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The Journal of San Diego History
Spring 1984, Volume 30, Number 2
Contents of This Issue
Book Notes
Raymond Starr, Book Reviews Editor
The Penultimate Mission: A Documentary History of San Rafael,
Arcangel. Compiled and Edited by Francis J. Weber. Hong Kong: Libra Press
Limited. 1983. 113 Pages. Price Unavailable.
The thirteenth volume in Francis J. Weber's series on the
California missions concerns San Rafael, which was founded in 1817 as a
"hospital mission" to provide a healthier climate for the natives than that
found in what later became known as San Francisco. The mission had 1140 Indians
in residence by 1828, but declined after the Mexican Revolution, and after the
American takeover, virtually dropped out of sight. Indeed, one writer noted:
"From this time [1846] the ex-Mission had no history." Perhaps because the
mission's existence was brief and it had little history, this volume is much
shorter than others in the series. It also has very little contemporary or
primary material. Indeed, only nine of the 113 pages deal with sources
originating prior to 1900. Even more than in other volumes, the selections are
journalistic, with a considerable sprinkling of poetry. As is the pattern for
the series, there is no documentation, no index and no bibliography.
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