Every city has a backstory, a tale about its creation
and the people responsible for putting it on the map. This is a tale
about the people who helped found the City of Angels way back in 1781- The Los Angeles Pobladores.
Forty four settlers and four soldiers were brought from Sonora and Sinaloa, Mexico to Las Californias to help build the future home of Hollywood, from 11 families personally selected by the Governor of Las Californias, Felipe de Neve.
California
historian William Mason shared the story of Los Angeles' founding
families with the Los Angeles Times way back in 1975, and yet this tale
of how the large and influential city of L.A. began with forty four
souls is little known to this day.
The city’s Hispanic origins are
common knowledge, but the fact that over half of the settlers were of
African descent, and only a few were actually Spanish, is quite
surprising.
The racial diversity found in the group reveals the
progressive nature of the Spanish regarding citizens of African descent,
in a time when the United States had only recently abolished slavery.
You can read more of William Mason's research in this PDF entitled Los Angeles Under The Spanish Flag, with research and findings which were reiterated in Mason's obituary posted by the Los Angeles Times after his passing in 2000.
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