Pedro del Barrio Junco y Espriella

Pedro del Barrio Junco y Espriella (July 15, 1682 – ?) was acting governor of Texas from 1748 to 1750 and twice the governor of Nuevo León, Mexico (1740–1746 and 1752–1757).

Pedro del Barrio Junco y Espriela
26th governor of Nuevo León (1st time)
In office
1740–1746
Preceded byJuan Antonio Fernández de Jáuregui y Urrutia
Succeeded byVicente Bueno de Borbolla
20th governor of the Spanish Colony of Texas
In office
1748–1750
Preceded byFrancisco García Larios
Succeeded byJacinto de Barrios y Jáuregui
28th governor of Nuevo León (2nd time)
In office
1752–1757
Preceded byVicente Bueno de Borbolla
Succeeded byJuan Manuel Muñoz de Villavicencio
Personal details
BornJuly 15, 1682
Llanes (Asturias, Spain)
DiedUnknown
Unknown
SpouseMaria Antonia Rodríguez
ProfessionPolitical

Biography edit

Junco y Espriella was born on July 15,[1] 1682,[1][2] in Carranzo, Llanes (Asturias, Spain). He was the son of Felipe de Barrio Junco y Espriella and Ana Maria Noriega Rubín de Celis.[3] He had a brother, Nicolás de Junco y Espriela, Knight of Calatrava.[2]

He was a knight of the Order of Santiago. He joined the Spanish Army in his youth, attaining the position of colonel. In 1716, he traveled to modern Mexico as a knight of the Viceroy, Baltasar de Zúñiga. After that, he returned to Spain, and in 1724 he was appointed Governor of Marquezado Valley, in Mexico, so he returned to this place.[1]

In 1740, the Spanish Crown appointed him Governor the Mexican state of Nuevo León. He finished this term in 1746. Two years later, on June 3, 1748, he was appointed the interim governor of Texas. He discussed with the friars the place where the Mission San Xavier del Bac should be established, because were not in agreement about the right place for the foundation of the mission. However, he did not get the friars to accept his opinion and the mission was established in Tucson, Arizona. However, In June 1749, Junco y Espriella spoke with Juan Galván, an explorer who led the Mission San Xavier del Bac, to devise a plan to organize an expedition in the valley of San Javier (San Gabriel). He personally investigated the valley to decide how to conduct the expedition. On August 28, after returning from his expedition, Barrio decided to elect Lieutenant Galván to lead a new group of soldiers to San Javier. He jailed the first regidor to be appointed in San Antonio, but this imprisonment lasted a short time.[3] In 1750, a French soldier, the son of explorer and soldier Louis Juchereau, asked Junco y Espriella for a permit that would allow him to trade with the Caddo people. Junco y Espriella refused to surrender a license, so the soldier carried many goods to the Caddo territory and tried to convince the indigenous people that the Spanish rejected their friendship since they had tried to prevent the delivery of goods to this people.[4]

However, Espriella kept alive the trade between French and residents in Texas, as well as the gambling, even though these things were forbidden in the Spanish America. This caused him to be expelled from the Texas government in 1750.

In spite of this, Espriella was appointed governor of Nuevo León for the second time, between 1752 and 1757,[3] and he led many campaigns against Amerindian peoples.[5][3] Later, he served as provincial alcalde of the Santa Hermandad (Brotherhood) of New Spain. On March 27, 1765, he became in captain of the Presidio of El Paso del Norte, Mexico. Apparently, after this position, he was not reappointed to any other official position. His place and date of death are not known.[3]

Personal life edit

Pedro de Barrio Junco y Espriella was married to Maria Antonia Rodriguez, and they had two children.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Duque de Estrada y Castaneda, María Dolores; De Alós y Merry del Val, Fernando (1998-1999). Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía. Volume V. Page 20. Real Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, Madrid.
  2. ^ a b De Cadenas y Vicent (1977). Caballeros de la Orden de Santiago, siglo XVIII (In Spanish: Knights of the Order of Santiago, 18th century). (in Spanish). Volume II (volume about the years 1709-1730). Numbers 366-740. Editorial Hidalguia, Madrid. Page 268.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Pedro del Barrio Junco y Espriela". Handbook of Texas Online. November 26, 2008. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
  4. ^ Clayton Anderson, Gary (August 3, 2009). The Indian Southwest, 1580-1830: Ethnogenesis and Reinvention. University of Oklahoma Press. Page 156.
  5. ^ Phares, Ross (1976). The Governors of Texas. Firebird Press. Page 29.

External links edit