The gals I had lunch with on Thursday strongly suggested I start my tour of the area with a visit to at least one of the missions near San Antonio so as to get a better idea of the historical context of the Alamo.
I was going going to go out today, having woken up to super overcast and coldish conditions, but the sky was clear by noon and I was itching to get outside.
I started with Mission San José because it is the best restored and it has a visitors’ centre, guided tours, and a movie (all free, including parking!). From there, I went to Mission Concepción because it is the best preserved. There were a few others to see, but I did not feel compelled to tour them.
Briefly, the Missions were established by Spanish Franciscan friars in the 18th century as settlements to teach the south Texas Indians how to be Spanish citizens. This was how Spain established its presence in the area. If it couldn’t populate it with real Spaniards, then it would create new Spaniards.
The Indian tribes were being attacked from the north by Comanches, Apaches, and other plains nations who had horses. From the south came a wave of European illnesses. The south Texans accepted their bitter fate and that sometimes the only way to survive is to surrender. They went to live in the missions and learned the Spanish way of life, the language, and the religion, Roman Catholicism.
The missions were eventually secularized and turned over to their inhabitants. Some fell to the wayside and others, like the Alamo, were used by the military.
The architecture of the missions was exquisite! I’m glad I watched the movie, Gente de razon (literally, people of reason, but actually human beings), which talks about the fate of the Indians and how they live on as the Tejano people.

All the missions have four of these round rooms at each corner. There were canons on the bottom and riflemen at the top.

80 people would have to share one oven like this. 8 to 10 people would live two rooms in the Indian quarters.

This is the only original part of the structure. Most of the walls were dismantled during secularization in the early 1800s, with the walls used to build home.

The bell tower was destroyed, rebuilt, struck down by God (well, lightening), and then rebuilt a third time. The window under construction is called the rose window and is very famous and popular with romantics.

These are authentic period colours. The entire exterior of the church would have been painted in colours like these.

Grave of the man who supposedly carved the rose window in memory of his beloved who died en route to the new world.

This gristmill still works. The ditch is called an acequia, a technologically marvelous technique of diverting water from the San Antonio river to irrigate fields with no loss of water pressure. Here, the acequia is full of recycled water.

Flying buttress outside the granary (flying because it is not flush against the building; who thought my degree in medieval history would come in handy on an RV blog?!)



































































