San Antonio
CITY OF MISSIONS
By CLAUDE B. ANIOL
HASTINGS HOUSE
PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
COPYRIGHT, 1942, BY CLAUDE B. ANIOL
PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
2
3
San Antonio
From a village of Tejas Indians has grown the modern city of
San Antonio ... not completely modern, for there still remain many
evidences of the past, even though towering skyscrapers mark the city
as progressive and prosperous. San Antonio is filled with picturesque
charm and interesting contrasts. Off busy downtown streets one will
find in bold relief buildings, as well as customs, that date back to times
when the city was settled by Spanish conquistadors.
The Spanish, fearing encroachment in Texas by the French in
the late seventeenth century, set out to make good their original
claims by establishing forts and missions in East Texas. Captain Don
Domingo Teran de los Rios was named governor of the new Spanish
dominion and, in 1691 during a journey across Texas accompanied by
Father Damian Massanet, missionary and explorer, paused here at an
Indian Village. Mass was said on the site, a great many salutes were
fired, and the place was named “San Antonio”.
No permanent settlement was established, however, but later
other expeditions passing this way encamped here. The French explorer
and trader, Louis Juchereau de Saint Dennis, claiming his
interest to be the establishment of trade relations between Louisiana
and Mexico, stopped near the headwaters of the San Antonio River
in 1714, admired the charms of the place, and declared the location
to be an ideal spot for founding a permanent community. St. Dennis’
activity in the area aroused the Spanish authorities. Rivalry for the
possessions of Texas broke out anew.
In 1718 the Spanish viceroy, desiring a point midway between
the East Texas Missions and the Spanish Presidio of northern Mexico,
established here as a fortress the Royal Presidio of San Antonio de
Bejar, and founded the mission San Antonio de Valero (The Alamo).
4
This step marked the real founding of San Antonio. Within the
next thirteen years the building of four more missions got under way.
King Philip of Spain began colonization of the province, when in 1731
sixteen Canary Island families arrived and settled in San Antonio.
This settlement was known as the “Villa de San Fernando”, and it is on
the site of this original settlement that the Old San Fernando Cathedral
stands today. This little villa in the wilderness formed the
nucleus about which San Antonio gradually developed. Many prominent
citizens today are descendants of these early settlers.
Progress for the community during the next half century was
slow, for San Antonio was on trails seldom traveled and was brought
into little contact with the outside world. The missions established
earlier in the century prospered, expanded and then declined. In
1793-94 they were secularized and ceased to function as church settlements.
Then followed a period of waning Spanish religious and
political influence. In 1811 Mexico revolted against Spain and San
Antonio was occupied several times, alternately by Mexican Revolutionists
and Spanish Royalists.
In 1820 Moses Austin, a Connecticut Yankee living in Missouri,
left his home and traveled to San Antonio, seeking permission of the
Spanish authorities, still in power, to establish a colony of Americans
in Texas. After Austin’s death from hardships encountered during
his trip, approval was granted his plan and it was carried out by his
son, Stephen F. Austin. The years 1821 to 1836 saw a flood of Anglo-American
immigration pouring in.
Mexico achieved her independence from Spain in 1821 and San
Antonio and Texas came under the domination of the newly formed
Mexican government which put forth inconsistent confused policies.
The earlier liberal grants to the Anglo-Americans were questioned.
Following a series of revolutions begun in 1829, unscrupulous
rulers successfully seized power in Mexico. Their unjust acts and
despotic decrees led to revolution in Texas. The Texans formed an
army, and in November 1835 established a provisional government.
In 1836, at the former mission San Antonio de Valero, the
famous battle of the Alamo was fought. W. B. Travis, James Bonham,
James Bowie, David Crockett and some 180 Texans held off, from
5
February 23 to March 6, the Mexican army of more than 5000 troops
under General Lopez de Santa Anna. The Mexicans finally broke
over the mission walls on the morning of March 6 and bayoneted or
knifed the entire garrison. Santa Anna was decisively beaten by
Texans under General Sam Houston at the battle of San Jacinto
forty-six days later. Following this San Antonio came under the rule
of the newly formed Republic of Texas.
The year 1845 saw the annexation of Texas to the United States.
In 1861, during the war between the States, Texas seceded from the
Union. New times began in 1865 at the close of the Civil War. San
Antonio became the center of a cattle empire. Longhorns were driven
northward up the trails to market; mile-long wagon trains from
Mexico began to come through the city. The Southern Pacific Railroad
was constructed through this section in 1877. In 1898 the
Spanish-American War again stimulated military activity in San
Antonio and Colonel Theodore Roosevelt trained his Rough Riders
at the site now marked by Roosevelt Park.
And so until 1900 San Antonio had a colorful life. Then it
settled down to consistent growth and progress. Oil was discovered
near the city. Hundreds of new families came to make this their home
because of the natural beauty, the mild climate, the healthfulness and
business opportunities. But progress proceeds without dimming the
past and it is the past that draws thousands of visitors to this unique
city of picturesque contrasts.
Today, more than 2,000 acres are included in the city’s 60 parks
and plazas. One of the most complete city park systems in the nation,
Brackenridge Park embraces 320 acres. Among its interesting features
is a Zoo which ranks among the nation’s largest and best.
The San Antonio River which finds its source in numerous flowing
springs just north of Brackenridge Park and winds its way
through the business section of the city, has been transformed into a
beautiful Venetian canal with walkways below the street level along
banks lined with semi-tropical flowers and shrubs.
An important military center since its beginning, San Antonio
now possesses the largest permanent army post of the nation in Fort
Sam Houston, headquarters for the Eighth Corps Area. An arsenal
6
is located here, Normoyle Quartermaster Depot and Camps Stanley
and Bullis. San Antonio saw the birth of the air corps in 1910 and
today are located here the military flying fields of Randolph, the
“West Point of the Air”; Kelly, Duncan and Brooks.
Thus the past two hundred years have seen much colorful drama
enacted under the flags of France, Spain, Mexico, the Republic of
Texas, the Confederacy, and the United States. Each flag has left
mirrored a part of its own significance. The curious mixture of old
and new which is San Antonio has been recorded in the pages of
this book.
Claude B. Aniol
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One of the most famed historic shrines in the United States is the
Alamo, the old chapel of Mission San Antonio de Valero, founded in
1718. Here on March 6, 1836, a band of less than 200 Texas patriots
valiantly defending the Alamo against more than 5,000 troops
of Santa Anna, the Mexican general, were massacred. “Remember
the Alamo!” became the battle-cry of other Texans. Santa Anna
was later defeated by General Sam Houston’s forces at the battle
of San Jacinto.
Most of the earlier history of the Alamo, is shrouded in obscurity.
It was named in honor of St. Anthony of Padua and the Duke of
Valero, a Spanish viceroy. Although the mission was founded in
1718, the cornerstone of the chapel was not laid until 1744. Founded
for the purpose of Christianizing and educating the Indians, it later
became a fortress and was the scene of many conflicts prior to the
immortal siege of 1836. The ravages of time, of faulty construction,
of war and fire have destroyed all the buildings except the chapel,
and even this has been partially restored. According to some historians,
the name “Alamo” came from a company of soldiers bearing
the name who were once quartered there, and another claims it
was derived from a grove of cottonwood trees nearby, “Alamo”
being the Spanish word for cottonwood.
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Mission Conception, Nuestra Señora de la Purisima Conception de
Acuna, was established in 1731. It is probably the best preserved of
the Texas missions, despite the fact that when it was secularized in
1794 its lands were distributed among the Indians, settlers and
soldiers and it ceased to function as a church settlement.
Conception and the other missions of the San Antonio area are
built of adobe and porous gray rock called tufa. The walls of this
mission are 45 inches thick. The topmost roofs of the twin towers
are pyramidical and of stone, with smaller corner and center cap
stones.
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The interior plan of Conception is the cruciform. Original frescoes
of vegetable and mineral dyes are still visible.
The niche within the triangle
above the ornamental entrance of
Conception once held a statue.
The coat of arms and symbols of
the Order of St. Francis are carved
in the center of the arch. Here
and there can still be seen spots
of what were once vivid frescoes
adorning the mission front.
10
Conception from the south side presents the Moorish dome with
its wide stone serrations. The walls at the right are all that remain
of the mission kitchen, destroyed during the battle of Conception
in 1835.
A simple arcade runs south from
the entrance of Conception, connecting
at the right and far end
with the former living quarters of
the monks.
11
Mission San Jose (San Jose y San Miguel de Aguayo), acclaimed
“Queen of the Missions”, was established in 1720 by Father Margil,
one of the pioneer missionaries of New Spain. The first chapel was
completed in 1731, and the entire mission plan, in all of its glory,
by 1779. Time and neglect had caused many of the original mission
buildings to crumble away.
As it stands today, with restoration completed, San Jose presents
an interesting picture of the extensiveness of the original mission
plan. It was the most beautiful, the most prosperous and the best
fortified of the missions in New Spain. The mission building itself
faces west, with a frontage of 62 feet, and including the monastery
wing, is 241 feet long. The front walls are almost 5 feet thick and
the others but slightly less. The Mission is enclosed in a quadrangle
embracing more than six acres, protected by ramparts forming the
outer walls of the Indian quarters which were a part of the establishment.
Construction of the chapel took ten years, following a slow and
tedious process. As the main walls were built, earth was constantly
hauled in, the level being raised as the stones were piled higher.
When the roof line was reached, dirt for the dome was piled higher
and moulded so that each stone could be locked in place. With the
roof completed, the dirt was dug out from beneath and the balance
of the building finished. The single tower of San Jose rises to the
height of the average seven and one-half story building, and the
hemispheric dome of the church is almost as high.
12
The richly ornamented facade of San Jose is considered one of
this Mission’s most notable features. Those parts not originally
covered with carving were decorated with frescoes. The facade is
rich with beautiful stone carving and ornamentation that is still in
an excellent state of preservation despite the vandalism of relic
hunters during the many years the mission was deserted following
secularization.
13
The roof, dome and front of the walls of the original main chapel
of San Jose crashed during a storm in 1868. They remained in a
state of disrepair until 1937.
The lower portion of the facade of San Jose presents the work of the original sculptors. Above the
doors is carved our Lady of Guadalupe. Figures in niches on each
side of the doors, Saint Joachim and Saint Anne, are no longer
intact. The hearts above these two statues represent the hearts of
Mary and Joseph.
The window is framed in a wreath, above which
is a partially mutilated statue of St. Joseph. Saints Dominic and
Francis of Assisi are represented by statues on the right and left
of the window.
14
Two-story cloisters connect with the main building.
Adjoining the main church at San
Jose is a smaller chapel, which
can be entered through this sculptured
door. The original red cedar
doors still swing on the old wrought
iron hinges.
15
Padres of bygone days peacefully fingered their rosaries in this
picturesque cloister.
The “Rose Window” of the San
Jose Sacristy is said to be the work
of one Pedro Huizar who toiled
on it for five years. Legend has it
that an unhappy romance caused
the artist to pour his heart and
soul into the design.
16
This cloister garden at San Jose no doubt abounded in native
trees, flowers and shrubs just as it does today.
The old Mission Mill
(below) has been reconstructed on its original foundations.
17
Lookouts were provided above each of the four gates entering the
plaza at San Jose. Unfriendly Indians, however, seem to have seldom
bothered the mission.
Around three sides of the plaza are
reproduced the living quarters of the mission Indians.
18
MISSION SAN FRANCISCO de la ESPADA
The wrought
iron cross atop this mission is said to have been
made on the premises by the founders.
19
Mission San Francisco de la Espada was established in 1731, the main
church building in a plan including many other structures, a few of
which still remain. But most have long since been destroyed. One
wonders why the Mission, dedicated to St. Francis, founder of the
order of Franciscans, should be referred to as St. Francis of the
Sword. Tradition has it that the tower was built in the form of the
hilt of a sword. One’s imagination is to project the length of the
blade to complete the similarity to the whole weapon.
20
A number of the original statues of the Franciscans can still be seen
in the chapel of Mission Espada. These are hand carved of native
wood, with movable limbs. The heads have glass eyes and separately
cut teeth.
21
A fortified tower has thirty-six-inch walls. Holes for cannon muzzles
were created near the base. Musket loopholes can be seen higher.
The Moorish entrance of Mission Espada. A wooden cross
beside the door is a reminder of the efficacy of prayer.
22
Nestled in a thick grove of tall hackberry and pecan trees, stands
Mission San Juan Capistrano. Founded in 1731, this Mission is
less imposing than the others in the area. San Juan Capistrano followed
the plan typical of the other missions, with an enclosed area
containing all the buildings. Although in ruins, the original boundaries
and foundations can still be seen. Unlike other missions the
main buildings formed part of the rampart walls.
23
Of the chapel interior of San Juan Capistrano, the outer walls, the
three wooden statues and a few odd items represent the original
mission.
24
Looking through the entrance gate into “La Villita”, a restored
settlement of the oldest remaining residential section of the city. It
was started about 1722 shortly after the establishment of the presidio
San Antonio de Bejar.
25
The houses in La Villita are built of rock and adobe. The residents
were mostly soldiers, many of whom had intermarried with the
Indians, and their families. A feeling of class distinction was created
in 1731 with the coming of the Canary Islanders, who considered
themselves of noble lineage. The Islanders established their
own settlement and refused to have any relations with those living
in La Villita.
26
The Cos House in the Villita settlement is an outstanding example
of an early dwelling in San Antonio. Here General Perfecto de Cos
signed articles of capitulation on December 9, 1835, after the Texans
had captured San Antonio from the Mexican force.
27
High walls to give protection as well as privacy, enclose a patio of
the Cos House. The house itself is of adobe with very thick walls.
28
This picturesque old adobe house on Dawson Street is but a few
hundred yards from the Alamo and is typical of hundreds of similar
early homes still to be seen. At the door of this home is a
metate stone, still used by many Mexicans to grind their corn for a
masa mixture used in making tortillas.
29
Located in Military Plaza is the Spanish Governors’ Palace, a
restoration of the historic building used by the Spanish governors
and vice-governors of the province.
In the keystone over the entrance
is the Hapsburg coat of arms
bearing the date 1749. Philip V of
Spain, founder of the Canary
Island settlement in San Antonio
was a descendant and heir of the
Spanish Hapsburgs.
30
The arrangement and furnishing of the ten rooms in the Spanish
Governors’ Palace give a picture of home life in the better class
Spanish homes of the day. In such homes there was a private
chapel such as this room of the Blessed Virgin.
There are four fireplaces in the Palace, each different. According
to tradition, sticks of wood were placed on end in one corner of the
fireplace and the fair señoritas named each stick for a young señor.
He was worthy of her consideration if the stick burned evenly, but
if it burned in the middle and fell apart, he was not to be trusted.
31
This is the living room in the palace.
This interesting stairway led up to
the despensa, or storage pantry,
where food was stored.
32
In the cocina or kitchen of the Spanish Governors’ Palace the stove
is typical of the Spanish kitchen in which charcoal fanned to flame
by bellows, is used.
33
This comedor (dining room) in the Governors’ Palace was the scene
of many gay and festive affairs.
34
The garden of the Spanish Governors’ Palace, filled with subtropical
shrubbery and flowers, could have been no more beautiful
in the days when Spanish viceroys ruled within its walls. The
pebble mosaic walks form interesting patterns in the patio.
35
Moses Austin, born in Connecticut, lost in 1819 the fortunes he had
made in the South and West and two days before Christmas of the
following year arrived in San Antonio seeking permission from the
Spanish authorities to bring 300 families from the states to found
a colony. This bronze statue of Moses Austin, modeled by Waldine
Tauch, stands on the City Hall grounds facing the restored Spanish
Governors’ Palace, from whence came permission to establish his
colony.
36
Looking across Main Plaza to the San Fernando Cathedral. It is
here that the original Canary Islanders settled in 1731, naming the
spot “Plaza de las Islas”. San Fernando Cathedral was completed
in 1873 after a fire destroyed most of the original 1749 building.
Santa Anna used the church as an observation point during the
siege of the Alamo in 1836.
37
This Georgia Marble Cenotaph in memory of the heroes of the
Alamo stands opposite the Alamo fortress area. Its sides are inscribed
with the names of all who fell at the Alamo. Pompeo
Coppini was the sculptor. At the left is the Spanish Colonial Post
Office, at the right, the Medical Arts Building.
38
This sixteen room mansion built in 1859 for James Vance of Stebaune,
Ireland, stands as a splendid example of the Greek Revival
influence in architecture felt all through the South before the Civil
War. Robert E. Lee was often a guest here. The lumber and iron
railings were brought in from New Orleans and much of the materials
used in its construction were imported. It is said that the
water hydrants were of solid silver.
39
The San Antonio River is but a narrow meandering stream, with
headwaters just outside the northern city limits. In the twists and
turns it makes, crossing six miles of street, it passes beneath 42
bridges. The Indians of the locality used a word that characteristically
describes it as a “drunken-old-man-going-home-at-night”.
The beautiful San Antonio River is about twenty feet below
street level and the part that winds along twenty-one blocks of the
downtown business section has been beautified and transformed into
a Venetian-like canal. Stairways, each of a different design, lead
down from the bridges to the river walkways lined with trees and
shrubs, many of them semi-tropical. Here one can stop and relax
away from the noise of traffic on the upper street level.
40
In the early days, Old St. Mary’s College, established in 1852,
maintained a boat landing here and many of the boys who lived
along the river came to school in their boats.
41
On St. Mary’s Street, at a picturesque bend in the river, has been
preserved the home of John Twohig, erected in the early 1840’s.
Because he gave barrels of bread to the poor on each Saturday,
Twohig was given the name of “the breadline banker”.
42
One of the several boat landings along the San Antonio River.
Many of the buildings bordering the river have overhanging balconies
and a few street level business houses can be reached from
river bank entrances.
43
The Arneson River Theatre, a unique outdoor playhouse, can be
reached through this Villita Street entrance which adjoins the Cos
House, as well as from the river walks. Seen through the arch is a
portion of the stage.
44
From the Villita Art Gallery grounds a portion of the Arneson
River Theatre stage with the permanent back drop of a mission type
building and bell arches, can be seen at the right.
45
Tiers of grass-covered seats accommodating nearly a thousand people
form the seating arrangement of the Arneson River Theatre.
46
The Municipal Auditorium, built as a memorial to the World War
dead, has a seating capacity of over 6,000.
47
The little Block House pictured here was built in 1862 as a defense
against the Indians. It is located in San Pedro Park, an old council
ground of the Indians.
48
The Pioneers’-Trail Drivers’ Memorial in Brackenridge Park has
many interesting exhibits. The Texas Trail Drivers, an association
of men who made drives up the early cattle trails, have official
headquarters here.
49
Thomas Jefferson Senior High School, a modern adaptation of
Spanish Colonial architecture, is the largest of the city’s several
senior schools.
50
The longhorn, once a familiar sight on the ranges of Texas, have
probably made more history than any other breed of cattle. Of
Spanish origin, their first appearance in the southwest was probably
with Coronado’s expedition in 1541. These big lanky, raw-boned
animals, with a horn spread sometimes
reaching nine feet, have
long since been supplanted by improved
beef types. In the Brackenridge
Park Zoo can be seen a
number of these picturesque animals
which have now become
somewhat of a curiosity.
In Brackenridge Park Zoo, one of
the leading zoological gardens of
the nation, an African panorama
with natural pits for the animals
displays the most important specimens
in barless areas.
51
The Sunken Garden Theatre in Brackenridge Park. Here during
the summer in a magnificent setting are presented light operas and
concerts.
An abandoned rock quarry was converted into this Japanese
Garden.
52
Within the Quadrangle at Fort Sam Houston is the 88-foot clock
tower which, when it was constructed in the late seventies, also
served as a watch-tower for the fort.
53
Kelly Field, established during World War I, is the oldest advanced
flying training school in the nation. The dull gray frame hangars and
buildings erected at that time still constitute most of the field’s structures,
although in recent years
many fine permanent type buildings
like the Cadet Barracks pictured
here, have been erected.
Most of America’s great aviators
of the past quarter century received
their “wings” at Kelly Field.
Ground school study at the field
is now carried on in this new
Academic Building.
54
Randolph Field, “The West Point of the Air”, is one of the largest
military airdromes in the world, embracing a total area of approximately
two miles square with the building area occupying 475 acres
of this.
Here are located the primary and basic flying schools of the Air
Corps, U. S. Army. The key structure of the field is the Administration
Building pictured here, which has a tower 175 feet high,
topped by a powerful beacon to help orientate night fliers.
55
A portion of Randolph Field looking south from the top of the
Administration Building. The home in the foreground is that of the
commanding officer of the field.
Randolph Field from the air.
56
Two of the Cadet barracks at Randolph Field. The Spanish type of
architecture has been followed consistently in all the construction
at the field, with the exception of the hangars.
57
The Randolph Field Post Chapel.
58
$1.25
San Antonio
City of Missions
By
CLAUDE B. ANIOL
Travelers who have visited San Antonio
remember it as a city with a warm and personal
charm. It is one of the rare places which
embody and symbolize all that is America.
Founded by the Spanish in the late seventeenth
century, San Antonio has flown the
flags of France, Spain, Mexico, the Republic
of Texas, the Confederacy, and the United
States.
In the midst of an important city which is
a center of industry and commerce stand the
lovely 200-year-old missions, and the Alamo,
whose defense by Bowie, Crockett and their
fellow heroes gave birth to a great rallying
cry of our nation. Nearby are the aviation
stations of Randolph, Kelly, Brooks and
Duncan Fields, “the cradle of America’s air
might.”
Claude B. Aniol, one of America’s
foremost photographers, is eminently
qualified by his intimate knowledge
of San Antonio, his home, to portray
in superb photographs this dynamic
and busy, yet always picturesque
city.
American Guide Series
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Publishers New York, 18
Transcriber’s Notes
- Copyright notice provided as in the original—this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.
- Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.
- Moved some captions closer to the corresponding pictures; exchanged the captions on pages 32 and 33.
- In the text versions, delimited italicized text by _underscores_.