Where did this come from: This scenario started out as two very separate
threads. I'm still not entirely sure I should have
mixed them. Oh well, both threads are
interesting enough. If you want to ignore one or
the other and concentrate exclusively on the
remaining one, you'll still have an interesting
enough scenario.
Thread one started a long time ago with a
question: On the one hand we have the Aztecs
and other heavily populated 'civilized' groups of
central Mexico. On the other hand we have the
stereotypical tribal Indians of North America. I
asked myself: Why didn't Aztec-style
civilization simply spread north until it was too
cold to grow corn—say Southern Canada? How,
where and why did the transition take place? In
trying to answer that question, I discovered a
little known, but fascinating group of Indian
tribes.
There was quite a distance between the
northern frontier of the Aztec empire and the
current international border between the United
States and Mexico—an area at least as large as
the Aztec core. That area was filled with tribes
that even I had never heard of or knew little
about—tribes like the Opata, the Eudeve, and the
Yaqui. Once I read up on them, I started
thinking of ways to make their history more
dramatic—not that it lacked drama as it was. I
decided to bring Sir Francis Drake into their
lives on his great voyage of 1579, which
eventually took him around the world.
At the same time, I've been refining my version
of Island California (see last issue). I decided
tentatively to combine the two threads. This
scenario will have Sir Francis Drake discovering
and basing himself on a smaller version of my
Island of California—an island consisting of
what in our time-line would be the southern half
of the peninsula of Baja California.
I'm making it smaller because frankly I'm very
uneasy about the probability of there being an
England, a Sir Francis Drake, or even our species
of human being if I have all of California break
off of North America and head south in the
Eocene. I'm still somewhat uneasy about those
things given the revised island, but I think that it
is at least marginally possible that any changes
propagating from that altered geology would
damp out before they reached anything vital to
our history. Peninsulas generally tend to be
dead-ends where dying species hang on for a
time, rather than hotbeds of new species.
In any case, on to the scenario.
What actually happened: (European
perspective) In 1579, Sir Francis Drake sailed
on a voyage that was essentially a mission of
state-approved piracy. The English crown was
aware of his intentions and privately supported
them. He sailed around the southern end of
South America, then raided Spanish coastal
settlements all the way up the coasts of South
and Central America. The raids caught the
Spanish off-guard after fifty-odd years where the
Pacific had been their private lake.
Drake found the going easy and lucrative—almost too lucrative. He seized so much silver
that his flagship began to leak from the weight.
In our time-line he landed somewhere in what is
now California, fixed his ship, then sailed the
rest of the way around the world.
What might have happened: (European
perspective): Drake was looking for the western
end of the non-existent northwest passage
through North America. As he went along the
coast of Baja California, he would be on the alert
for signs of that passage. The strait that
separated the island of Baja California from the
mainland would have attracted his attention.
Add in a good natural harbor at the north end of
the island, or better yet, on a smaller island off
the northern tip of the main island. Make that
island easily defendable and uninhabited. Drake
wouldn't be happy about the lack of distance
between him and Spanish Mexico, but the
combination of a good harbor, a possible
northwest passage, and a strong defensive
position would lead him to stop there. We'll
look at the consequences of that latter. Right
now let's look at the Indian side of what
happened and what might have happened.
What actually happened (From an Indian
perspective): On the east coast and in the center
of Mexico, the transition from the 'civilized'
groups like the Aztecs and Tlaxcallans to desert
nomads was rather abrupt. The frontier of
agriculture moved north or south from time-to-
time as the climate shifted, but the line between
'civilized' and nomadic Indians was generally
pretty clear-cut.
For the western third of Mexico, there really
wasn't a clear line between 'civilized' and
'uncivilized'. The Tarascans took a subset of
central Mexican culture, added their own
elements, and created an empire to rival the
Aztecs. West and north of the Tarascans, other
groups took subsets of Tarascan culture, added in
their own elements, and created cultures with
large agricultural populations and varying
degrees of political and material sophistication
all the way north to what is now the US/Mexican
border.
As I mentioned earlier, these groups are almost
unknown to most people in the US, though some
played a prominent part in the history of New
Spain and then Mexico. The southern part of
this area was conquered by Nuno de Guzman(sp)
in the early 1530's and ruled for a few years as
province separate from New Spain. The
conquest and rule were exceptionally brutal and
destructive even by the standards of the time, and
several groups were destroyed so completely that
specialists in the area are just starting to piece
together a picture of the groups as they were
before the conquest. Even the names of many
prominent groups have been lost.
North of the area destroyed by Guzman, a
number of related tribes lived, most prominent of
which were the Yaquis. The Yaquis and related
tribes lived and farmed along the fertile valleys
of a series of rivers that ran to the sea along the
coast of Northwest Mexico. In 1579 these were
still large tribes, with the Yaquis numbering as
many as 60,000 and a related tribe called the
Mayo at least that many people.
The Opata may have been an even larger group.
They lived inland from the Yaquis, and their
population has been estimated in a range from
30,000 up to 100,000. They were also primarily
agricultural, and some researchers believe that
when the Spanish arrived in Central Mexico the
ancestors of the Opata were very close to
developing their own urban, state-level culture.
The Opata were also known as one of the few
North American Indian tribes to use poison
arrows.
In 1579 this area was still outside the effective
control of New Spain. The Spanish were still
fighting a bitter, decades-long war against the
Chichemic nomads of the Central Mexican
deserts. The Spanish frontier was still twenty or
thirty years away from the Yaquis or the Opata
in 1579, though Spanish expeditions had gone
through the area from time-to-time, and the local
Indians knew that something deadly lurked to the
south of them.
In our time-line, the Spanish missionary frontier
reached this area in the early 1600's. Spanish
diseases almost certainly made it there a bit
earlier. The Spanish ranching and silver mining
frontier reached the area a decade or two later,
and secular Spaniards fought a many-decades-
long political battle with the Jesuits over control
of Indian lands and bodies. The Jesuits were
expelled from the area over a hundred years
later.
Without their protection, some Indians in
this area, like the Opata, were absorbed into
Mexican society. Others, like the Yaqui, fought
for autonomy in a series of revolts that went on
until they merged with the Mexican revolutions
starting in 1911.
What might have happened (Indian
perspective) Ultimately, if the English found a
way to maintain themselves in this area, they
would give Indians an alternate focus to
maneuver around. In our time-line, with Baja
California a peninsula, there is simply no way
the English could have established themselves in
the area. Given Baja California as an island,
English colonies in the area may or may not be
possible. We'll see as the scenario unfolds.
Drake lands in the easily defendable natural
harbor my bit of alternate geology has given
him. As he tries to repair his flagship, he sends
other vessels of his fleet through the strait into
the Gulf of California.
His captains are initially disappointed to find
Northern Mexico in the way of what they
thought might be a passage through the
American continent. After a little investigation,
they begin to see potential. The area is rich in
silver, fertile, and not controlled by Spain.
Drake's people may land in Yaqui country during
an epidemic and manage to earn Yaqui trust by
caring for the sick. (That may be a stretch.
Mexico was in the middle of one of its periodic
major epidemics, but I'm not sure it made it as
far north as Yaqui country. The first epidemics
known to have made it that far north came in
1611-12,1616-17, and possibly 1606-7).
Drake's men cement an alliance with the Yaquis,
do some trading with them, claim the country in
the name of Queen Elizabeth, and then redouble
their efforts to find a passage through to the
Atlantic. Their discoveries will become very
valuable if they can find such a passage. It is
less likely to be useful without it, due to the
difficulty of getting past the Spanish-controlled
coasts of Peru and New Spain to get there.
The Spanish have not been idle. They have a
fleet out looking for Drake, so far
unsuccessfully. After a time, garbled word of
strange Europeans up the west coast of Mexico
reaches Mexico city. The Spanish viceroy
scrapes together a small fleet of ships that are not
already out looking for Drake, and sends them
north to investigate.
The Spanish encounter Drake's ships of the coast
of Yaqui country. Drake's men have explored
the upper Gulf of California and are returning
with the news that there is no passage.
The two
fleets clash. The Spanish are defeated, but one
of their ships limps back to Mexico with the
news that Drake has been found.
Two of Drake's ships are badly damaged in the
fight. Rather than risk a voyage back to Drake's
harbor, the crews land in Yaqui country and use
stores from the ships to build a fort to hopefully
keep the Spanish at bay until they can be
rescued.
The presence of those Englishmen starts having
an impact on the military equation of New Spain.
The Chichemic tribes have been fighting Spain
for over a decade. They are very interested when
they hear about these new Europeans who are
apparently enemies of Spain. As New Spain
gathers ships and men for a massive attempt to
destroy Drake, his stranded men in Yaqui
country are visited by little delegations from
various tribes who want to evaluated the
potential of this new force. Ominously for
Spain, a few of those delegations are from tribes
that have long been military allies of New Spain.
And that's about all I have time for this issue.
What happens next? Does Drake simply repair
his ships and sail away? Does he attempt to
found a colony? If he tries to found a colony,
how does he re-supply it? Can it survive in the
face of Spanish hostility? Can it become the
nucleus around which anti-Spanish Indians can
gather?
As always, comments are very welcome.
If you are enjoying this scenario, or if you are disappointed with it, please let me know. I always read and enjoy any feedback I can get.
Note: I'm still planning to start an 'e-mail to
the editor' section--hopefully next issue. If you do e-mail me, please indicate whether
or not I can use your e-mail in that section.