Espíritu Chijulla
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María del Espíritu Santo Chijulla also known as Espíritu Chijulla; also spelled Chihuya; was an
Indigenous Californian Indigenous peoples of California, commonly known as Indigenous Californians or Native Californians, are a diverse group of nations and peoples that are indigenous to the geographic area within the current boundaries of California before and afte ...
woman who became the first common-law spouse to win legal rights in California and inherited
Rancho El Escorpión Rancho El Escorpión was a Mexican land grant in present day Los Angeles County, California given in 1845 by Governor Pío Pico to three Chumash Native Americans - Odón Chijulla, Urbano, and Mañuel.
.


Chijulla Family

Her father was Odón Chijulla, a
Chumash Chumash may refer to: *Chumash (Judaism), a Hebrew word for the Pentateuch, used in Judaism *Chumash people, a Native American people of southern California *Chumashan languages, Indigenous languages of California See also

* Pentateuch (dis ...
man Humaliwo who had been baptized at the San Fernando Rey de España Mission and was considered a leader (or chief) of the Fernandeños living in the western portion of the San Fernando Valley. While Odón was born in Humaliwo, his father had apparently been from the village at the base of Kas'ele'ew Peak known as ''Hukxa'oynga'' in Fernandeño-Tongva and ''Hu'wam'' in Ventureño Chumash; this village would later become the site of Rancho El Escorpión. Her mother was Odón's wife, Juana Eusebia, a
Tongva The Tongva ( ) are an Indigenous peoples of California, Indigenous people of California from the Los Angeles Basin and the Channel Islands of California, Southern Channel Islands, an area covering approximately . In the precolonial era, the peop ...
woman from a village near
Santa Monica Santa Monica (; Spanish language, Spanish: ''Santa Mónica'') is a city in Los Angeles County, California, Los Angeles County, situated along Santa Monica Bay on California's South Coast (California), South Coast. Santa Monica's 2020 United Sta ...
(possibly Guashna, Kuruvunga, or Topanga). Odón and Juana Eusebia had three daughters, Marcelina, María Dolores, and María del Espíritu and two sons, Bernabé and Tiburcio. Most of their children continued to remain associated with the Rancho El Escorpión land owned by Odón. Marcelina married Urbano Chari a
Fernandeño The Tongva language (also known as Gabrielino, Gabrieleño, or Kizh) is an extinct and revitalizing Uto-Aztecan language spoken by the Tongva, a Native American people who have lived in and around modern-day Los Angeles for centuries. It has no ...
who became co-owner of the Rancho El Escorpión grant with her father; she later lived with Joaquín Romero who was also a partial owner of the rancho. María Dolores was first married to a Fernandeño named José "Polo," and then lived with José Arnaz, recipient of the San Buenaventura Ex-Mission grant, before finally settling down with Pierre Domec, a Frenchman who owned a lime kiln near El Escorpión; her eldest daughter María del Rosario married Carlos Leboubon, a Frenchman who worked for Domec. Leboubon won a court battle against Domec, after which he and María del Rosario settled near Saticoy. María Dolores's youngest daughter, María Antonia, married Francisco More who was of half indigenous and half Euroamerican ancestry who had been raised at Saticoy. Bernabé first married a Tataviam and Kitanemuk (or Kawaiisu) woman named Teodora; after her death he married Marta, a Tataviam/Fernandeña woman. He and Marta split and he continued to live in El Escorpión where he married Dolores, possibly the granddaughter of Urbano Chari. Bernabé eventually died by suicide when he hanged himself at the San Fernando Mission. Tiburcio had married an indigenous woman named Manuela and had two children, but no other records of his family past 1860 have been found.


Biography

María del Espíritu Santo Chijulla, born in 1836, was baptized in the San Fernando Mission. Her father Odón was, most likely, one of the forty petitioners who received a grant from governor Micheltorena on May 3, 1843. This grant was not preserved by governor Pico; however, in July 1845, Odón, his son-in-law Urbano Chari, and Urbano's son Manuel, negotiated joint ownership of a square league of land which became Rancho El Escorpión.LoC-HABS: Escorpion (1937); p. 2
/ref>LoC-HABS: Leonis (1963); p.3
/ref> Urbano and Manuel died in about 1860, and the El Escorpión land was either sold or lost by the end of the 1860s. Espíritu Chijulla and her family spoke both Ventureño Chumash and Fernandeño Tongva, having roots in and inhabiting the multilingual community in El Escorpión. Chijulla married José Antonio Menéndez in 1856 and had a son with him called Juan José Menéndez in 1857.Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park (SSPSHP); Ethnohistory
; p. 46.
After Menéndez's death, Miguel Leonis partnered with Chijulla in 1859. Leonis was a French-
Basque Basque may refer to: * Basques, an ethnic group of Spain and France * Basque language, their language Places * Basque Country (greater region), the homeland of the Basque people with parts in both Spain and France * Basque Country (autonomous co ...
settler who was active in the San Fernando Valley starting from around 1854. Leonis persuaded Odón to transfer the title of his portion of El Escorpión to him under the pretense of protecting the land from government confiscation; he then sold and transferred ownership of the property to Espíritu, never returning it to Odón. Around 1869, Leonis was also able to secure Urbano and Manuel's portions of El Escorpión. By 1871, Leonis had taken possession of Odon's remaining share of the El Escorpión land. Leonis' relationship with Espíritu was controversial among the local Basque settlers who generally married Anglo-European women. Leonis did not allow Espíritu's son Juan José to live in the same house with them. Espíritu had a daughter with Leonis, Marcelina, in 1860; Marcelina would die of smallpox at 20 years old. In 1880, the couple moved their home three miles south to Calabasas; here, they remodeled an abandoned adobe into a two story adobe. In the early 1880s, Leonis persuaded Horace Bell, an attorney who had been his adversary, to work for him; Leonis began to win more suits against squatters in the lands he owned.


Legal battle

Leonis died in 1889, after falling from a wagon. Having amassed a worth of over $300,000, he left the majority of his assets to his Basque relatives and only allocated $10,000 to Espíritu who he referred to as his "faithful housekeeper," despite her having been his common-law wife; he further stated that he wanted "to prevent her from being reduced to pennies during her lifetime by reason of her ignorance and inexperience." The ''
Los Angeles Times The ''Los Angeles Times'' is an American Newspaper#Daily, daily newspaper that began publishing in Los Angeles, California, in 1881. Based in the Greater Los Angeles city of El Segundo, California, El Segundo since 2018, it is the List of new ...
'' reported that the local French population was surprised that he left so little to the woman "who has for nearly thirty years been considered his wife." Espíritu refused the money and challenged the will. She hired Horace Bell and future United States Senator Stephen M. White as her attorneys. Espíritu called 40 witnesses who testified that Leonis had publicly acknowledged her as his wife; she herself testified that she had met Leonis at El Escorpión and lived with him for 30 years, having given him a daughter who died before adulthood. Marcelina's grave was also offered as proof of their relationship. When Espiritu appeared in court dressed in black with mourning veil attached to a black flat straw hat, the ''Los Angeles Times'' described her as "a typical Mexican of the original cast," with "a very dark complexion, small black eyes, nose blunt, mouth large and lips tightly compressed when in repose." When an old friend of Leonis reported that Espiritu had previously lived out of wedlock with two other men, the ''Times'' reported in detail on the "Sensational Disclosures." After five weeks of testimony, the jury ruled in favor of Espíritu and declared that the long-standing relationship between her and Leonis was legal, making Espíritu the heir to Leonis' $300,000 estate. After winning this initial case, her legal troubles continued. The estate produced over 100 lawsuits against her. She unknowingly gave power of attorney to a friend who later claimed she owed him $5,000; another sold her cattle and kept the money. Two other men who owed the Leonis estate about $12,000 used her signature on another paper as proof of having repaid her $8,000. She had been put in such a desperate position that "she was at one time reduced to a diet of acorns which she picked up off the ground at her home, her property being so tied up in the courts." She again turned to White and Bell, who had taken half of her estate in payment for their services. The court case went to the state Supreme Court three times. Finally, after 16 years of litigation ending in 1905, Espíritu Chijulla was awarded half of Leonis's land. Espíritu Chijulla died the next year in 1906. Espíritu left the estate to her son Juan José Menéndez who had her buried in the San Fernando Mission's cemetery next to the mission church; the grave has her name recorded as ''María Espírito Capigaras Menéndez''. He and his wife Juana Valenzuela de Menéndez ended up having to sell the property to George Platt in 1912 and sold the adobe property in 1922 to the Agoure family.Canoga/Owensmouth Historical Society
Bulletin — April 2007.
Menéndez and his wife, were later interviewed by ethnologists John P. Harrington and his wife
Carobeth Laird Carobeth Laird (née Tucker; formerly Harrington; July 20, 1895 – August 5, 1983) was an American ethnographer and linguist, known for her memoirs and ethnographic studies of the Chemehuevi people in southeastern California and western Arizona. ...
and helped record several Fernandeño stories, traditions, and place names, many of which had been recounted to them by Espíritu Chijulla herself. Horace Bell's son, Charlie, who continued to live near the El Escorpión land, was also interviewed and added to the ethnography.


See also

*
Mission San Fernando Rey de España Mission San Fernando Rey de España is a Spanish missions in California, Spanish mission in the Mission Hills, Los Angeles, Mission Hills community of Los Angeles, California. The mission was founded on September 8, 1797 at the site of Achooyko ...
*
Rancho El Escorpión Rancho El Escorpión was a Mexican land grant in present day Los Angeles County, California given in 1845 by Governor Pío Pico to three Chumash Native Americans - Odón Chijulla, Urbano, and Mañuel.
*
Leonis Adobe The Leonis Adobe is a historic adobe located in what is now Calabasas, California. One of the oldest surviving private residences in Los Angeles County and one of the oldest surviving buildings in the San Fernando Valley, it was built in 1844 a ...
* Victoria Reid


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Chijulla, Espirtu 1830s births 1906 deaths 19th-century Native American women Chumash people Tongva people History of Los Angeles County, California Mission Indians