View of the casa grande, courtyard, and a large pond. This section of Ex-Hacienda Santo Tomás is the most intact. In the previous posting (Part 6 of the series) we looked at the fortifications surrounding this old hacienda de beneficio (silver refining operation). The walls and bastions protected the casa grande and other structures within it that related to the production of silver and tequila.
In this posting (Part 7) I will show you the casa grande, including its arcades, dining room, kitchen, and bedrooms and game room. Along with the photos, I will tell you about the daily life typical of people who lived in places like this. For directions to the pueblo of Santo Tomás and its hacienda, please refer to Part 6.
The entrance and zaguan of the casa grande
Entrance gate and back wall of the casa grande. The covered arcade along the back overlooks a cobble-stoned work area where a key part of the silver refining process was conducted. From the arcade, the hacendado (owner) and his mayor domo (administrator) could sit comfortably in the shade and supervise the work. The iron gate opens into the zaguan, a large hallway that leads to the central courtyard. Zaguans were typical features of casa grande architecture.Hacendados often did not live on their rural properties, visiting only periodically to examine the books and to consult with the mayor domo about significant problems that may have arisen. Instead, they lived in comfortable mansions in nearby towns or even in more distant locations such as Guadalajara or Mexico City.
The mayo domo's job was to administer the hacienda in the hacendado's absence. He was an experienced professional who sometimes became a hacendado in his own right. The mayor domo would either live in one of the rooms of the casa grande or, in the case of an important property like Hacienda Santo Tomás, he would be provided with his own residence within the casco walls.
Until the last quarter of the 19th century, Mexico lacked rail networks and the roads were often little more than trails. This was particularly true in rugged, mountainous country like that around Hostotipaquillo. Most of these areas were accessible only by horse, mule, or burro. The carriages shown above would have been restricted to the few roads in a condition to handle them. In the late 19th century, a railroad spur was extended as far as Etzatlán, 89km (55mi) west of Guadalajara. This shortened the first leg of a rugged road journey to Santo Tomás from 2-3 days down to a few hours in a comfortable rail coach.
However the last leg of the journey, from Etzatlán to Santo Tomás, is another 44km (27mi). This would have required a very long day's travel by wagon, carriage or horseback. Unless there was extreme urgency in returning to Santo Tomás, it is likely that the journey would have been broken up by visits to one or more of the several haciendas situated along the route. Such neighborly visits were a normal part of the hacendado lifestyle. The hacendados and mayor domos of these haciendas would have welcomed their visitors and the news they brought from the outside world.
A poster announcing upcoming bullfights hangs on the wall of the zaguan. The poster informs us that the Gran Corrida de Toros will feature six toros (bulls) and names the three bullfighters who will face them. There is another painting of a matador facing a bull in the hallway leading to the game room and the head of a large bull is mounted on the wall. Bullfighting was imported to Nueva España (colonial Mexico) during the early days of the Conquest. The first bullfight was held in Mexico City on August 13, 1529, only eight years after Hernán Cortéz led his conquistadors to victory over the Aztecs.
Pope Pius V tried to ban the sport in 1567, but it was wildly popular in Europe and the ban was largely ignored, especially in far-away Mexico. Bullfighting has continued in Mexico up to recent times. However, public opinion has begun to turn against the cruelty of the sport. Recently, a poll showed that three quarters of Mexicans would like to see the sport banned and several Mexican states have done so. However, Mexico City's ban was recently lifted by a court order.
The courtyard arcade and its portales
Hacienda Santo Tomás was founded in 1668 by Francisco de la Isla Solórzano, who claimed the land through a denunció, which meant that it had been abandoned by the previous owner. When Francisco died in 1682, his sons José and Juan took over the property. They appear to have been absentee owners, because they hired Francisco de Mazariegos to be their mayor domo. He must have been one of the ambitious administrators because, by 1700, he was listed as the owner. By then it was one of the three most important haciendas de beneficio in the Real de Hostotipaquillo real (mining district).
Francico Mazariegos died in 1704 and his wife and son became the new owners. However, they decided not to operate it themselves. Instead, they rented out the property over the next thirty-three years to a variety of mine owners. In 1737, Eugenio Francisco de Castro bought the hacienda for 1,700 pesos ($53,282 in today's US dollars). For most of the next fifty years, the hacienda de beneficio refined ore primarily extracted from the Copala mine, some distance away. However, ore also came from several nearby mines, including the Santa Efigenia, Nuestra Señora de Zapopan, Nuestra Señora de Santo Tomás, and the San Javier.
A will probated in 1787 lists the owner of Hacienda Santo Tomas as Francisco Antonio de la Brena and states that the property was a fully-functioning hacienda de beneficio. In researching its history, I have been unable to find further information. Because the hacienda has survived relatively intact, it must have continued to operate through the revolts, coups, and foreign invasions of the 19th century and even into the 20th, with its Revolution and Cristero War. At some point, silver refining and tequila production stopped, but why and when are currently unknown to me.
The Dining Room
"The hacendado, his family, and staff ate an early breakfast. Bells clanged for a Mass at 6:00 or 7:00 A.M. (before or after breakfast), depending on the weather...By 2:00 or 2:30 P.M...(they) enjoyed a meal at the long table set with imported or hacienda linen, elegant china, cut glass, and Mexican and European silverware. Barefoot maids served...The butler may have worn white gloves. In the spacious, beamed, windowed room, cool in summer, warm in winter, the menu was varied."*
*Haciendas of Mexico, An Artist's Record, by Paul Alexander Bartlett, University Press of Colorado, 1990, pp. 43-45
A beautiful cabinet full of glassware stands in a corner. This is an example of the sort of furniture that would have been imported, or at least brought in from someplace like Guadalajara or Mexico City. In the earlier centuries, such elegant furniture would not have been found in most casas grande. What furniture that existed would have been heavy, rustic, sparse, and would have almost certainly been made by a local native carpenter, perhaps one of the peones acasilados.
George Lyon, an English traveler of the early 19th century, described the furnishings he found in one country estate. "The owners of the largest and most attractive hacienda, which provided them with an income of $100,000, were content with lodgings and comforts that an English gentleman would hesitate to offer to his servants."*
Stylish furniture had to be imported, and would have been far too expensive to waste on working estates far out in the country. A hacendado who possessed such furniture would have reserved it for his mansion in the city. In the late 19th century, when railroads were well established, more expensive items could be brought to outlying properties. The bigger haciendas even had their own train stations, although Santo Tomás never did.
*Daily Life on the Haciendas of Mexico, by Ricardo Rendón Garcini, Fomento Cultural BANAMEX A.C., 1997, p.56
Some technologies appear to be universal among human cultures. When I visited the Ancient Egyptian section of the Louvre Museum in Paris, I was astonished to find stone devices that are almost identical to Mexican manos and metates. In addition, I saw small statues of Egyptian women using them in exactly the same way as portrayed in pre-hispanic Maya paintings. Ancient Mexicans and Egyptians both used small disks called spindle whorls to spin thread, backstrap looms to create cloth, and built stepped pyramids as tombs for their rulers.
The Kitchen
A large kitchen contains some modern appliances. The cooks and kitchen help may have eaten some of their meals here, but the peones acasillados would have eaten in the huts they were provided as part of their wages. Other workers would have eaten their breakfast and the day's final meal in their villages after their work day finished. Refrigerators like those above would not have existed in a casa grande's kitchen until well into the 20th century, when electricity was finally extended to rural areas. But before then, food preservation was necessary, particularly for meat. The methods commonly used dated back centuries.
"(Meat) was cured with smoke or salt, or processed as sausage. Toward the same end, other foods were pickled. Fruit that was harvested from the orchard was turned into sweet preserves...whose preparation was to become a family tradition.The bread was...made in the adobe ovens that were present on all haciendas. During the early years. bread from wheat was only eaten by Spaniards...but eventually (it was) part of the diet of the workers on the hacienda, especially on those where wheat was grown..."*
The hacendado's desayuno (breakfast) would have included fruta (fruit), huevos (eggs), meat dishes, frijoles (beans), tortillas or pan (bread), café (coffee), chocolate, té (tea), and pulque or cerveza (beer). The main meal, served in the mid-afternoon, was called comida. It typically started with soup, then a meat dish like beef, chicken, pork, lamb or wild game like venison, turkey or rabbit. Dessert consisted of flan (custard), cajeta (caramelized goat's milk), cake, or fresh fruit and cheese. Comida would have finished with coffee, tea, wine, liquor, horchata (rice drink), jamaica (tropical drink), or chocolate.
*Daily Life on the Haciendas of Mexico, p.269
The kitchen viewed from another angle. Again, modern appliances like gas stoves were a 20th century innovation. Wood fires were the rule for the first 400 years after the Conquest. Keeping a constant supply of cut wood for fuel, as well as enough food for the hacendado's family, staff, and guests, required the efforts of a number of workers.
For the workers, desayuno would have consisted largely of tortillas and water. Comida would have included tortillas, frijoles y arroz (beans and rice), and occasionally a little meat. Seasonal fruits served included mangos, aguacates (avocados), naranja (oranges), bananas, or berries picked in the wild. Corn tortillas had been the dietary staple of ordinary people since pre-hispanic times. From the 16th through the last part of the 18th century, most haciendas provided their workers with a corn ration as part of their wages. This ensured a stable workforce in a era of labor shortages.
However, labor shortages eased after the great population decline of the 16th and 17th centuries. By the late 18th century, the hacendados no longer needed to worry about finding and keeping enough workers. They found that a little money could be saved by curtailing, or even eliminating, the corn ration. This directly impacted the diet of the workers and their families, causing great resentment. This anger contributed to the explosion of violence against hacendados at the beginning of the War of Independence in 1810.
The east wing of the casa grande
During the early colonial period, the Crown maintained a monopoly on European drinks like rum and brandy. This made them expensive and difficult to obtain. Soon, many haciendas began to look for a way to produce their own alcohol. Noticing that the natives made pulque from the maguey sap, the early Spaniards experimented with distilling the sap and thus invented tequila. In the 18th century, tequila became popular enough that haciendas like Santo Tomás began to sell it commercially.
The city hall of Zapopan, a wealthy suburb of Guadalajara, contains a large mural of 20th century revolutionaries. Honored are Mexico's own Emiliano Zapata, but also Che Guevara of Cuba, Ho Chi Minh of Vietnam, and Vladimir Lenin of Russia. Mexicans remember that the U.S. Ambassador conspired in the overthrow and murder of Francisco Madero, the first President of Mexico after the 1910 Revolution, and the U.S. intervened militarily in 1914 and 1917. This has led them to respect the revolutionary struggles of other people. In fact, Fidel Castro launched his revolution from Mexico, where he gathered his forces while in exile from Cuba.
This completes Part 7 of my Silver Mines of Hostotipaquillo series. In the next part, we will check out the remains of the mayor domo's house and the tequila distillery near it. I hope you have enjoyed this part. If you have any thoughts or questions, please leave them in the Comments section below or email me directly. If you leave a question in the Comments section, please include your email address so that I can respond in a timely fashion.
Hasta luego, Jim
Thanks, Jim. Somethings here I think I remember. Or maybe not. Anyway, thanks for the memories however meshed together they are.
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