4,706
edits
No edit summary |
|||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
* ''Catálogo Archivo Histórico de Estado Sonora,'' 4 Vols. by Cynthia Radding de Murrieta and María Lourdes Torres Chavéz. (Hermosilla, Mexico: Centro Regional de Noroeste, 1974-7). Holdings of parish archives. | * ''Catálogo Archivo Histórico de Estado Sonora,'' 4 Vols. by Cynthia Radding de Murrieta and María Lourdes Torres Chavéz. (Hermosilla, Mexico: Centro Regional de Noroeste, 1974-7). Holdings of parish archives. | ||
* ''Catálogo de Archivo de las Parroquia de la Purisima Concepcion de los Alamos, 1685-1900'' by Cynthia Radding de Murrieta and María Lourdes Torres Chavéz. (Hermosilla, Mexico: Centro Regional de Noroeste, 1976). These registers are available on microfilm at Arizona State University, Tempe. | * ''Catálogo de Archivo de las Parroquia de la Purisima Concepcion de los Alamos, 1685-1900'' by Cynthia Radding de Murrieta and María Lourdes Torres Chavéz. (Hermosilla, Mexico: Centro Regional de Noroeste, 1976). These registers are available on microfilm at Arizona State University, Tempe. | ||
* | * ''Documents of Southwestern History: A Guide to the Manuscript Collections of the Arizona Historical Society'' by Charles C. Colley. (Tucson: Arizona Historical Society, 1972). | ||
* ''Friars, Soldiers, and Reformers: Hispanic Arizona and the Sonora Mission Frontier, 1767-1856'' by John L. Kessell. (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1976). | |||
* ''Spanish Frontier in the Enlightened Age: Franciscan Beginnings in Sonora and Arizona'' by Kieran McCarty. (Washington, DC: Academy of American Franciscan History, 1981). | |||
* ''Seventeenth-Century Spanish Missions of the Western Pueblo Area'' by Watson Smith. (Tucson: tucson Corral of the Westerners, 1970). Arizona, New Mexico, and northern Mexico make up the Western Pueblo. | |||
== History == | == History == | ||
Franciscans began establishing Spanish missions in northeastern Arizona in 1629. The Jesuits established missions in southeast Pima in 1692. A chain of missions, known as the ''Pimería Alta'', dotted the Arizona-Sonora frontier. Arizona became a part of Mexico in 1810, and became a U.S. territory in 1863.<ref>Christina K. Schaefer, ''Genealogical encyclopedia of the colonial Americas : a complete digest of the records of all the counties of the Western Hemisphere'' (Baltimore, Maryland : Genealogical Publishing Company, c1998), 561. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/39622039 WorldCat (Other Libraries)]; {{FHL|822639|item|disp=FHL book 929.11812 D26 1998}}</ref> | Franciscans began establishing Spanish missions in northeastern Arizona in 1629. The Jesuits established missions in southeast Pima in 1692. A chain of missions, known as the ''Pimería Alta'', dotted the Arizona-Sonora frontier. Arizona became a part of Mexico in 1810, and became a U.S. territory in 1863.<ref>Christina K. Schaefer, ''Genealogical encyclopedia of the colonial Americas : a complete digest of the records of all the counties of the Western Hemisphere'' (Baltimore, Maryland : Genealogical Publishing Company, c1998), 561. [http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/39622039 WorldCat (Other Libraries)]; {{FHL|822639|item|disp=FHL book 929.11812 D26 1998}}</ref> |
edits