Full name: Santo Domingo

Founding date: August 30, 1775 (relocated 2.5 miles east in 1798) Mission #20

Catholic Order: Dominican

Founded by: Padre Miguel Hidalgo, Padre Manuel Garcia

Condition: Adobe ruins at second site.

Closing date: Closed in 1822

GPS: 30.770889, -115.937222

Access: Mex. #1, Km. 169, south of Ensenada, 5 miles east.

The second Dominican California mission was named Santo Domingo and located at the mouth of a long valley, a few miles from the ocean. A red-colored cliff was next to the new mission and the first services were held on August 30, 1775, in a cave in the cliff. In 1798, the mission was relocated 2.5 miles inland from the red cliff.

> To see where this mission is, maps and directions at bottom of page <<

First Site (1775-1798):

The red cliff where Santo Domingo was first established. On the right side, the white letters HR are still visible for Hamilton Ranch (a guest ranch, closed in the 1970s).
1955 photo from Howard Gulick at the first mission site. Note the HR on the hillside for the nearby Hamilton Ranch.

Final Site (1798+):

2025 (Photos by David Kier & Dave W.)

2017 (Photos by David Kier)


2014 (Photos by David Kier)

Note the helicopter and dust where it landed in the background.

“David Kier, your guide to the missions” promo shot. Yes, I ‘got baja’! It was sure a blast to be invited by Cameron to join the tour for three of the days and appear (briefly) on his TV show. I flew in with the helicopter and returned on it.

2005 (Photos by David Kier)

Elizabeth & David Kier, Santo Domingo selfie, October 2005.

2003 (Jack Sword photo)


1954 (Howard Gulick photo)


1949 (Marquis McDonald photo)


1926 (Peveril Meigs photo)


1894 (photo provided by David Marrón and Ensenada’s history museum)


1886 (photo provided by Robert Jackson)



Site Plans from Peveril Meigs mid-1920s:

Site Plans from INAH:


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#20 Santo Domingo (1775-1822)
One year following the founding of their first mission at El
Rosario, the Dominicans were ready to establish the second
mission of their California service. Padre Manuel García and
Padre Miguel Hidalgo traveled twenty leagues (about fifty
miles) north to a site where a large arroyo emerged from the
mountains. This was on or about August 30, 1775, and they
named the new mission Santo Domingo. The first services
were held in a cave at the base of a large red rock on the
south side of the arroyo. The mission church was soon
constructed near the cave.

Padre García was at Santo Domingo until late 1776, when he
was succeeded by Padre José Aivár, who served until the end
of 1791. Other Dominicans performed functions at Santo
Domingo during his time as resident priest. One was Padre
Luis Sáles, who performed baptisms here in 1778 and 1779.
Sáles wrote that the Indians of Santo Domingo (and San
Vicente further north) were “unquiet, subversive, and
inclined to revolt.” A terrible smallpox epidemic killed a third
of the population in 1781.

In 1782, the mission’s neophyte population was only seventy-nine.

Getting Indians to live at Santo Domingo was more
difficult than at other missions, where food offered by the
missionaries had bribed them away from their native homes.
The problem for this mission location was that most of the
Indians lived along the coast or on San Quintín Bay twenty
miles away and the sea provided for their subsistence. The
mission’s agricultural program required quantities of fresh
water to grow crops and raise livestock. Fresh water was
typically found in the hills but not along the seashore. Salt
flats near the bay provided for the salt needs of this and the
other northern Dominican missions.

The next resident missionary was Padre Miguel Abád who
was stationed here from January 1792 to September 1804. In
1793, the church was constructed using adobe and poles. It
measured approximately twenty-two by fifty feet. In 1798, a
large chapel with additional rooms and a kitchen was
constructed two and a half miles to the east, where the
twenty-three-year-old mission was moved. This placed the
mission closer to a better water supply.

By 1799, a cattle ranch outpost was established at San Telmo,
about sixteen miles north. Construction of additional
buildings continued at both Santo Domingo and San Telmo.
San Telmo was an important visita of Santo Domingo and has
been populated continually since mission times. By 1800, the
neophyte population at Santo Domingo had increased to 315.

Padre José Miguel de Pineda was next in charge at Santo
Domingo making entries in the mission books until August 24,
1809. Very few baptisms appear in the books beyond 1809
and it is uncertain if a resident priest was even living at Santo
Domingo after 1821. Sea otters, sold to the Russians, were an
important source of mission revenue, along with sales of salt.
These activities were necessary during the period of isolation
while Mexico and Spain were at war and the padres needed
supplies.

Large gaps in recording events began after 1822. The next
entries in the mission books were made in 1827 and 1828.
The population was down to seventy-eight in 1830. The final
entries made in the mission book began again in 1832 and
were made each year to 1836, then again in 1838. The final
baptism was on March 18, 1839.

An interesting story comes from the pen of an editor of
Desert Magazine, the late Choral Pepper:
“In the late 1920s the buildings were still intact with
embroidered altar cloths, carved wooden saints, and bells
hanging from a crossbar in front of the mission. The faithful
then had a superstition that so long as the bells hung in their
rightful place, peace and health would dwell in the pueblo.
Then one night in 1930, the bells were stolen. Immediately
several older residents dropped dead. After that, the mission
fell into ruin and its altarpieces disappeared.

“While editor of Desert Magazine, I was told a story by a
reliable reader that might explain the disappearance of the
wooden saints. On a visit to Santo Domingo, she had
personally examined four carved wooden mission figures,
each about three feet high and so heavy that it required the
efforts of several strong men to lift them. She was told that
the mission’s last priest had left the saints in the care of a
local farmer. Responsibility for their safekeeping had been
passed from one surviving senior member of the community
to the next eldest upon the death of each in turn. Originally
there had been five figures, she was told, but one had been
loaned to a neighboring village for a festival and never
returned. At that time, they resided in a shed at the rear of a
farmhouse near the mission.

“An early traveler who discovered gold dust clinging to their
hollowed insides reportedly found a different set of figures,
similar except in size.”

To reach Santo Domingo, take a graded dirt road east for 4.6
miles from Km 169 on Highway One, just north of the Santo
Domingo river crossing.

Dominican Missionaries recorded at Santo Domingo:
Manuel García (to 1776) August 30, 1775
Miguel Hidalgo 1775 and 1777-1780
José Aivár 1775-1792
Domingo Ginés 1778
Luis Sáles 1778-1779
José Díez Bustamante 1780
Manuel Pérez 1781
José Estévez 1782-1785 and 1788
Juan Antonio Formoso 1785-1787
Jórge Cóello 1789
Miguel Abád 1791-1804
Tomás Valdellón 1793-1801
Tomás Cavallero 1794
Jáime Codina 1794-1797
Miguel López 1795
Mariano Yóldi 1796
Juan Ríbas 1799
José Caulas 1799-1803
Antonio Lázaro 1800
José Miguel de Pineda 1804-1809
Manuel de Águila 1807
Ramón de Santos 1809
Bernardo Solá 1809-1811
Róque Varela 1811-1812
José Duro 1812-1819
Domingo Luna 1819-1822 (last resident missionary)
Francisco Troncoso 1821
Antonio Menéndez 1822-1825 (from San Vicente)
Félix Caballero 1822, 1827, 1829, and 1832-1834 (from San
Miguel)
Tomás Mansilla 1829-1850 (from Santo Tomás)