David K - 9-10-2007 at 11:40 PM
(Posted originally some time ago, I am reposting this for the new Nomads to have something fun to read and history or legends to inspire some Baja
exploring)
The incredibly blue sea we call the Gulf of California has laid claim to names far more romantic than its present one. Early Spanish explorers who
sailed northward in 1538 as far as Cedros Island called it the 'Sea of Cortez' to honor the great Spanish explorer of Mexico. Later explorers, some of
whom were jealous enemies of the great Cortez, changed its name to the 'Vermilion Sea' because of the red tint from Colorado River runoff. Ship
wrecks, mutinies, a fabled island dominated by Amazons, political disputes, pearl fishermen, smugglers, piracy-- all are part of the Gulf's oft-told
legendary history, with one important exception.
While I researched old records for my early Baja book, the name 'Osio' cropped up in so many instances that it piqued my curiosity. The man appeared
to be an enormous power, and yet nothing of substance gave a concrete account of his activities. I couldn't decide whether he was one of the 'good
guys' or one of the 'bad guys', so I began to fit bits and pieces of information together.
Manuel Osio was a master at delivering the shaft. He not only pulled off the biggest mine swindle in the history of Baja California, he also
expedited, if not directly brought about, the expulsion of the Jesuit Order from the New World.
Osio arrived in Baja California as a mission soldier. Almost immediately he recognized that a future in pearl hunting would be more lucrative than one
in soul saving. When a band of recently converted Indian divers arrived at San Ignacio Mission bearing a cache of pearls destined for the Holy Virgin,
Osio managed to intercept their leader and for a trifling value, acquire the pearls. With this grubstake, he procured a discharge from the mission
army and hastened to Sinaloa on the mainland to purchase boats, supplies and men.
By 1742, Osio had fished up more than 128 pounds of pearls. By 1744, his record exceeded 275 pounds per year. He then produced a coup that forever
established him as the Pearl King of Mexico. Off the shore of Mulege, his Yaqui divers brought up the largest pearl ever found in peninsular waters --
a giant the size of a pigeon egg valued at 50,000 pesos. Osio offered to sell it to the Queen of Spain and she accepted his offer. This established
him as Mexico's leading pearler and gained for him the fawning respect of Spain's governing body in the New World.
Conversely, it repulsed the Jesuit fathers. Five percent of all pearls acquired by legitimate pearl hunters went to the Crown, but only after the
largest and most perfectly formed had been collected by the priests to be set aside for the Holy Virgin. That Osio had ignored this tradition did not
endear him to the clergy. They showed their displeasure in 1750 by outlawing all pearl fisheries in peninsular waters because pearl hunters and
corrupt mission soldiers were arousing discontent among the converts and causing uprisings.
The powerful Jesuits, in their agreement with the Crown, were empowered with full rights of administration in Baja California provided they operated
there at their own expense. So there was little that Osio could do but carry on his fisheries surreptitiously. This he managed to do for good many
years until a fateful encounter inspired him to take on the Jesuits in a new endeavor.
While on a business trip to Guadalajara, Osio met a priest, a Franciscan, with whom he could talk sense. This man resented the power that the Jesuit
order held in Baja California almost as bitterly as did Osio. He pointed out that although the Jesuits were empowered with full rights of
administration on the peninsula, possession of the land still remained in the name of his Majesty. Considering Osio's popularity with the king's
advocates in the New World, would it not be possible for him to acquire from the Crown land capable of being developed for mining? Surely the Crown
would prefer mining interests to be in the hands of a trusted citizen rather than controlled by the secretive Jesuits.
Osio laid his plans well, carefully and slowly. He acquired a powerful business partner in Guadalajara to negotiate on their behalf on the mainland,
while Osio himself returned to Baja California to study the land. As a blacksmith in his youth in Andalusia, he had learned enough about metallurgy to
convince himself that a weak silver lode lay in the Santa Ana district near the southern tip of the peninsula. This area also embraced plentiful
grazing land for cattle and had a convenient access for shipments arriving by sea. Although it was situated between two missions, Santiago and Todos
Santos, it was still isolated enough to minimize Jesuit interference with his Indian miners. That prospect, however was eliminated in one forceful
blow when the Jesuits issued an order that no Baja California native would be permitted to work in Osio's mines.
This injunction deterred Osio only temporarily. He still maintained a fleet of ships that employed Yaqui divers who could be brought from Sonora to
work the mines. They also could cause unrest with the Jesuit?s converts, he ultimately learned. Osio's miners were building up resentment among Baja
Indians by telling them that natives on the mainland were given their own land to cultivate as they liked, keeping all profits to themselves. This
caused the mission?s fickle-minded Pericues to make extravagant demands upon the missions, even though the claim was not true.
Jesuit missionaries further complained that Osio did nothing to provide for the spiritual needs of his laborers. When out of charity they felt
compelled to visit the mines to celebrate mass, Osio refused to compensate by even providing meals or paying traveling expenses.
Then new problems arose. Santa Ana's miners ran short of supplies and took advantage of the priests? compassion by applying at Santiago and Todos
Santa missions for help. The missionaries naturally did not wish to sell provisions, that they needed for their own converts, but with the poor miners
so neglected by their employer, it seemed cruel to refuse them. To solve the dilemma, the priests took to charging a just price to those who could pay
while others received necessary supplies for free.
As Osio had designed it, word soon reached Jesuit enemies in Mexico that corn and other produce sold to the miners at the mission instituted a great
commercial enterprise in which the missionaries acted as agents. This accusation was accompanied with another claiming that the missionary at Santiago
was also engaged in furnishing fresh provisions to the Manila Galleon that annually entered the harbor at San Bernabe.
Meanwhile, following the Jesuit ban on pearl fisheries in 1750, Osio subsidized the development of his Santa Ana property by making ninety-day voyages
every few years to Europe in order to profitably unload his illegally obtained pearls. On one of these sojourns Don Jose de Galvez, an aristocrat whom
King Carlos III was secretly planning to send to rule New Spain, sought him out. Osio discussed quite frankly his concern over Jesuit exploitation of
the Baja California peninsula, emphasizing that their continual interference impeded the progress of his mining industry. Don Jose listened
sympathetically.
A short time thereafter the superior of the Jesuits in Mexico found reason to fear that enemies of the Order, specifically one, prevented from
enriching himself at the expense of peninsula natives, were attempting to falsely pin a crime on the priests who charitably visited his mines. To
prevent this from occurring in the future, the Superior demanded that Osio obtain a secular priest to serve his mining settlement.
Paradoxically, Osio welcomed this idea. He had a son approaching marriageable age that had grown up under the tutelage of ignorant cowhands and
miners. Osio himself had felt inadequate to certain social situations during his visits to the mainland and he was desirous that his son and heir make
a worthy marriage and be equipped to cope with the new station in life to which the family had ascended. Possibly an educated priest familiar with the
social amenities of the mainland would be an asset to Osio's establishment. So for once Osio agreed with a Jesuit command provided he selected the
priest.
This was agreed to and Osio sailed to Guadalajara. He returned with a priest whose name was never known outside of Osio's household. Where the priest
went when he departed two years later was never revealed. During the priest's stay, however, Osio accomplished his purpose. His son was wed to the
daughter of a highly respected merchant and business associate of his father's after a dowry of 20,000 gilders from Osio's European pearl profits had
persuaded the girl to come to Baja California.
Following the priest's unexplained departure, the little chapel at Santa Ana stood empty and the disagreeable task of saving uncouth miners? souls
again fell upon the missionary at Santiago. With it also came the necessity of providing for their substance when supplies ran short at Osio's company
store, an occurrence that grew alarmingly frequent. Increasing likewise in frequency were whispers on the mainland that the Jesuits were undermining
Osio's control over his mine workers and retarding production that resulted in a loss of tax revenue for the Crown.
The whole business climaxed in 1767 when the first party of Franciscan priests set sail from the mainland in a launch provided for them by Don Manuel
Osio. They were enroute to Baja California to replace the Jesuits, who had been expelled by a secret mandate from Spain.
Two years prior to that, Don Jose de Galvez had arrived in New Spain, endowed by King Carlos III with almost absolute power. One year following the
Jesuit expulsion, Don Jose himself arrived on the peninsula. He, too, sailed there in a ship owned by Osio and when he and his family arrived, they
proceeded directly to Santa Ana where they lodged with Osio while Galvez set up headquarters from which to start colonization.
Galvez was intensely interested in colonizing Lower California with Spaniards. He was still convinced that great riches lay somewhere in the land and
with so many missions losing converts to epidemics, he wanted to make sure that the Crown maintained its foothold there. At least, that appeared to be
his motive when he separated government land from mission land and offered it to mainland Spaniards of good reputation on easy terms.
A district was organized called 'Real de Minas' with headquarters in Santa Ana. It was this district that was settled first, to the gratification of
Osio, who owned the only store in the district. Supplied with meat from his own cattle that grazed on his own land and other goods that arrived on his
ships from the company he owned in partnership with his new daughter-in-law's father in Guadalajara, the store's profits increased with each new
arrival.
Even Osio's mines appeared to prosper with the exodus of the Jesuits. For the first time, the viceroy in Mexico began to receive bars of silver
designated as the Royal Fifth. The viceroy also received tokens of pearls from Galvez, with a vague explanation that they were mined during his stay
on the peninsula.
Things began to look so profitable on the peninsula that when Osio suggested one day that he might be talked into selling his mines to the Crown,
Galvez offered to cooperate. Or perhaps Galvez had offered to cooperate long before. At any rate, toward the end of Galvez? yearlong residence with
Osio, the sale was consummated. Houses were added for dependents in the royal service, the chapel was enlarged with intentions to raise it to the
status of a mission, and Osio's mercantile operation was doing a thriving business supplying the new settlers. Galvez then sailed back to the
mainland, leaving his secretary, Juan Manuel Viniegra, to oversee the completion of the project.
Viniegra did not have to remain very long.
By 1771 the proposed mission at Santa Ana had been abandoned. Indians brought over from Sonora to work the mines had been returned to their respective
pueblos to relieve the Crown of their support. The mine was ordered sold, along with everything pertaining to it. If a purchaser could not be found,
the mine was to be given to anyone who could work it. There had been no further receipts for the Royal Fifth from Santa Ana after the mines had been
purchased from Osio by the Crown.
Father Francisco Palou, a Franciscan priest asked to report on the situation, wrote that a man versed in such matters had informed him that the mines
were of so little value that they had never paid their way, even when Osio had them. Later, Galvez? secretary, Viniegra, confessed that no metal was
ever refined from the Santa Ana mines, but that the bars of silver and the pearls sent to the viceroy in Mexico by Galvez had been taken from the
missions after the Jesuits departed.
In a surprise move to discount these rumors, Manuel Osio leased back from the Crown a part of the abandoned mines, but the move was suspect as a ploy
to disguise his profits from illegal pearl fisheries.
The small chapel still stands at Santa Ana, along with ruins of Osio's mansion. The settlement is a ghost town, haunted by a legend that lives on in
distant Guadalajara.
According to this legend, Osio was killed by his Yaqui pearl divers while getting ready to take 500 pounds of pearls to Europe to sell. While he
prepared for his voyage, the pearls were believed to be buried for safekeeping at the mine property he had recently leased from the Crown at a site
called 'Tescalama'. His son had already moved from Baja California to carry on family interests in Guadalajara.
The pearls have never been found.
Juan de Iturbe, explorer for the King and pearler on his own account, was first to sail the entire length along the California Gulf Coast and into the
Colorado River in 1615. After loading his fifty-ton ship with a great fortune in pearls, he sailed northward beyond San Felipe, but instead of finding
the mouth of the Colorado River, he discovered himself grounded on a sandbar in a vast sea surrounded by mountains. Certain that he had discovered the
long-sought Straits of Anian that gave entrance to the Pacific Ocean, even though it had already been determined that this was not so, Iturbe stayed
there for a month waiting for a storm or enough wind to carry him off the bar. At last the gods favored him with a great cloudburst, but water gushed
down from the high mountains with such fury that waves rendered his ship unmanageable.
Still dreaming that he and his crew would be ennobled by the King and endowed with measureless fame and fortune, Iturbe continued his exploration by
land. When supplies ran low, they dried flesh from antelope and wild sheep. After several months of futile searching, they climbed to the top of the
highest mountain and identified the Colorado River winding toward the northeast, but the mouth of it was as elusive as the supposed Straits running to
the west.
With their ship finally seaworthy, they attempted again to sail around the landlocked sea in search of an exit, but somehow, as if controlled by a
sorcerer, the water had receded. Iturbe once again found himself grounded, this time on soft, boggy ground from which the crew barely escaped alive.
With little choice, they abandoned the ship with its vast treasure of pearls, leaving it poised upright with its keel buried in sand as if a-sail, and
managed to straggle across the sandy waste back to the Gulf where they eventually were rescued.
Iturbe's aborted pearling adventure gave birth to one of Southern California's greatest lost treasure legends, as recounted in Desert Lore of Southern
California by this author.
(Footnote see Osio's/ Ocio's ruins in Jack Sword's historic photos: http://vivabaja.com/swords )
[Edited on 9-11-2007 by David K]
Manuel Osio
John M - 9-12-2007 at 04:56 PM
Choral Pepper wrote a wonderfully detailed account of Mauel Osio, gathering details from papers, documents and research available to her at the time.
Manuel de Ocio - his proper name according to researcher and historian Harry Crosby. Crosby had the obvious good fortune and opportunity to delve much
more deeply into Ocio.
In Harry Crosby's book, Antigua California, he devotes more than 60 pages to Ocio's activities in Lower California and mainland Mexico. (pp 318 to 390
basically).
While Choral Pepper's account is a most interesting version of Ocio's life in Lower California, much more material is now presented to give us the
opportunity to learn more of his fascinating life.
Thanks David, for the opportunity to go back to Crosby's book.
Gnome-ad - 9-13-2007 at 04:10 PM
Thanks for sharing this one, too. There is so much more on Nomad than I imagined.
Debra - 9-13-2007 at 04:41 PM
Contrary to some acussing others of 'tooting their own horn with little knowledge or "real" experience.
I will "toot" that horn............With a fact..............
Truth is, Choral Pepper, author/publisher/traveler/explorer/.........and dang good chef..........choose David K. to be trusted (in her will) with not
only her papers, maps,and books, but also a beautiful self protrait that I was honered to see in her home at Coranado Shores (in the penthouse!...It
now is in David's livingroom last I saw) Was I impressed? YAH!.............Corkey greeted us in jeans and no shoes......(Dang, was I sorry I
'dressed' I had shoes yUCK! I would have done the whole 'dress-up thing, but I was sufffering with a borken back) Had my friend not 'forced me' to
go.,.........I would have missed out on such a warm and beautiful woman! Thanks again David!
David K - 9-13-2007 at 08:13 PM
Thanks Debra...
I am about giving and appreciate others on Nomad who also give us the joy of reading their trip reports or seeing their photos... I was really
dismayed how some can pop in here and put down nice people like Bajaboy because they admit that they caught fish and even gave some away... like that
is a crime!
Maybe I just blew a fuse... I (for one) really appreciate trip reports as the best way to be back in Baja, when we can't be... Why I think Baja Nomad
is so popular...
How a couple people don't also see what I was upset about, and then blame me for the thread going sour... well, bizzaar come to mind!
Anyway, Choral Pepper or 'Corke' (silent e) was a wonderful lady and gave us so much to inspire us into the desert to seek out the wonders found
there... Thank God that Erle Stanley Gardner dropped into her Desert Magazine office and invited her to join his caravans into Baja! Otherwise, what
would the great Jimmy Smith be known as? (Choral gave Jimmy the nick name 'Grinning Gargoyle')... So much to share! Viva Baja!!
[Edited on 9-14-2007 by David K]
Mango - 9-13-2007 at 08:25 PM
David,
I, and I am sure many others, appreciate all you have done for the collective knowledge and preservation of the history of Baja. I did not know about
Choral until earlier today; but, now have her page bookmarked.
I am glad to here that her works are in good hands. You're website is a treasure and your input here is welcome. I thank you for it. We all have
our days and moments...
You may be guilty of one thing though.. inspiring me to ramble off into the desert with a smile on my face....
Thanks
David K - 3-27-2008 at 08:24 AM
Bumping up for the new Nomads... This is the same man Jimmy Smith was talking about in his unpublished chapter I posted here...