Hugo Reid

{{Short description|Scotland-born early resident of Los Angeles County and author (1811–1852)}}

Image:Hugo Reid at Rancho Santa Anita.png

Hugo Reid (April 18, 1811 – December 12, 1852) was a Scottish immigrant and early resident of Los Angeles County who became known for writing a series of newspaper articles, or "letters," that described the culture, language, and contemporary circumstances of the local Tongva (Gabrieleño) people. He criticized the Franciscan missionaries, who administered the Spanish missions in California, for their treatment of the native peoples.{{cite web |url=https://www.loc.gov/item/68008964/ |title=The Indians of Los Angeles County: Hugo Reid's letters of 1852.|last1= Reid |first1=Hugo |date=1968|website=Library of Congress |publisher=Braun Research Library, Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, California. |access-date=August 25, 2018}}

Born and raised in Scotland, Reid immigrated to California as a young man after setting up trading in Mexico. He became a naturalized citizen there when the province was a part of the Republic of Mexico,{{cite web |author= |title=Historic Structures: Hugo Reid Adobe |url=http://www.arboretum.org/index.php/explore/historic_structures/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140209071942/http://www.arboretum.org/index.php/explore/historic_structures/ |archive-date=9 February 2014 |access-date=20 October 2013 |website=Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden }} and married Victoria Reid, who was born at the village of Comicranga and a respected land-owning woman in Alta California.{{Cite book |last=Raquel Casas |first=Maria |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61330208 |title=Latina legacies : identity, biography, and community |date=2005 |publisher=Oxford University Press |others=Vicki Ruíz, Virginia Sánchez Korrol |isbn=978-0-19-803502-2 |location=New York |pages=19–32 |oclc=61330208}}

Life

He was born to Charles Reid and Essex Milliken, at Cardross, Dunbartonshire, Scotland, on 18 April 1811.Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950, index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XYZG-LPJ;: accessed 12 December 2012), Hugo Reid, 1811; citing Scotland Registrar General, Registers of births, marriages and deaths, FHL microfilm 0102138, 1041983, The New Register House, Edinburgh, Scotland. As a young man, Reid established a trading house in Hermosillo, Mexico in the late 1820s with a business partner, William Keith. He first visited Los Angeles, then a part of Mexican Alta California, in 1832.{{cite book |last=Casas |first=Maria Raquel |chapter=Victoria Reid and the Politics of Identity|editor1-first=Vicki L.|editor1-last=Ruiz |editor2-first=Virginia |editor2-last=Sanchez-Korrol |date=2005 |title=Latina Legacies : Identity, Biography, and Community: Identity, Biography and Community|location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-515398-7 }}

After settling there, he converted to Roman Catholicism{{cite web | url=https://pcad.lib.washington.edu/building/5845/ | title=PCAD - Rancho Santa Anita, Reid, Hugo, Adobe House, Arcadia, CA }} and married Victoria Bartolomea Comicrabita, a Gabrieleño woman from the village of Comicranga, who became a convert at Mission San Gabriel.{{cite book |last=Dakin |first=Susanna Bryant |date=1939 |title=A Scotch Paisano in Old Los Angeles: Hugo Reid's Life in California, 1832–1852, Derived from his Correspondence|location=Berkeley, California |publisher=University of California Press }} He adopted her children, Felipe, Jose Delores and María Ygnacia.{{Cite web |title=City of Arcadia, CA |url=https://www.arcadiaca.gov/enrich/arcadia_public_library/gilb_museum_of_arcadia_heritage/hugo_reid.php |access-date=2023-01-08 |website=www.arcadiaca.gov |language=en}}

After Mexico attained independence, it secularized some mission holdings. Reid and his wife were granted the {{convert|13319|acre|km2|adj=on}} Rancho Santa Anita following secularization of Mission San Gabriel ranch lands. He built an adobe house there in 1839. The grant was confirmed by Alta California Governor Pio Pico in 1845. Reid was nicknamed the Scotch Paisano during his days as a Scottish settler in Mexican Southern California.

File:The home of Elias J. ("Lucky") Baldwin, the former Hugo Reid Adobe, at Rancho Santa Anita, ca.1903 (CHS-5178).jpg" c. 1903, prior to removal of a wood-frame addition by Lucky Baldwin that was built ]]

A restored adobe, which became known as the "Hugo Reid Adobe", was built on a different nearby site by a later owner.{{cite web |url=http://www.arcadiaweekly.com/featured/arboretums-shocking-revelation-it-isnt-the-hugo-reid-adobe/ |title=Arboretum's Shocking Revelation: It isn't the Hugo Reid Adobe!|last1= Peters |first1=Bill |date=2009|website=Arcadia Weekly |publisher= |access-date=June 5, 2016|quote=}} Today both Reid's original site and the surviving adobe are located at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden, part of the former estate of Lucky Baldwin. This is within what is now the city of Arcadia.

Letters about the Gabrieleño and two missions

Following the Mexican American War, the United States annexed California in 1848. While it promised to honor current deeds, Reid's fortunes suffered. In 1852 Reid wrote a series of 22 letters which were published in the Los Angeles Star. These provide an important ethnographic picture of the little–known Gabrieleño people. He also discussed the history of the San Gabriel and San Fernando missions, perhaps with an eye to being appointed as a US Indian agent.

The articles were collected and republished in book form several times. Arthur M. Ellis published the first collected book in 1926, entitled Hugo Reid's Account of the Indians of Los Angeles County, in an edition of 200 copies.{{cite book |last=Ellis |first=Arthur M. |date=1926 | url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.$b59340 |title=Hugo Reid's Account of the Indians of Los Angeles County|location=Los Angeles, California |publisher=Privately Printed }} In 1939, Susanna Bryant Dakin reprinted the collected letters in a new edition.

Death and legacy

Reid died in Los Angeles on December 12, 1852.{{cite journal |last=King |first=Laura Everston |date=1898 |title=Hugo Reid and His Indian Wife |journal=Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California and Pioneer Register |volume=4 |issue=2 |pages=111–113 |doi=10.2307/41167702 |jstor=41167702 }} His funeral was held at the old Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, located on Main Street in Los Angeles. He was buried in its adjacent cemetery.

His body was later moved to the Campo Santo (cemetery) on North Broadway (now the site of Cathedral High School). His remains were later disinterred and moved to the new Calvary Cemetery in East Los Angeles.Kielbasa, John R. (1997). Historic Adobes of Los Angeles County. Pittsburgh, PA: Dorrance Publishing.

See also

References

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Sources

  • Dakin, Susanna Bryant. 1939. A Scotch Paisano: Hugo Reid's Life in California, 1832–1852, Derived from His Correspondence. University of California Press, Berkeley.
  • Ellis, Arthur M. 1926. [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b59340;seq=1;view=1up Hugo Reid's Account of the Indians of Los Angeles County]. Privately Printed, Los Angeles.
  • Reid, Hugo. 1968. [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/calbk:@field(DOCID+@lit(calbk007)):@@@$REF$ The Indians of Los Angeles County: Hugo Reid's Letters of 1852]. Edited and annotated by Robert F. Heizer. Southwest Museum Papers No. 21. Los Angeles.

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Category:People of Alta California

Category:Writers from California

Category:Historians of Native Americans

Category:Naturalized citizens of Mexican California

Category:1811 births

Category:1852 deaths

Category:19th-century American writers

Category:19th-century American male writers

Category:19th-century Mexican people

Category:Scottish emigrants to Mexico

Category:Scottish emigrants to the United States

Category:People from Cardross, Argyll and Bute

Category:People from the San Gabriel Valley

Category:Converts to Roman Catholicism from Calvinism

Category:History of Los Angeles County, California

Category:Native American history of California

Category:Arcadia, California

Category:Burials at Calvary Cemetery (Los Angeles)

Category:American male non-fiction writers