I’m going to tell you about mission that I chose. Where is it located? Why was this location chosen? When was this location chosen? When was it founded? How was the mission built? Which of the Indian tribes lived there before. Who founded the mission? How was the mission build? Not so parity it lucks lick parent gin made, but it is student gin med. My sister and I made the madly it my luck lack parent gin med is not so much work effort.
What is the mission known? What are some of the things that have happened there? How were the priests and the mission able to survive? What did they sell? What crops did they grow? What is happened at the mission today? What does the mission look like now?
My mission, Santa Inez, was dedicated to Saints Agnes. Mission Santa Inez is located in railing, which provides one of the loveliest things of any Mission. Santa Inez has been called the “Hidden Gem of the Missions.” On September 17, 1784 Father Estevan Tapias, successor to Father Serra, founded Mission Santa Inez Virgen y Mártir. Begun with the assistants of trained neophyte from neighbor from neighbor mission, this was than last mission to be established in southern California.
Fertile
lands supported 13,000 head of livestock and excellent crops yielding enough
food to export some to the mission Santa Barbara presidio. 450-mission workers
lived in Santa Barbara and, accent to than mission compound. They are of sugar
pine and were hauled from
coupled 30.
Begun with the assistance of trained neophytes from
neighboring mission,
they founded Mission Santa Inez. Mission Santa Inez is known for stories and
legends. Legend like Santa Inez vilely tallies stories of a waterfall. Mission
Santa Inez was built as a quadrangle. The priest got their water supply from
the mountains. First the community dug ditches, and then they placed comet
pipes in the ground. The pipes led
water from mountains lathe mission.
They grew wheat to make berried and suds and nuts. When
the Spaniards first arrived in Alta California many American Indian tribes were
already living there. The Chumash Indian called the first people. They were a non-violent people who
loved music and made it a part their everyday lives.
Though never entirely abandoned, regular maintenance at
the mission was neglected and by 1870 some buildings had collapsed. In 1904,
Father Alexin Debunker began a 20-year cleanup patching up the work done by the
Franciscan fathers. In 1972 the mission gardens were restored in the middle of
the original mission.