Juan Francisco Reyes Reyes (ca. 1749-ca. 1800)

February 12, 2008 
/ Contributed By: John W. Ravage

Reyes Family

Reyes Family

Courtesy UCLA Library Special Collections

California’s 18th Century history is embedded with that of settlers from many racial and cultural groups. Terms such as mestizos, mulattos, españoles, lobos, and coyotes indicated a variety of Indian, Spanish, and Mexican, white and black families who migrated into the area in the 18th century.  El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora Reina de los Angeles sobre El Rio Porciuncula (eventually shortened to Los Angeles) was founded in 1781 by 46 settlers who were members of these groups who made their way north from Baja California.

Juan Francisco (also Fernando) Reyes, a mulatto settler who arrived shortly after the original party of settlers in 1781, symbolizes the racially diverse origins of the city.  In 1793 Reyes became the first elected mayor of the hamlet, a position he held for two years.

Reyes, by any measure of his times, was a wealthy man.  He was the Spanish Crown’s first land-grantee in the area.  Reyes’s lands included an area which the Catholic Church wanted to build a mission.  Reyes sold the property during his last year as mayor.  Two years later in 1797 the San Fernando Mission was completed.

Reyes’ tenure as the first “black mayor” of the town was brought to light during the term of Thomas Bradley, who was mayor from 1973 to 1993 and who was generally considered the first person of African ancestry to hold the post.  Reyes, in fact, holds that distinction.  Equally overlooked is the fact that he was the first “Hispanic mayor” of the small town, rather than Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa who was popularly elected in 2005.

Descendants of the Reyes family remain in the Los Angeles area until present times.  The family’s historic home is now known as the Reyes Adobe Historical Site and is located in Agoura Hills California.

Author Profile

Dr. John W. Ravage is Professor Emeritus of Mass Communication at the University of Wyoming, where he also taught as an adjunct professor of African American Studies. His background is in television and film history, writing, production and direction, as well. He has produced books, academic and popular journal articles and television documentaries on the black experience in the Trans-Mississippi West, including Alaska, Canada and Hawaii. His collection of over three thousand photographic images of blacks in the West ranks as one of the larger private libraries in the country. He has served as consultant/writer for groups such as Bill Miles, Educational Films and WTBS Superstation and has written for History of Photography, in England. Ravage serves as consultant to the Eiteljorg Museum of the American West, the Cincinnati Art Museum, the Seattle Museum of History and Industry and the Smithsonian Institution on the African-American West and the works of James Presley Ball, a renowned African American photographer of the West. His books include: Television: The Director’s Viewpoint (Boulder: West View Press, 1978), Singletree, a novel of the black experience in the West (Jelm Mountain, 1990), Kenneth Wiggins Porter’s The Negro On The American Frontier (Editor, 2ND. ed., Ames Publishers, 1996), and Black Pioneers, Images Of The Black Experience On The American Frontier (University of Utah Press, 1997, 2002). A member of the Western Writers of America, he is available for lectures on The Black West.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Ravage, J. (2008, February 12). Juan Francisco Reyes Reyes (ca. 1749-ca. 1800). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/reyes-juan-francisco-reyes-c-1749-c-1800/

Source of the Author's Information:

Ravage, John W., Black Pioneers – Images of the Black Experience on the North American Frontier (Salt Lake City, Utah:  University of Utah Press, 2002); Jack D. Forbes, “The Early African Heritage of California,” in Lawrence B. de Graaf, Kevin Mulroy and Quintard Taylor, eds., Seeking El Dorado: African Americans in California (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2001).

Further Reading