people in the
Americas.
Louis Choris, Voyage pittoresque autour du monde… (Paris: Firmin Didot, 1822), Vault 910.4 C45, California Historical Society |
The lithograph, “View of
the Presidio in San Francisco,” sketched in October 1816 by German-Ukrainian
artist Louis Choris (1795-1828) during his journey aboard the Rurik as part of a three-year Russian
exploration of the Pacific, visually corroborates the speculation as to the
comparative number of Spanish soldiers and indigenous workers, as well as their
relationship. In the hand-colored lithograph, Choris shows three soldiers on
horseback holding lances, two of whom seem to be driving groups of Native
Californians, who are organized in rows like chain gangs. In this way, the
lithograph conveys the disparity between the number of Spanish soldiers and
Native people, as well as the hierarchical relationship established by the
soldiers’ position on horses as opposed to the indigenous men on foot.
While Hamilton gained the military rank of Major
General and political prestige in the newly formed United States government as
the first Secretary of the Treasury, the Spanish empire sought a foothold in
Alta California. They established Catholic missions along the coast and
strategic military garrisons such as the San Francisco Presidio up until the
Mexican Revolution of 1821. This Hispanic past of what would later become the
thirty-first state of the United States often does not garner the same amount
of interest as the dramatic events of the early Federalist period, especially
with the ongoing performances of the “Hamilton” musical. By placing the objects
of “Meanwhile in California” alongside the New-York Historical Society’s
Hamilton exhibition, the California Historical Society hopes to draw attention
to this critical period in California history, a time of momentous change and
upheaval with lasting impacts on the landscape, culture, and peoples of
California.
Louisa Brandt
Library and Collections Intern, California Historical Society
Sources:
Dorn, Samantha. “Major
General Alexander Hamilton.” The National
Museum of the United States Army. 16 July 2014. https://armyhistory.org/major-general-alexander-hamilton/ Accessed 12 September 2017.
Ellis, Clifton.
“Spanish Colonial Architecture: Forts and Presidios.” Texas Tech University, College of Architecture.
http://www.arch.ttu.edu/people/faculty/ellis_c/arch5319/Lectures/6%20Spanish%20Forts-Presidios.pdf Accessed 12
September 2017.
Voss, Barbara L. The Archaeology of Ethnogenesis: Race and
Sexuality in Colonial San Francisco. Berkeley, CA: University of California
Press, 2008.
“Voyage pittoresque
autour du monde [illustrations—excerpt]: Background. “ American Journeys: Eyewitness Accounts of
Early American Settlement and Exploration: A Digital Library and Learning
Center. Wisconsin Historical Society. 2017. www.americanjourneys.org/aj-087/ Accessed 12 September 2017.
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