Humana and Leyva expedition

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Umana and Leyba, Spanish colonists, made an unauthorized expedition to the Great Plains in 1594 or 1595. An Indian, Jusepe Gutierrez, was the only survivor of the expedition.

Background

In 1593, Antonio Gutierrez de Umana (also spelled Humana) recruited Jusepe in Culiacan, Mexico to join him on an entrada (expedition) to what would become New Mexico. At the time, the Viceroy of New Spain was planning to authorize an official expedition and colonization of New Mexico. The expedition of Umana and his partner, Francisco Leyba de Bonilla (also spelled Leyva) was therefore illegal.

After recruiting Jusepe, Umana and Leyba found additional Spanish and Indian soldiers and servants in Santa Barbara, Chihuahua and proceeded onward into New Mexico. They remained there about one year among the Pueblo Indians near the Rio Grande. At the time there were no Spanish settlers in New Mexico, although there may have been other fortune-seekers and slavers living among the Pueblos.

The expedition

Jusepe told the story of the expedition to Juan de Onate.[1]

Umana and Lebya and an unknown number of Spanish and Indian soldiers and servants left New Mexico to explore eastwards, presumably in search of rich kingdoms which were rumored to be just over the horizon. Their route led them by the Indian pueblo at Pecos and out onto the Great Plains of Texas where they met the Vaquero (Apache) Indians. They found numerous rancherias, some of them abandoned, and herds of bison, he American buffalo. Jusepe said they found abundant water in many marshes, springs, and arroyos as well as great numbers of plum trees and nuts. At some point they turned toward the north. The further they went the more abundant were bison. After traveling 45 days, they crossed two big rivers and beyond was a very large Indian settlement ten leagues long (about 26 miles) and two leagues wide. One of the two rivers flowed through the settlement.

Jusepe gave a brief description of the "Great Settlement." The houses were built on a frame of stakes with straw roofs. They were built close together, separated by narrow pathways and, in some places, between the houses were fields of maize, pumpkins, and beans. The people of the settlement received the Spanish in peace and provided them with food. They depended upon buffalo hunting as well as agriculture.

Leaving the settlement, three days toward the north they came upon a "multitude of buffalo," but no more Indian settlements. Discord between the leaders broke out. Umana spent an afternoon and morning in his tent apparently writing up his account of the dispute and then sent a soldier, Miguel Perez, to summon Leyba. Leyba came to Umana's tent, dressed in shirt and breeches only. Umana "drew a butcher knife which he carried in his pocket, unsheathed it, and stabbed Captain Leyba twice." Leyba died and was quickly buried. Then Umana showed "some papers" to his men. He said that because Leyba had threatened to give him a "beating with a stick" he had killed him.

The expedition continued, reaching a very large river ten days beyond the Great Settlement. The river was one-fourth of a league wide (about two-thirds of a mile), deep and sluggish. "They did not dare to cross it." It was here that five of the Indians, including Jusepe, deserted . Three became lost on the plains and Indians killed another. Jusepe was taken captive by Apaches and lived with them for a year until he escaped or was set free and made his way back to New Mexico. By this time (1596) Onate and a large group of settlers had arrived in New Mexico and Jusepe took up residence at the San Juan Bautista Pueblo. On February 16, 1599, Onate interviewed him concerning the Umana and Leyba entrada.

According to later accounts from Indians, Umana and the other members of the expedition were killed by Indians 18 days beyond the Great Settlement.[2]

Where were the "Great Settlement" and the "great river?"

In 1601, Jusepe guided Juan de Onate, the founder of New Mexico and governor of the new colony, on a large expedition to the Plains. He took Onate to the same area where he had gone with Umana and Leyba. They found the Great Settlement which was probably located either at the site of present day Wichita, Kansas or along the Walnut River in Arkansas City, Kansas. Archaeological discoveries favor the Walnut River.[3] The people of the Great Settlement were almost certainly Wichita Indians whom Onate later called Rayados.

The large river where Jusepe deserted the expedition may have been the Missouri, perhaps near Kansas City. The Missouri is about 500 yards wide at this point, not as wide as Jusepe estimated, but the largest river that could be reached in about 10 days travel from the Great Settlement.[4] This would be the first known visit of Europeans to the Missouri River.

What does not fit very well with this possible route is Jusepe's comment that three days beyond the Great Settlement that they came upon "such a multitude of buffalo that the plain - which was level, for there are no mountains -- was so covered with them that they were startled and amazed at the sight." If the Great Settlement were at Wichita or Arkansas City, three days travel toward the Missouri River would place the expedition in the rocky and rolling Flint Hills—not a plain. Moreover in historic times buffalo were most abundant in the shorter grass prairies west of Longitude 97 rather than the tall grass prairies to the east. Thus, the contradictions in Jusepe's account will continue to incite speculation.

Conceivably the "great river" was the Kansas which during high water would have been deep and wide. The Platte River in Nebraska has also been suggested, but that would require a major recalculation of the route of Umana, Leyba, and Onate and the location of the Great Settlement.[5]

References

  1. ^ Hammond, George P. and Rey, Agapito, eds. Don Juan de Onate, Colonizer of New Mexico, 1595-1692. Albuquerque: U of NM Press, Vol.5, 1953, 416-419.
  2. ^ Bolton, Herbert Eugene, Spanish Exploration in the Southwest, 1542-1706. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916, 261
  3. ^ Vehik, Susan C. "Onate's Expedition to the Southern Plains: Routes, Destinations, and Implications for Late Prehistoric Cultural Adaptations, Plains Anthropologist, Vol. 31, No, 111, 1986, 13-33
  4. ^ Washington University News Room, 9 Nov 2006; http://news.wustl.edu/news/Pages/8070.aspx
  5. ^ Bolton, 201

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