A view of Mission San Gabriel Arcángel in April 2005. The open stairway at the far right leads to the choir loft, and to the left is the six-bell campanario ("bell wall") that was built after the original bell structure, located at the far end of the church, toppled during the 1812 Wrightwood earthquake.
|
|
Location in Los Angeles County
|
|
Location | 428 South Mission Dr. San Gabriel, California 91776-1299 |
---|---|
Coordinates | 34°5′50.59″N 118°6′22.68″W / 34.0973861°N 118.1063000°WCoordinates: 34°5′50.59″N 118°6′22.68″W / 34.0973861°N 118.1063000°W |
Name as founded | La Misión del Santo Príncipe El Arcángel, San Gabriel de Los Temblores |
English translation | The Mission of the Saintly Prince The Archangel, St. Gabriel of the Tremblors |
Patron | Gabriel, Holy Prince of Archangels |
Nickname(s) | "Pride of the Alta California Missions" "Mother of Agriculture in California" |
Founding date | September 8, 1771 |
Founding priest(s) |
Pedro Benito Cambón and Angel de la Somera (1st); Father Presidente Junípero Serra (2nd) |
Founding Order | Fourth |
Military district | First |
Native tribe(s) Spanish name(s) |
Tongva Gabrieliño |
Native place name(s) | 'Iisanchanga, Shevaanga |
Baptisms | 7,825 |
Marriages | 1,18 |
Burials | 5,670 |
Secularized | 1834 |
Returned to the Church | 1859 |
Governing body | Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles |
Current use | Chapel / Museum |
Designated | 1971 |
Reference no. | #71000158 |
Reference no. | #158 |
Website | |
http://www.sangabrielmission.org |
The Mission San Gabriel Arcángel is a fully functioning Roman Catholic mission and a historic landmark in San Gabriel, California. The settlement was founded by Spaniards of the Franciscan order on "The Feast of the Birth of Mary," September 8, 1771, as the fourth of what would become 21 Spanish missions in California. San Gabriel Arcángel, named after the Archangel Gabriel and often referred to as the "Godmother of the Pueblo of Los Angeles", was designed by Antonio Cruzado, who hailed from Córdoba, Spain. Cruzado gave the building its strong Moorish architectural influence. The capped buttresses and the tall, narrow windows are unique among the missions of the California chain.
Mission San Gabriel was founded on September 8, 1771 by Fray Angel Francisico de Sonera and Fray Pedro Benito Cambon. The planned site for the Mission was along the banks of the Río de los Temblores (the River of the Earthquakes—the Santa Ana River). The priests chose an alternate site on a fertile plain located directly alongside the Rio Hondo in the Whittier Narrows. The site of the Misión Vieja (or "Old Mission") is located near the intersection of San Gabriel Boulevard and Lincoln Avenue in Montebello, California (known to the natives as Shevaanga). In 1776, a flash flood destroyed much of the crops and ruined the Mission complex, which was subsequently relocated five miles closer to the mountains in present-day San Gabriel (the native settlement of 'Iisanchanga). The Mission is the base from which the pueblo that became the city of Los Angeles was sent. On December 9, 1812 (the "Feast Day of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin"), a series of massive earthquakes shook Southern California. The 1812 Wrightwood earthquake caused the three-bell campanario, located adjacent to the chapel's east façade, to collapse. A larger, six-bell structure was subsequently constructed at the far end of the capilla. While no pictorial record exists to document what the original structure looked like, architectural historian Rexford Newcomb deduced the design and published a depiction in his 1916 work The Franciscan Mission Architecture of Alta (upper) California.