Mission in the Sierras; a Documentary History of San Antonio
de Padua.
Compiled by Msgr. Francis J. Weber. Hong Kong: Libra Press, 1981.
202 pp. No price given.
Reviewed by Rhoda E. Kruse, Senior Librarian, California Room, San Diego
Public Library.
A number of years ago this reviewer represented the San Diego
Historical Society at the First Annual Missions Conference held at Mission San
Miguel. A high point of that conference was a field trip to Mission San Antonio
de Padua. And what made that field trip memorable was seeing the mission in its
unspoiled rural setting. No houses, no TV aerials, or other urban clutter marred
the view. Mission San Antonio is the only mission so
fortunate, and the experience of seeing the building much as
it was almost two hundred years ago is unforgettable. Msgr. Weber emphasizes
this unique feature in the latest in his series of documentary mission histories.
The documents and excerpts from printed sources are
purportedly in chronological order; but upon closer study, one finds this
arrangement not consistently adhered to. For instance, Item One, "Foundation of
the Mission (1771)," is a quotation from Fr. Maynard Geiger's 1959 biography of
Fr. Serra. Item Two, also dated 1771, is a translation of part of an actual
document of that period. This type of discrepancy, which recurs several times in
the course of the book. will probably be more upsetting to the
historian than the layman. To this reviewer, it is one evidence of
this book's need for further editing. Others include repetition of
the same information, over and over again. Authors of the quotations
and dates of original publication of their articles vary, but they
seem to have been drawn from the same sources. Also, Msgr. Weber
frequently supplies a brief paragraph of introduction concerning the original
publication of the document or article he is quoting; in a number of these, the
date in the paragraph varies from that in the chapter heading, often by up to
ten years. So many "typos" cannot fail to raise a reader's quizzical eyebrow.
Lastly, several of the articles mention illustrations which, though necessary to
an understanding of the text, are not reproduced in Msgr. Weber's book.
The book's time frame includes over two centuries, from the
mission's inception to its battles with the U.S. Army in the 1970s. A number of
the sources quoted are relatively obscure. Hence it contains much information of
interest to historians and others. Even with its flaws the book merits
purchase. However, it is regrettable that what could have been a better book, isn't.