Contents
Foreword
Preface
The Invaders 1540-1542
The New Mexico: Preliminaries to Conquest 1542-1595
Oñate's Disenchantment 1595-1617
The "Christianization" of Pecos 1617-1659
The Shadow of the Inquisition 1659-1680
Their Own Worst Enemies 1680-1704
Pecos and the Friars 1704-1794
Pecos, the Plains, and the Provincias Internas 1704-1794
Toward Extinction 1794-1840
Epilogue
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
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The ruins of Cicúique
are still to be seen at the site where [Hernando de] Alvarado visited
it, close by the modern town of Pecos. This is one of the most historic
spots in the Southwest, for in every era since it was first seen by
Alvarado as the guest of Bigotes, it has occupied a distinctive position
in all the major developments of the region. It was the gateway for
Pueblo Indians when they went buffalo hunting on the Plains; a two-way
pass for barter and war between Pueblos and Plains tribes; a portal
through the mountains for Spanish explorers, traders, and buffalo
hunters; for the St. Louis caravan traders with Santa Fe; for pioneer
Anglo-American settlers; for Spanish and Saxon Indian fighters; for
Civil War armies; and for a transcontinental railroad passing through
the Southwest. Pecos deserves an historian.
Herbert E. Bolton,
Coronado, Knight of Pueblos and Plains, 1949
Another project definitely
planned was a study of the documentary history of Pecos and other Rio
Grande Pueblos. This, most unfortunately, was never done.
Alfred Vincent Kidder,
Pecos, New Mexico, 1958
So wrote Bolton and Kidder, the twin war gods of
Southwestern history and archaeology. Although neither of them produced
such a study himself, they were agreed. Pecos, that evocative "mess of
ruins" twenty-five miles southeast of Santa Fe, was worthy.
Here then is a beginning, an historical documentary
of the eastern fortress-pueblo from earliest Spanish contact in 1540, to
abandonment three hundred years later. It is largely narrative, written
in the active rather than the passive, largely biographical, concerned
more with people than with inert phenomena. I have tried throughout to
let the juices flow, the stuff of life that wells up in the documents,
convinced that we historians too often squeeze them out in the interest
of neat and dry, methodical monographs.
I have made every effort to get to the documents. In
no case have I cited in the notes an archival source without having seen
the Spanish myself, whether the original, a photographic copy, or a
transcript. Such an approach would have been hopeless without the
previous researches of France V. Scholes, Eleanor B. Adams, Fray
Angelico Chavez, and a score of others who charted pertinent islands in
the oceans of material. I have rechecked and revised others'
translationsnot because I mistrusted George P. Hammond and Agapito
Rey, or Charles Wilson Hackett and Charmion Clair Shelby, or Alfred
Barnaby Thomasbut rather because my closeness to Pecos gave me the
advantage of historical continuity. Knowing from other sources, for
example, that the Pecos had built a low, mud-plastered rock wall around
the entire perimeter of their building site was reason enough to
question the sudden appearance of a "stockade," even though that, in
another context, might have been an accurate rendering of the Spanish
word.
I have seasoned the text with quotations, with the
words of eyewitnesses and participants, of protagonists and antagonists,
recognizing at the same time that the Pecos Indians themselves, when
they are allowed to speak at all, do so only in a foreign tongue. In
that sense, the story is one-sided. Forewarned by anthropologists that
the Pecos of 1540 or 1740 were likely very different from their
linguistic cousins, or even their own descendants who live at
Jémez pueblo today, I have attempted no reconstruction of Pecos
social organization. For those who would do so, blending the data of
artifacts and the written record, full citation of sources will be found
in the notes.
There are scenes that would delight a script writer:
the entrance of Alvarado in 1540, bold but wary, as two thousand Pecos
watch from the rooftops; Gov. Diego de Peñalosa's vain bullying
of the Franciscan superior he had come to arrest in the mission cloister
one dark night in 1663; the devil-may-care, three-day burlesque of a
bishop's visitation by a Pecos carpenter in 1760; and the solemn
harangues of Comanche warriors gathered at the Pecos peace conference of
1786 to embrace Juan Bautista de Anza, to smoke, and to barter.
There are themes, too, that run through the story
from beginning to end. None is more persistent than factionalism, the
fatal flaw that festered to a head in 1696, when Felipe Chistoe, one
Pecos, delivered to Diego de Vargas the severed head, hand, and foot of
young Caripicado, another Pecos. Still, despite the unrelenting decline
in population and the violent rift that made them their own worst
enemies, the Pecos people never did succumb to cultural submergence. The
Pecos bull still cavorts at Jémez.
This book is dedicated to Eleanor B. Adams, generous
scholar and kind friend who first pointed out to me the historic trail
to Pecos. I am much indebted to Em Hall of present-day Pecos for
relating to me the story of the pueblo land grant from the time John
Ward peddled it in 1872 to date. His lively study of the subject will
soon be published.
Jerry L. Livingston drew many of the illustrations
and the maps, and Gary G. Lister took many of the photographs. Together
they restored the 1758 Miera map. To them, and to a score of others in
the National Park Service, my wholehearted thanks for the opportunity to
tell the Pecos story. It has been good fun.
John L. Kessell
February, 1977
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