José María Echeandia
(?-1871)
Quite a little has been said about this, the only governor of California who made his residence in San Diego. A few more personal details will be given at this place.
Before coming to California, he was a Lieutenant-Colonel connected with a
college of engineers in Mexico. Besides Robinson's statement that he was "a
tall, gaunt personage," who received him "with true Spanish dignity and
politeness," we learn from Bancroft that he was "tall, slight and well
formed, with fair complexion, hair not quite black, scanty beard . . . and
a pleasing face and expression. His health was very delicate. In his speech
he affected the Castilian pronunciation, noticeably in giving the 'll,' 'c'
and 'z' their proper sounds." He was somewhat absent-minded at times. Some
of his contemporaries regarded him as a capricious despot, who would carry
out a whim without regard to results; others thought he lacked energy; and
still others say he was popular, but overindulgent and careless. Pio Pico
found him affable, but apathetic. Alfred Robinson, the son-in-law of
Captain de la Guerra y Noriega, who strongly opposed Echeandía in the
matter of the secularization of the missions, calls him "the scourge of
California, and instigator of vice, who sowed seeds of dishonor not to be
extirpated while a mission remains to be robbed." Wm. A. Gale found him a
man of undecided character, trying to please everybody. After leaving
California he was very poor until 1835, when, an earthquake having damaged
a number of buildings, his services as engineer were in demand and he
became prosperous. In 1855 he was arrested by Santa Ana for some political
cause, but released. Two step-daughters took care of him in his old age,
and he died before 1871.
[from William Ellsworth Smythe's History of San Diego, 1907, page 168]
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