Details for Mission San Francisco de la Espada (Mission St. Francis of the Sword)

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5029003411

Data

Marker Number 3411
Atlas Number 5029003411
Marker Title Mission San Francisco de la Espada (Mission St. Francis of the Sword)
Index Entry Mission San Francisco De La Espada (Mission St. Francis of the Sword)
Address
City San Antonio
County Bexar
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 553431
UTM Northing 3243268
Subject Codes Spanish immigrants/immigration; missions; Roman Catholic denomination
Marker Year 1969
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Mission Drive, San Antonio
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Established in San Antonio in 1731. May have been named for statue of St. Francis in the chapel which, according to tradition, once grapsed a sword. One of the few missions near which descenants of the Indian converts and spaniards still live, Espada is considered by some to date back to Mission San Francisco De Los Tejas, founded in East Texas in 1690. A succession moves eventually brought it here. The original buildings at Espada, the farthest south of the five missions near San Antonio, were undoubtly of adobe. A wall surrounded the church (usually called a chapel), friary, granary,and work shops. Extensive farms and pastures lay nearby. By 1745 the Indians produced grain and beans, and the missioned owned 1,150 head of cattle and 750 sheep. One of the few remaining early structures is the southeast bastion (fortified round tower), which is the only mission fort left intact in San Antonio. Its three-foot rock walls, which contain holes for cannons and muskets, support a vaulted roof. Composing Espada's once-vital waterworks are a dam (one mile north), an irriation ditch, and a fine aqueduct (near this site)--the only extant spanich aqueduct in the United States.
ATLAS_NUM=5029003411

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