Eight-year-old Encarnación Castro embarked on a life-altering Journey that challenged her endurance and resolve.
What began as a promising adventure for Encarnación and her family, became an existential struggle..
The Anza caravan, made up of 240 men, women and children, traveled over eight months.
There was no turning back for Encarnación and her family.
Stalked and attacked by Apache warriors, tested by hostile environments, burdened by the shortage of food and water, grief-stricken over the loss of loved ones, the Castro\'s 1800-mile Journey defied human fortitude and expectations.
The Anza Expedition\'s goal was to settle San Francisco, Alta California and to found a mission there.
After ten years of military service, the Spanish King promised land grants to those who served.
On the expedition, her father was a "soldado de cuera," a leather-jacket soldier, who protected the expedition.
Encarnación\'s family had been recruited as soldier-settlers in Lieutenant Colonel Juan Bautista Anza\'s Expedition of 1775-1776.
Intellectual curiosity and strength of will were her personal mantra.
Encarnación was a precocious eight-year old Mestiza (Spanish-Indian) child from Villa de Sinaloa, Nueva España.
Her life would never be the same.
Eight-year-old Encarnación Castro embarked on a life-altering Journey that challenged her endurance and resolve