Caballero de Anza Route
It is a binational tour between Sonora and the United States that seeks to promote the cultural richness of both regions following the route taken by the military and explorer Juan Bautista de Anza to San Francisco, California.
In 1775-1776, Anza took more than 240 men, women and children on an overland journey across the border from New Spain to settle for Alta California. He covered 3,245 kilometers in the footsteps of this multiethnic and intrepid expedition, and explored the rich cultural history of the communities from San Miguel de Horcasitas, Sonora, to San Francisco, California, across the inhospitable desert. In such an important feat, José Joaquín Moraga participated as lieutenant and the Franciscan friar Pedro Font as chaplain, for his ability to fix coordinates. They established a Mission and Presidio in the present city of San Francisco, California. The Anza trail was designated a National Historic Trail by the U.S. Congress in 1990.
The soldiers and families who departed carried the language, customs, religion and all that encompasses the Hispanic-Mexican culture from our Sonoran lands. Most of the members of the expedition were born in America, in the lands of New Spain, but their roots came from different races: European, mestizo, indigenous and African.
Mexican.
The route passes through several municipalities, such as Hermosillo, San Miguel de Horcasitas, Ures, Baviácora, Aconchi, San Felipe de Jesús, Huépac, Banámichi, Arizpe, Cucurpe, Carbó, Opodepe, Santa Ana, Magdalena de Kino, Ímuris and Nogales. In all these places there is a historical trace of the tireless gentleman.