María Gabriela Berryessa 

Doña María Gabriela Berryessa y Castro

1780-1851

[From a daguerreotype]


María Gabriela Berryessa was the daughter and first born of Nicolás Antonio Berryessa and María Gertrudis Peralta. Her parents came from two pioneer families of Alta California, Nueva España. Her father, Nicholas came north with the De Anza Expedition in 1776, at the age of fourteen, as did his wife, Gertrudis as a nine-year-old child.

On 16 February 1795, at Misión de Santa Clara, Gabriela married Don Francisco María Castro, grantee of Rancho San Pablo, then known as “Rancho de los Cuchiyunes” on San Francisco Bay. Don Francisco and Gabriela initially made their home in San José and produced fourteen children between 1796 to 1824. When he retired from public life, the family moved to the existing Rancho Cuchiyunes adobe on his property at San Pablo.

 

Don Francisco died in 1831 and ownership of the Rancho was divided half to his wife, Gabriela and the remainder to their surviving children. Gabriela was now a widow at fifty-one years old and continued to live in the old adobe with all seven of her surviving sons, three daughters, two daughters-in-law, and seven little grandchildren. The adobe was very small for so large a family even with a few additions added on later. For Gabriela, food for her family was plentiful but unsophisticated. She had tough beef, beans, onions, peppers, eggs, poultry and local wines with fruits in season added. The women’s lives revolved around church celebrations, baptisms, marriages and other events.

 

Gabriela and her family continued to live together for another five years after their father’s death. The sons eventually started to build their own homes and the rancho was filled with building activity for the ten years that followed. Sometime later in 1843 her youngest son, Jesus María Castro became engaged and hired carpenters to build a small adobe that had 3 rooms for his future bride. He married Josefa Alviso in November 1845, and a year later moved into the unfinished adobe at Rancho San Pablo with his new wife, his mother and a younger brother, Alvino.

By 1850 most of Gabriela’s children had died, so their portion of the inheritance reverted back to her. In August of 1851 lawyers were quietly called in and Gabriela signed a deed giving her entire share to her daughter Martina. It would be sometime before the brothers became aware of this transaction. Late in November of 1851, Gabriela was attending a birthday celebration of her son, Joaquin when she had a stroke and fell to the ground unconscious. Joaquin hurried by boat to San Francisco to bring Dr. Jacob Tewksbury to attend to her. About three weeks after, Gabriela died in December of that year, just before Christmas. She was buried a few weeks later across the bay at Mission Dolores in San Francisco. The cost of her medical expenses and funeral were a substantial amount, perhaps indicating a very elaborate funeral. Certainly it was appropriate that her Mass was said in the chapel of the mission which was built by the settlers who came with the Anza expedition in 1776.