Laboring in The Fields of The Lord
Laboring in The Fields of The Lord
When you think of Spanish Missions in United States, you automatically head to
California because that is where the public awareness believes it exists. History has been
detailed from a view leading to the Eastern Colonies to the Western expansion. Very
little is known about the history of Spanish Colonization of Northern Mexico, missions
on the Mexican frontier and the consequences of the Spanish colonization for native
“Laboring in the Fields of the Lord: Spanish Missions and Southwestern Indians”
authored by Jerald Milanich brings us an interesting and easy reading book that leads us
where numerous Spanish Missions existed and how they were lost through time.
Unfortunately, none of the La Florida colonial missions exists today but through
the mission system, its impact on the Indians who lived on this mission village and the
So Milanich sets the stage in the first four chapters of his book, by characterizing
the landscape of La Florida with a discussion of the societies and cultures of the natives
people that the Spanish encountered and how it lead to the early efforts of colonization
ending with the settlement of Saint Augustine in 1565. In his characterization, Milanich
talks about the how the Spanish missions were established, the impact it had when it was
finally built and its fate. Therefore, focusing on three major groups: the Guales, the
Timucaus, and the Apalachees, Milanich details the impact upon the native groups when
they are exposed to European diseases, Spanish policies and international competition, as
they occupy areas from coastal South Carolina and Georgia to the Florida panhandle.
entrepreneurs established ranches and farms. Small farms grew around the major
military garrison.
Although, Spanish missions were first established for the purpose of religious
conversion and instruction in the Catholic faith, the mission system actually served as the
primary means of integrating Indians into the political and economic structure of
Florida's colonial system. Missions were normally built where the local chief lived, as a
small compound with the larger Indian community which is usually has a number of
small villages. This mission compound included a church and a single building where
one friar would reside so they can serve a much larger group of Indians when they did
their rounds.
responsible for the religious affairs, they were politically subordinate to the governing
Indian chiefs. The Indian chiefs maintained rule over their local communities by gaining
Spanish clothing and other trade goods. Although the chiefs were subordinate to the
Spanish crown and church, Indian chiefs found it to be a huge benefit to be part of the
mission systems and often requested the construction of other mission establishments.
In the second half of the book, Milanich reviews the spread of Indian-Spanish
alliances after 1595 in terms of towns under indoctrination. Using maps, Milanich shows
the locations of missions established in Guale, Mocama and Agua Dulce and Apalachee.
Also he describes the mission regime and labor draft imposed on those "born under the
One of the consequences for being subordinate to the Spanish crown within the
mission system was the enactment of the “Repartimiento” which was a mandatory wage
Augustine each year and work in the Spanish cornfields or build and maintain Spanish
fortifications. Chiefs selected which single male Indian were to be the workers each year
and these workers were paid in inexpensive trade goods for each day of labor. Most of
these workers often caught and spread diseases during their terms of service and died.
Some would die as results of being overworked and from exhaustion. The impact that
Milanichi reveals to us on this wage labor, is that since many single male Indians were
As a result from the imbalance within the Indian communities, Milanchi discusses
the decline and fate of the mission communities in his last two chapters. With the impact
of single male Indians dying during their term of working in St. Augustine, it lead to the
decline of Indian population which made it susceptible other factors such as slave raids
by the English and Indian raids. These devastated the mission communities and forced
them to be abandoned of all coastal missions and retreat to St. Augustine. South
Carolinas and Georgia Missions were already closed before the retreat to St. Augustine.
The amount of information Milanich has put into this book was very impressive,
and I admit that I found it very interesting. It was not filled with technical information or
archaeological information where it was boring or difficult to understand but easy to read.
Also, Milanichi put maps and illustrations to make it clearer for the reader to identify its
location and culture. It was well written for the general public as well as historians.
Work Cited
Milanich, Gerald. Laboring in the Fields of the Lord: Spanish Missions and Southeastern
Indians. University Press of Florida. 1999.