Charts the histories of the missions of San Francisco de Asis, Santa Clara, San Jose, San Rafael Arcangel, and San Francisco Solano, and briefly describes life among the Ohlone and Coast Miwok Indians before the arrival of the Spaniards.
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Grade 4-6?Welcome additions to curriculum support materials on California history. All three titles are attractive, balanced, and age appropriate. Each volume begins by placing the founding of the missions by Spanish Franciscan priests in a historical context. Spain's expansionist ambitions in the New World are discussed. Then a picture is painted of the land, flora and fauna, and indigenous Native American life in California before the European onslaught. A substantial section is devoted to each of the featured missions, with discussions of its origins, construction, daily functioning, and ultimate demise as an outpost of the Spanish empire. Respectful attention is given to the exploitation of the mission Indians known as "neophytes." The final portions of each volume describe the secularization of the missions in the mid 1800s, subsequent deterioration, and ultimate renovation in this century. Each text is richly illustrated with full-color and black-and-white annotated photographs and drawings. Frequent insets effectively highlight various points mentioned in the main text. Although these titles are not by any means exhaustive treatments, they do fill a gap in material on this subject for middle elementary grades. Librarians will still want to keep Linda Lyngheim's The Indians and the California Missions (Langtry, 1990) and The California Missions (Sunset-Lane, 1979; o.p.) for supplemental and more in-depth information.?Rosalyn Pierini, San Luis Obispo City-County Library, CA
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Gr. 4^-7. The California Missions series, a six-book set, documents the development of 21 Spanish missions and examines their impact on the indigenous cultures. In this volume, White chronicles the missions of San Francisco de Asis, Santa Clara de Asis, San Josede Guadalupe, San Rafael Arcangel, and San Francisco Solano. At the outset, White reminds readers of the pitfalls of telling the history of the California missions, with the debate centering around whether the mission system was a detriment or an asset to the Native Americans of the region. The balanced account reveals that though missions created successful farms and ranches and taught newly converted Christians useful new skills, many Native Americans involved with them longed to return to their old lifestyles, and many died from diseases carried by the Spanish and from malnutrition. Still others were mistreated and beaten, supposedly so that they would become better Christians. The full-color format is inviting, replete with period etchings, paintings, maps, and informative sidebars, as well as contemporary photos of the sites. Two other volumes are listed in the Series Roundup in this issue. Shelley Townsend-Hudson
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