Hugo Reid


Hugo Reid, born in Scotland, was an early resident of Los Angeles County who became a naturalized citizen of California and who married a local Gabrieleño woman. Reid wrote a series of newspaper articles, or "letters," that described the culture, language, and contemporary circumstances of the local Tongva people, criticizing their treatment by Franciscan missionaries who administered the Spanish missions in California.

Life

Born to Charles Reid and Essex Milliken, at Cardross, Dunbartonshire, Scotland, on 18 April 1811, Reid established a trading house in Hermosillo, Mexico in the late-1820s with a business partner, William Keith, and first visited Los Angeles, then a part of Mexican Alta California, in 1832. He married a Gabrieleño woman and adopted her children, María and Felipe.
" ca.1903, prior to removal of a wood-frame addition by BaldwinReid and his wife were granted the Rancho Santa Anita following secularization of the Mission San Gabriel ranch lands, and built an adobe house there in 1839. The grant was confirmed by Alta California Governor Pio Pico in 1845. A restored adobe, known as the "Hugo Reid Adobe", was in fact built on a different nearby site by a later owner. Both Reid's original site and the current adobe are located at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden, part of the former estate of Lucky Baldwin, in what is now the town of Arcadia. Reid was nicknamed the Scotch Paisano during his days as a Scottish settler in Mexican Southern California.
Reid wrote a series of 22 letters which were published in the Los Angeles Star in 1852, and which provide an important ethnographic picture of the little-known Gabrieleño people. They were republished in book form several times. The first publication in book form was by Arthur M. Ellis in 1926, in an edition of only 200 copies, so in 1939 they were again reprinted by Susanna Bryant Dakin.
Reid died in Los Angeles on December 12, 1852. His funeral was held at the old Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, located on Main Street in Los Angeles, and he was buried in the adjacent cemetery. His body was later moved to the Campo Santo on North Broadway. His remains were then disinterred and moved to the new Calvary Cemetery in East Los Angeles.