Memorial Cross Park
History
The Mission Santa Clara de Asís was founded along the banks of the Guadalupe River, with the first Mass held on January 12, 1777. In January 1779, the Guadalupe flooded the original site, destroying it, and a second site was blessed by Father Junipero Serra on November 11, 1779. The cornerstone for a new church was laid on November 19, 1781 at a third site, and after it was completed in May 1784, services were moved there from the temporary second site.
This second Mission site is occupied by the present Mission (or Memorial) Cross Park, at the northeast corner of the intersection of De La Cruz and Martin. The city purchased the land as a park before 1907. Reportedly, there were four structures at the second site: a church and sacristry, measuring 6×25 varas (a vara is a customary unit of measurement equal to 0.8375 m (2.75 ft)); servant's quarters (5×10 varas); a kitchen and shop (5×10 varas); and a residence and storeroom (5×45 varas). The Native American Marcello, said to be "the Last of the Mission Indians", assisted in constructing the second site. A memorial cross which had been placed near the city's Southern Pacific railroad station in 1912 to mark the second Mission site was moved approximately 200 ft (61 m) to the corner of Campbell and Franklin, where an old cornerstone had been unearthed in 1913. However, the precise locations of the first two sites have not been proven; a cultural resource management project was conducted in the late 1970s covering the purported sites prior to an expansion of San Jose International Airport, involving a surface survey and trenching, which provided no definitive evidence for the presence of the mission at the first two claimed locations.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f8/Memorial_cross_which_marks_second_Mission_Santa_Clara_site%2C_1916.jpg/260px-Memorial_cross_which_marks_second_Mission_Santa_Clara_site%2C_1916.jpg)
On November 19, 1907, an 8 ft (2.4 m) tall wooden cross was erected at the second Mission site by the Santa Clara County Historical Society. That cross incorporated a fragment of the original 1777 cross and used the wooden timbers from the cross erected by Fr. Serra in 1781 at the third Mission site; the timbers, in turn, had been part of the first Mission building built in 1777. The original 1777 cross had been rebuilt and encased in new material in 1902 following a windstorm that had knocked it down, and the 1907 cross sealed the 1781 timbers in a similar manner. The president of Santa Clara College, Richard A. Gleeson, S.J., delivered the keynote speech during the dedication ceremony, entitled "The Birth of Christianity and Dawn of Civilization in Santa Clara Valley"; other speakers included James R. Daily, reading "The Mission Cross", a poem by Charles F. Walsh; Rev. John W. Dinsmore ("Footprints of the Padres"); and historian Dr. George Wharton James ("Junipero Serra, Pioneer of Pioneers"). Politicians attending included former San Francisco Mayor James D. Phelan, who delivered brief remarks: "I am reminded of the American traveler who received a just rebuke from Lord Byron, who refused to see him because the American had never beheld Niagara Falls. We should first see and know our own land" as well as Congressman Joseph R. Knowland.
A larger 14 ft (4.3 m) tall granite cross was dedicated at the second site on January 12, 1953; the principal speaker was Knowland (this time, as President of the California Historical Society) and Santa Clara Mayor William P. Kiely accepted the cross on behalf of the city. The granite cross was originally donated by the local Lions Club. It weighs 23 short tons (21 t) and was cut in Santa Rosa by Massimo Galeazzi to a design by John Costa, although Jess Talancon would claim credit for design and execution in the 1970s; the granite was quarried from Rocklin. The park was developed in 1956, and the cross was rededicated to the city in 1961. The city of Santa Clara considers it a mini park with 0.34 acres (0.14 ha) of area.