On Monday, I visited the mission at San Juan Bautista, CA located about 45 miles south of San Jose. The mission was dedicated on June 24, 1797 and was the 15th of 21 missions founded in California by Catholic Spanish padres to teach Christianity and agricultural techniques to Native Americans. Here's a map of the 21 missions.
Mission San Juan Bautista is the largest of all the missions and the only one with 3 aisles. The church has never been abandoned and is currently the parish church of San Juan Bautista.
The monastery wing was dedicated in 1815 and has 36 rooms.
Statue of Native American
Inside the church
Altar
The entire mission complex sits directly next to the San Andreas Fault. This pic was taken standing on the fault at the bottom of the stairs. Seems amazing the church has survived. The San Andreas Fault is the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. It's a horizontal strike-slip fault. The church on the left is moving north while the valley bordering on the right moves south.
Plaza Hotel established 1856 sits across from the mission.
This cottage was originally a Wells Fargo office.
I loved the shape of this old pepper tree trunk. There were a number of really old pepper trees in town.
The town is really cute, but unfortunately I was there on Monday and a lot of the stores are closed on Mondays.
Sandi