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San Antonio Missions National Historical ParkMission San Juan
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San Antonio Missions National Historical Park
Mission Community
 
Drawing of Mission Espada's compound
Drawing of Mission Espada's compound as it may have looked in the 1780s, with modern buildings shown as gray shadows.

Several gateways provided entrance into the compounds of the walled communities. Bastions, or fortified towers, were located along the walls to provide defense. Living quarters were built inside, against the compound walls, for the Indian neophytes and Spanish soldiers, usually only one or two with their families. The Church was the focal point of the missions; the missionary lived in the convento. Workshops and storerooms dotted the grounds. Outside the walls were the croplands and ranches, and the danger of the Apache and Comanche.

 
Texas brush and wildflowers similiar to the mission frontier
The Mission Frontier
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Church and State on the Frontier
Church and State on the Frontier
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to San Antonio Missions, their Beginnings
San Antonio Missions, their Beginnings
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Fr. Bouchu sold one share of the San Juan Ditch Company in 1906 for $10.00.  

Did You Know?
that along two of San Antonio's Spanish acequias (irrigation ditches), the San Juan Ditch Water Corp and the Espada Ditch Comp retain water rights first granted in 1731? While the park is the major stake holder, private shareholders continue to use the water on their fields and in farm tanks.

Last Updated: July 17, 2007 at 10:45 EST