Friday, September 25, 2020

 PEDRO ANTONIO DE ARRIQUIVAR

 MILITARY CHAPLAIN AT THE PRESIDIO SAN AGUSTIN DEL TUCSON

Pedro Antonio de Arriquivar was born in 1745 probably in Ceanuri (today Zeanuri), Vizcaya, Spain, son of Bentura de Arriquibar and Magdelena de Leguizamon. He was baptized on 19 December 1745 at Santa Maria or Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion, Ceanuri, Vizcaya Spain.[1] Pedro had an older sister, Maria Antonia de Arrquibar, who was baptized in the same church on 24 September 1738.[2] The Vizcaya province is in the Basque region of Spain, along its northern coast.

 

On 29 May 1770, Arriquibar was among 44 Franciscan friars who arrived in Mexico from Spain. Members of the Jesuit order had been expelled from the New World in 1768, after the Spanish monarch decided that the Jesuits were too strongly aligned with the Papacy and were acting autonomous.

 

Arriquibar was to be assigned to a mission in southern California, so he traveled from Mexico City to the town of Tepic in October 1770. He and the other missionaries waited for three months for the sailing vessel San Carlos to take them to southern California. The vessel’s rudder broke and they ended up in Manzanillo, Colima. From there most of the friars walked to Santa Cruz and were picked up by the ship Concepcion, which delivered them to Loreto on the Baja on 24 November 1771.[3]

           

He was appointed to the Mission of Santa Rosalia deMulege in Baja California, where he remained for a year. 

Mision Santa Rosalia de Mulege.


The Franciscans relinquished control of the Baja California missions to the Dominicans and Arriquibar set sail for Loreto on 19 October 1772, arriving in San Blas 11 days later.[4]

          

Sometime in the next two years he was sent north to Sonora. On 26 February 1775 he performed a baptism at Tumacácori. He remained there until at least 27 March 1780.[5] He then moved to San Ignacio de Caborca in modern-day Sonora, where he was stationed from 16 April 1780 until 30 November 1794. He apparently became a military chaplain at this time, signing in his will that he had received special permission on 10 February 1784 to dispose of his goods he received as chaplain as he wished.[6]

           

Arriquibar arrived in Tucson by 21 January 1797. One of his first tasks was to draw up an inventory of the furnishings of the military chapel.[7]

 

Silver

 

A regular silver chalice with its paten and spoon

A new silver monstrance sent from Mexico by Captain Don Pedro Allande y Saabedra

A censor with its incense vessel and spoon

Some wine and water cruets with their plate and a handbell

 

White cloths

 

Two well-used albs of fine linen with their amices

Two altar cloths of Brabant linen

Two pairs of double corporals

One short-sleeved sobrepellice with its consecrated stone and four purificators.

 

Chasubles

 

Two regular chasubles of all colors

One black chasuble with stole, etc.

 

One white cope with its stole

One black cope with its stole

An antependium of all colors with its pall

Another black antependium with its appropriate pall

One pallium with which to administer the viaticum

One Altar with one small Holy Christ

Two bronze candlesticks

One box where the vestments are kept

One adobe confessional with wooden lattice

 

  

Monstrance

         

Arriquibar spent the next 23 years as the Presidio chaplain.[8] In April 1801, he was at Arizpe. On 29 August 1813, Arriquivar escorted Francisco Xavier Dias out of the Presidio chapel where he had taken refuge after murdering his wife.[9] Rosters of soldiers taken in Tucson were often signed by him. They provide only a few details of his life. He was sick between October 1816 and January 1817.[10] He recovered and was stationed at Tucson until his death, which occurred after he prepared his will on 17 September 1820.[11] He left his estate to his godson Teodoro Ramirez.

 

An inventory was taken of his estate.[12]

 

House with a parlor and two rooms, a storeroom, enclosure in rear of the back yard

-a table and chairs

-a statue of Our Lady of Sorrows

-A Roman cassock

-a rosary from Jerusalem

-four Roman breviaries

-a book of sermons on parchment

-11 Latin books bound in yellow pasteboard

-Four Latin books bound in pasteboard

-Six large sermon books on parchment

-30 books bound in parchment and two without bindings

-eight ordos in Latin

-A package of manuscript sermons

-A wood mattress much worn

- two Pima sheets much worn and a pillow

-one black blanket and cot with horsehair rope lacing

-a palm leaf hat bound with cotton duck

-some drawers, a shirt, some breeches of cotton duck, and some hose

-a large handkerchief and some shoes

-a mantle of blue wool cloth, a large snuff box, a snuff canister, and some glasses

a razor case, two razors and a hone

-an inkwell and two small bottles

-four pottery wine jars

-a saddle with saddle skirts, horn bags, sweat leathers, and spurs

-a metal knife and fork and spoon

-a tin can

-a candlestick and snuffers

-seven saddle horses and one mule

-five mules

-fifteen mares and their stallion

-about 40 head of cattle

-596 pesos, three reales, which remained ...after deducting 200 pesos...for the stipulated pious works and the redemption of captives in Jerusalem

 

Spanish amphora, used for wine or oil (Arizona State Museum collection, Photo by Robert Ciaccio).

 

In 1855, an inventory of the military chapel of the Presidio San Agustin del Tucson was prepared, prior to its contents being packed up and taken to Imuris. The document reveals that Arriquibar had enlarged the number of religious artifacts in the chapel (the last military chaplain was expelled from Mexico in 1828 when all foreign-born priests were exiled from the country.

 

The Spanish-language document was translated by Fred McAninch and Sergio Castro-Reino.[13]

 

Tucson company

 

Inventory of the sacred vessels, priestly ornaments which are in the military chapel of the company.

 

1 chest with the following [contents]

 

Wrought Silver

 

1 gilded silver monstrance

1 silver chalice, paten and spoon

1 gilded ciborium

1 small plate and cruets of silver [a set]

1 small silver bell

1 censer and boat of silver and 1 silver baptismal shell

2 deteriorated missals

2 manuals [rituals]

6 chasubles with all accessories of various colors, 3 corporals

3 [altar] frontals, black and purple, and one white [frontal], unusable

1 useless, deteriorated veil

1 humeral veil

2 copes, white and black

3 albs and amices

3 deteriorated veils

1 surplice

2 cinctures

3 altar cloths

1 black dress for [the image of] Our Lady of Sorrows, a reliquary, gold earrings and a string of pearls

2 boxes for holy oils [one] in wood and a box in brass




mages of Saints in the Chapel

 

1 usable tabernacle and another deteriorated

1 baptismal font in poor condition

2 Missal stands and altar cards, without one being unusable

1 a statue of Our Lady of Sorrows with its ornaments

! A painting of Our Lady of Piety

1 Our Lady of Guadalupe, a large oil painting

2 [?] small paintings of the same [Our Lady of Guadalupe]

5 Saints statues- Saint Anthony, Saint Joseph with fine robes,[14] Saint Francis, Saint Augustine, Saint Gertrude

11 paintings of saints, 1 Our Lady of the Angels with the heavenly court on the sides,

1 [of] Saint Joseph, 2 Our Lady of Light, Saint Maxima, Saint Joaquin, Our Lady Saint Anne, a medium sized one with archangels, now without its frame

1 holy water bucket of copper

2 Altar stones, one is in Santa Cruz where it was taken to the pueblo for [illegible]

1 bronze shell in the same place [Santa Cruz] for burials

1 gilded cross and candlesticks in fair usable condition

2 candleholders in copper or metal in fair condition

3 bells, one of them cracked without a clapper

1 table in fair condition 

May 14, 1855, Joaquin Comaduran

Spanish Ciborium

  

 



[1] See https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FR4K-CQF. His father was christened at the same church on 24 April 1708, son of Augustin de Arriquibar and Maria de Angoitia.

[3]Stoner, Victor T. 1959 Fray Pedro de Arriquivar, Chaplain of the Royal Fort at Tucson. Edited by Henry F. Dobyns. Arizona and the West, Vol. 1(1), page 72.

[4]Stoner 1959:72.

[5]Stoner 1959:74.

[6]Stoner 1959:74.

[7]Stoner 1959:75.

[8]AGS, Section 7047, document 18; AGN 233, 1818 rosters; AGI, GUAD 294.

[9]McCarty, Kieran 1976 Desert Documentary: The Spanish Years, 1767-1821, Historical Monograph No. 4. Arizona Historical Society, Tucson, page 96.

[10]Dobyns, Henry F. 1976 Spanish Colonial Tucson: A Demographic History, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, page 160.

[11]Stoner 1959:75-79.

[12]Stoner 1959:78-79.

[13] Document M-M 381  #143, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.

[14] Lustrina is a fine material with silk and silver thread

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