© Latinas in History 2008 |
BRIONES,
MARÍA JUANA (1802?1889)
María
Juana Briones y Tapia de Miranda was born in Villa de Branciforte, or
present-day Santa Cruz, California. In 1820, Briones married Apolinario
Miranda and they lived in El Rancho de Ojo de Agua de Figueroa. During
this time she helped mistreated young sailors, who where at times virtually
enslaved by their captains. Miranda became abusive
toward his wife, causing Briones to pack up their
children and belongings. In 1836 Briones received a land grant called
Yerba Buena, now known as Washington Square in San Francisco. Briones
supported her eight children in a number of ways, including raising cattle,
selling and trading hides and tallow, selling milk, growing and selling
vegetables, and working as a seamstress. As
single head of a large household, she also adopted an orphan girl, and
was known for her skills as a curandera (healer) and partera
(midwife). In 1844, Briones paid $300 for 4,438 acres of land in former
Mayfield and moved there in 1847. A witness to the early history of the
region, Briones observed the changes that took place in San Francisco
as the presidio grew from a wide open space with few inhabitants to a
very crowded city. She lived through the gold rush and the changes it
caused in the land and its people. On October
5, 1997, María Juana Briones contributions to early California
were recognized when a monument was erected in her honor in San Franciscos
Washington Square, not far from where her Yerba Buena house stood nearly
150 years earlier.
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