APTOS—As Santa Cruz County’s community college begins efforts to possibly rebrand itself with a new name—and reject the name of Spanish Explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo—two drastically different pictures of the man at the center of the debate have emerged.
Cabrillo College began to explore a name change in July 2020, as movements such as Black Lives Matter prompted communities across the United States to look at their own institutions and the historical names they bore. The Washington Football Team, previously named the Redskins, are in the midst of just such a change.
Proponents of Cabrillo’s name change say they do not want the college associated with Cabrillo, who they say brutalized and subjugated the native people that populated the coast.
University of San Diego history emeritus professor Dr. Iris Engstrand—who was the keynote speaker on March 18 as the college launched the public informational phase of its renaming process—called accusations of genocide, slavery, sex trafficking and murder by Cabrillo—which sparked the drive to change the college’s name—“patently false.”
In fact, Engstrand said Cabrillo wanted to treat the native people well in the places along the California coast where his voyage brought him, so as to have both able workers and converts to the Catholic church. Furthermore, she said, Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza stipulated that no harm should be done to local natives during explorations.
“[Cabrillo] is a pretty typical, not cruel, Spaniard,” she said. “He was very concerned about the natives, that nobody would hurt them.”
But in a letter sent out on Monday, Cabrillo President Matt Wetstein—along with Board of Governors chair Rachel Spencer and trustees Adam Spickler and Christina Cuevas—expressed disappointment in Engstrand’s presentation, saying she defended Cabrillo’s actions—and the imperialistic Spanish rule he brought—“through a lens of white supremacy and Eurocentrism.”
“While Dr. Engstrand shared a portrayal of Cabrillo that painted a portrait of him as an historic savior and explorer, her portrayal neglected to give credence to widely held historic beliefs that his roles in Cuba and Mexico led to what would be the modern-day equivalent of cultural genocide, sex trafficking and slave ownership,” the letter reads.
Wetstein vowed “a more balanced approach” in upcoming panel discussions regarding the college’s name change.
“We reject those statements made during her lecture that fail to give credence to the pain caused by cultural genocide, slavery, and the subjugation of women and indigenous people—not only in Central America and Mexico at that time, but anywhere and in any period of history,” the letter reads. “We reject them as Euro-centric, anti-indigenous interpretations of history that lacked cultural humility.”
The Name Exploration Subcommittee was formed after the school in July of 2020 received a request to change its name. The subcommittee includes trustees Spickler and Cuevas, Associated Students of Cabrillo College Student Trustee Amidia Frederick and Wetstein, according to the school website. It is expected to have at least five public meetings, including March 18’s, and then come up with a recommendation for a potential name change sometime in fall 2021.
The next virtual meeting is set for April 8. It will discuss the impacts of colonization on Native Americans.
Engstrand said that Cabrillo’s orders were to map the coast to the north and chart a course to China, find a route from Europe above Canada to the Pacific and establish trade relations with China.
She said that Cabrillo deserves credit for his voyage, which discovered the winter wind patterns and southern pacific trading current, and helped establish the beginning of trade with China and the greater Pacific Basin.
“To put it simply, it is the accomplishments of Cabrillo as a navigator and explorer that established his reputation in history and make him worthy of recognition,” she said.
Engstrand said that Cabrillo’s expedition along the coast of California was not rooted in genocide, and that there is no known instance of him murdering anyone.
“He was part of an army composed of Spaniards and natives … to defeat the Aztecs,” she said.
He also joined Pedro de Alvarado in the conquest of Guatemala, where he settled down with a native woman, and had two daughters with her. He later married Beatriz Sanchez de Ortega, who returned to Guatemala with him.
Engstrand said that slavery in that time was outlawed in Spain, except for enemies captured on the battlefield, who were used for mass labor.
She said that sex trafficking in the 16th century was not a crime, but an accepted fact of life.
In fact, many of Cabrillo’s actions, she stressed, were accepted practices.
“Cabrillo was a man of his times, not ours,” she said.
Accusations of sexual slavery, Engstrand said, stem from a letter to King Charles V of Spain written on Nov. 20, 1539 by bishop Francisco Marroquín of Santiago de Guatemala. That letter described the Spaniards rounding up native girls and women to “serve the men of the shipyard as bed companions, cooks and laundresses,” Engstrand said.
These men were operating under the orders of Pedro De Alvarado, not Cabrillo, Engstrand said.
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For information on upcoming name change events, visit bit.ly/31acZp0.
If the name is changed, Cabrillo will lose a lot of money that is donated. My family has donated funds to Cabrillo since it startred as my dad was a founding member and teacher. I also know of many other generous families that have donated who will also stop. Do think about this Cabrillo trustees and president.