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Show sae 7 © ag oe te igae ee = - = Bart ete he -— ¥ ee ee ee ed a ee rie er er aso conremes nrerrs 218 THE SPANISH ARCHIVES OF N EW MEXICO THE SPANISH ARCHIVES wounded Thadeo Romero, both citizens of the settlement of Fuenclara. 477 478 479 DE Fined 30 pesos. 6f LA CRUZ, PEDRO, Indian. Record of proceedings in the case against him for attempting to desert to the Comanches. Sentenced to five years hard labor at the ‘‘obraje’’ of the alealde mayor of Socorro del Sur. This Indian had fled taking with him an Indian woman. Socorro del Sur was a smal] pueblo on both sides of the Rio Grande below El Paso del Norte. ed by Governor Otermin and was populated It was foundby Piro Indians who fled from New Mexico with Otermin at the time of the uprising of 1680. A mission was established there by the Franciscans in 1689. NARANJO, JOSEPH. March 13, 1747. Appointment of as captain of the ‘‘Gente de Guerra’ of Santa Fe. He succeeded his father , Joseph, who held the Same position under severa] governors and captains-general. This may mean the office of is an office in the pueblo form of ‘‘War Captain,’’ which government; it probably means a captain of militia. The Naranjo family are descended from this man’s father who was one of the first settlers of Santa Cruz de la Cafiada. af (a) Letter to the governor of New Mexico , March 13, 1747, accompanying an index to royal orders. ie NEW 1747. SPAIN, Mezico. Supreme Government of. June 22, Letter and despatch ordering a detachment of 30 soldiers, 40 settlers, and 70 Indian auxiliaries, with a commander, to join the command of Capta tores de Celis for a campaign againstin Don Alonzo Victhe Apaches. This campaign was to be undertaken from the four presidios of Guevavi, Fronteras, J anos, and El Paso del Norte. ~Guevavi was a So baipuri sion established in 1790 on Bf settlement and a Spanish misthe Rio Santa Cruz, below Tubac, near the Present site of Nogal es, Arizona. Three - years after the campaign above ordered it was attacked by the Apaches, destroyed and abandoned; later it was reoccupied but was finally aband oned as Tumacacori became the headquarters of the mission. Janos was named for a tribe the Apaches of that name derivedof Apaches, or it may be their appellation from the presidio, which was located in the northwestern part of the present State of Chihuahua. Bandelier says that the 7 were — Janos Apaches OF NEW MEXICO 2 219 ip oaof the Mescalero, and up Pak Lipan, sane other tribes, Sumas, Opatas, a Fronteras was located in the northeastern portion of the present State of Sonora. PINO, DON JUAN pet. June 19-August 9, 1747. | Proceedings in matter of complaint against two apwire Indians, who lived at the ‘‘Paraje de Belen,’’ for i ceny of goods, etc., from the house of Don Juan | ig del Castillo at San Clemente. oe TesOnee was situate in the present county < cia. The grant of land of that name located there w made to Ana de Sandoval in the year 1716. ROIBAL, MARIA pe. November 15, 1747. a Power of attorney by her and her son, Don Joseph HERES to Don Juan Felipe Moreno, relative to estate o i ceased husband. SANTISTIEVAN, ANTONIO. November 24, 17 - 7: 6) : Proceedings in his trial for having permitted peer adh a captive Yute Indian, while serving as a a foes turn from a campaign against the Yutes and Chagt ve Banished for one year to the Paraje of mt Se. A ‘‘Paraje’’ was a stopping place or small se CODALLOS 1747. y RABAL, JOACHIN. September, the Report of the proceedings, etc., in the oe cay to command of the captain, Don AlonzoPresb against the Gila Apaches and their confe yor a ween This explains the delay occasioned by the s from the Abiqui a by the Yutes, which prevented the 3 the other Fe garrison from joining the penne Om 1747, and three presidios on the Rio Mimbres in ila calc clea foe Santa gives orders for the immediate marching 0 h Isleta, December 6, 1747; also a report of the at of the ma 4f soldiers to Isleta up to December pene eat ithe Gent: The Gentiles were the wild or hostilé tribes. tured from zaros were those who had been purchased ns A Spaniards the hostile or predatory tribes and settled in villages along the Rio Grande. y established at There was eblo of GentAbiquiti, about this time (1747-1748) & pu Gace zaros; there was also one at Tome eT ecient (Hes county and another near the present A 1748 and Bandelem). See Villasefior, Teatro Am. 416,- 54. 1892. her in Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 197, 1890; 1v, 9%, de |