
Vanessa Ann Gunther
Vanessa Ann Gunther holds a Ph.D. in Native American History from the University of California, Riverside. She has lectured in American History at California State University, Fullerton, and Cerritos ...
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Ambiguous Justice
Native Americans and the Law in Southern California, 1848–1890
Vanessa Ann Gunther
In 1769, Spain took action to solidify control over its northern New
World territories by establishing a series of missions and presidios
in what is now modern California. To populate these remote
establishments, the Spanish crown relied on Franciscan priests,
whose
role it was to convince the Native Californian population to abandon
their traditional religious practices and adopt Catholicism. During
their tutelage, the Indians of California would be indoctrinated
into
Spanish society, where they would learn obedience to the church and
crown. The legal system of Southern California has been
used by Anglo populations as a social and demographic tool to
control
Native Americans. Following the Mexican-American War and the 1849
Gold Rush, as California property values increased and
transportation
corridors were established, Native Americans remained a sharply
declining presence in many communities, and were likely to be
charged
with crimes. The sentences they received were lighter than those
given to Anglo offenders, indicating that the legal system was used
as a means of harassment. Additionally, courts chronicled the
decline
of the once flourishing native populations with each case of
drunkenness, assault, or rape that appeared before the bench.
Nineteenth-century American society had little sympathy for the
plight of Indians or for the destruction of their culture. Many
believed that the Indians of Southern California would fade from
history because of their inability to adapt to a changing world.
While many aspects of their traditional culture have been
irreparably
lost, the people of southern California are, nevertheless,
attempting
to recreate the cultures that were challenged by the influx of
Europeans and later Americans to their lands.
American Indian Studies Series
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Paperback Edition:
Bibliography, indexWorld Rights(978-0-87013-779-2)
256 pp., 6 " x 9 ", October
2006 paper, $29.95
0-87013-779-4 978-0-87013-779-2
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