San Francisco de los Tejas was founded in 1690 by Franciscan Father Damian Massanet near Weches, Texas and abondoned in 1693 after epidemics and after the Spansih learned of plot by the Tejas to massacre the missionaries. This mission was relocated to San Antonio in 1731 after several failed attempts at other locations in the province of Texas.
The mission was renamed San Francisco de la Espada. La Espada means sword in Spanish and is believed to be the surname of a distinguished person. The mission started from scratch, recruiting Indigenous groups, and collecting supplies.
The sacristy, granary, and two-story convento were completed in 1745. The first and current stone church was completed by 1756. The mission was partially secularized in 1794 and fully secularized by Mexico in 1824.
During the first years of the missions, the indigenous people under the instruction of the craftsman would’ve began construction on the dam, dug the earthen acequias, cleared land for farming, and built temporary structures. The acequia construction began around 1731 and was completed by 1745. The acequias water has been flowing ever since. Walk around outside the mission walls and you can see parts of the Espada acequia.
