The California Indians, the original inhabitants of the state, now constitute a small but rapidly growing percentage of the population. Spanish missionaries converted and subjugated them as part of the construction of the California mission chain. When the missions were secularized in 1833, some 30,000 Mission Indians were farming under the direction of priests and soldiers at 21 different missions. Disease decimated the California Indian population for decades after the Spaniards’ arrival. During the remainder of the 19th century, thousands of indigenous Californians were enslaved through the application of antivagrancy laws; similar numbers were killed during state-sponsored raids that were ...(100 of 10147 words)