Jacinto de Barrios y Jáuregui
Jacinto de Barrios y Jáuregui | |
---|---|
Governor of the Spanish Colony of Texas | |
In office 1751–1759 | |
Preceded by | Pedro del Barrio Junco y Espriella |
Succeeded by | Ángel de Martos y Navarrete |
Governor of Coahuila (1st time) | |
In office February 1759 – September 10 of 1762 | |
Preceded by | Ángel Martos y Navarrette |
Succeeded by | Lorenzo Cancio Sierra y Cienfuegos |
Governor of Coahuila (2nd time) | |
In office December 10 of 1765 – February 6 of 1768 | |
Preceded by | Diego Ortiz Parrilla |
Succeeded by | José Costilla y Terán |
Personal details | |
Profession | Military and Governor of Coahuila and Texas |
Jacinto de Barrios Leal y Jáuregui was a Spanish soldier who served as Governor of the Province of Coahuila (1759–1762; 1765–1768) and Texas (1751–59).
Career
Jacinto de Barrios Leal y Jáuregui was a native of Cadiz (in Andalusia, Spain).[1]
Around the year 1718, Jacinto started to serve the Spanish Crown as a soldier and was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of cavalry while he participated in the campaigns developed against Italia. He was appointed governor and Captain General of Texas in 1751, arriving at Los Adaes in June of that year. During his government, between other actions, he founded the Mission Santa Cruz de San Sabá and the Presidios of San Agustín de Ahumada and San Sabá. In addition, he moved the San Xavier missions and San Francisco Xavier Presidio to the San Marcos River.[2][3] In 1751, in early his term as governor, three Frenchmen were found to have settled along the Trinity River to trade with the Native Americans. The Spanish authorities arrested and expelled them from the colony.[4]
During the summer of 1756, Barrios was appointed governor of Coahuila, while his partner, Angel Martos y Navarrete, obtained the governorship of Texas. The men exchanged their territories to govern to allow Barrios stay in Texas longer (until 1759) so he could finish the construction the Presidio of San Agustín de Ahumada and establish a civil settlement in the near places to presidio. Barrios made a great fortune in the fur trade with several Native American people such as the Bidais and Orcoquizas, through a strict control of indigenous industry; So, he bought French goods in Natchitoches, Louisiana, and sold leathers to the indigenous population of place. Its practice of smuggling with the French Louisiana became Barrios in a very criticized figure in Texas, being the most criticized governor of the province (in this time, Texas was a province). He ended his term in Texas in 1759.[5]
In this year he left Texas and was appointed Governor of the Province of Coahuila, ruling the province from February 1759 till September 10, 1762. Later, he was reappointed in December 10, 1765, finishing his term February 6, 1768.[7]
References
- ^ Berrueto González, Arturo (2005). "BARRIOS Y JÁUREGUI, Jacinto de". Nuevo Diccionario Biográfico de Coahuila 1550-2005 (in English: New Biographical Dictionary of Coahuila 1550-2005) (second edition). Gobierno del Estado de Coahuila, ed., Saltillo. Page 710.
- ^ Pichardo, José Antonio (1941). Pichardo's Treatise on the Limits of Louisiana and Texas: An Argumentative Historical Treatise with Reference to the Verification of the True Limits of the Provinces of Louisiana and Texas. University of Texas Press.
- ^ a b "BARRIOS Y JAUREGUI, JACINTO DE," Handbook of Texas Online. Accessed April 10, 2013. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
- ^ Pichardo, José Antonio (1941). Pichardo's Treatise on the Limits of Louisiana and Texas: An Argumentative Historical Treatise with Reference to the Verification of the True Limits of the Provinces of Louisiana and Texas. University of Texas Press.
- ^ Bolton, Herbert Eugene (1915). Texas in the Middle Eighteenth Century: Studies in Spanisch Colonial History and Administration. University of California Press.
- ^ Carlos E. Castaneda (1976). Our Catholic Heritage in Texas (7 vols). Austin: Von Boeckmann-Jones, 1936–58; rpt., New York: Arno.
- ^ a b Provinces of New Spain