Inscription
Missionaries of the Franciscan order played an integral role in the administration of Spanish activities throughout Tejas (East Texas). In 1690, Father Damian Massanet (Mazanet) and Captain Alonso de Leon led an entrada to Tejas, and erected the first Spanish mission in the region, San Francisco de los Tejas.
The second mission was Mission Santisimo Nombre de la Maria. Both missions served to evangelize native communities, quell French intrusion, and chart the East Texas borderlands. Massanet attempted to foster positive relations with the local Caddo tribes, but the optimistic beginnings of the Presidio and all six missions did not last.
Deteriorated relationships, disease and harsh weather caused settlers to abandon the settlement in 1693. In 1716, Franciscan friar Isidro Felix de Espinosa and Captain Domingo Ramon led a second missionary expedition to Tejas. They established Presidio Nuestra Senora de los Dolores de los Tejas and six missions, three under the administration of Espinosa, and the remaining under the control of Father Antonio Margil de Jesus.
Despite tolerant coexistence, the missionaries did not find success converting the Caddo to Catholicism, and ultimately settlers fled in 1719 after harassment from French Lt. Philippe Blondel. A third and final effort to missionize East Texas took place under the Governor Don Jose de Azlor y Virto de Vera, the second Marquis de Aguayo.
With 500 soldiers, missionaries and laymen in tow, Aguayo resettled the Mission San Francisco de los Neches under the leadership of Espinosa. While the Franciscans never fully evangelized the Tejas, their expeditions legitimized Spanish presence in East Texas. (2015)
Location
Sources
More markers in Nacogdoches
Stephen Fuller Austin
Nacogdoches, TX
(November 3, 1793 - December 37, 1836) Republics often point to one person whose vision and leadership led to their creation.
Durst - Taylor House
Nacogdoches, TX
The family of Andres de Acosta, who settled in Nacogdoches in 1779, owned this property as early as 1809.
Halfway Inn (Flournoy - Granberry House)
Chireno, TX
This two-story log dwelling was built on the El Camino Real about 1840 by Samuel Flournoy for his wife Minerva (Wadington) and their...
"Los Ojos de Padre Margil" ("The Eyes of Father Margil")
Nacogdoches, TX
A Franciscan missionary who spent almost 50 years with the Indians of Central and North America, Father Antonio Margil de Jesus...
Site of the Mission Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe
Nacogdoches, TX
A Spanish outpost founded in 1716 by the pioneer Franciscan Antonio Margil de Jesus as a means of civilizing and christianizing the...
