Skip the
lengthy description if you like, but you will find out why there is a town
called Fremont, Campbell and how Santa Clara was founded. Either way, you
should have a seat!During the summer of 1846, the diverse elements
working for change in California began to coalesce. In March, Colonel John C.
Frémont and his men had arrived in the Santa Clara Valley after roaming
throughout the middle of California. After clashing with General Castro near San
Juan Bautista, Frémont moved north where he joined forces with Americans led by
William Ide. On June 1st the rebels took General Vallejo and others prisoner in
Sonoma. They designed a flag with a grizzly bear and a red star, raised it and
declared a California Republic. One month later word was received of a
declaration of war between Mexico and the United States. Upon the capture of
Monterey by Commander Sloat on July 7th, the Bear Flag Rebellion ended as the
"Bear Flaggers" joined with the American Military, becoming the California
Battalion.
Descriptions of California appearing in eastern newspapers had encouraged
Americans to come and settle, and during 1846 immigrants had been arriving
overland in greater numbers. The "Great Migration" of 1846 consisted of entire
families, a completely different type of American immigrant than had arrived
before. Stopping at Sutter's Fort upon completion of their journey, these newly
arrived American immigrants were informed by Frémont and the Californian that
they could shelter during the rainy season at a number of mostly unoccupied
missions. Among those named was Santa Clara.
At Mission Santa Clara the immigrants would find a place ill-prepared to
receive them. The years of being impacted by politics, stealing, and neglect
since secularization, had impoverished what was once reputed to be the
wealthiest mission in California. When visiting in 1848, Edwin Bryant described
the picture of neglect he saw stating, "The rich lands surrounding the mission
are entirely neglected... The picture of decay and ruin presented by a country
so fertile and scenery so enchanting is a most melancholy spectacle to the
passing traveler."
From mid-October through November 1846, an estimated 175 adults and children,
including William Campbell and his family, arrived at Mission Santa Clara.
Although upon their arrival they found a site in disrepair, due to the advent of
the War the new arrivals decided to stay on at the compound. The immigrants
sought shelter, living under what they would later describe as "deplorable
conditions, sharing a large warehouse building with little light [the mission
granary]. It was raining and the roof leaked. Food was in short supply." By the
end of the year conflict arose. With few of the immigrants understanding Spanish
or the customs and manners of the Californios, many offers of assistance were
refused. Rumors transmitted as facts, prompted the organization of a militia at
Santa Clara. One of the immigrants, Joseph Aram, established his headquarters at
the mission with a force of thirty-one men assuming leadership when the mission
militia elected officers. Ignoring the pleas of the Californios, Captain Aram
and his men proceeded to cut down several of the willow trees (planted by Father
Catalá) along the Alameda to use in barricading the mission. The lack of
understanding between the two cultures culminated with the Battle of Santa Clara
on January 2, 1847; the only campaign in the Northern District of California
between the Californios and the United States forces during the Mexican-American
war.
This "battle" which took place on the open plain about two miles from the
mission, was a result of several rancheros rebelling against Americans taking
their livestock and property. It was actually a 2 hour skirmish not a battle; no
one was killed, and the only casualty was the American military forces' cannon,
which continually bogged down in the knee-deep mud. A peaceful treaty was
arranged on January 7, 1847. However, the American immigrants who viewed it from
the tops of the mission buildings interpreted it as a tremendous defeat of the
"enemy." Joseph Aram's militia company was disbanded on March 1st, and for the
American immigrants, the winter spent at Mission Santa Clara was over. However,
during 1847, problems would continue at Santa Clara due to a continuing influx
of American immigrants; the non-Indian population of California almost doubled
between 1845 and 1848. By Spring, immigrants were not only occupying the adobe
buildings paying rent but many were simply "squatting" refusing to vacate the
premises. In June Governor Mason ordered the unauthorized occupants to leave.
However he proposed that the immigrants be allowed to stay until harvest time or
longer if they paid rent, and Father Real, the last Franciscan priest of Mission
Santa Clara, assented to that request.
William Campbell had enlisted as a private in "Captain" C. M. Weber's company
of California riflemen, participating in the Battle of Santa Clara. In February
he returned home to the Mission and among other enterprises took up the
profession of surveyor. In October 1847, Father Real hired him to survey lots
near the mission complex, on mission land, and draw up a town plat--this would
become the Town of Santa Clara. It has been said at various times that this
survey and its lots were later declared invalid, but the recordation of the
first official survey in 1866 states differently: "this [1866] map... correctly
represents the blocks, streets, and squares of the said town as surveyed in the
year 1847; and...the land embraced with in the said survey of 1847 has been
occupied and used for town purposes ever since."
Hostilities between the United States and Mexico ceased in early 1848, and
the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo on February 2nd, ceded Texas, New
Mexico and California to the United States. No longer a Mexican Province,
California was now an American possession, and Mission Santa Clara, an embryonic
American town.
Places to See
1. Mission Santa Clara, church and compound; located at the end of Palm
Drive, Santa Clara University.
2. Mission Corral Plaque (where both side's horses were corralled after the
Battle of Santa Clara); located in front of the Mission Library.
(Now how about this gazebo? How many sides does it have
?)