- Early California Population Project Database
Welcome to the Early California Population Project (ECPP), a reference database and research project that explores the lives of more than 100,000 individuals who appear in the sacramental records created by California’s Franciscan missionaries between 1769 and 1850
- Early California Population Project - The Huntington
The Early California Population Project (ECPP) is a database developed by the Huntington Library providing public access to all the information contained in the California mission registers from 1769 to 1850
- Early California Population Project Report - JSTOR
Within the baptism, marriage, and burial records of each of the California missions sits an extraordinary wealth of unique information on the Indians, soldiers, and settlers of Alta California
- The Huntington | Directory of Cultural Resource Libraries
"The Early California Population Project (ECPP) provides public access to all the information contained in California's historic mission registers, records that are of unique and vital importance to the study of California, the American Southwest, and colonial America
- EARLY CALIFORNIA POPULATION PROJECT
The database encompasses records from all 21 of the California missions, in addition to the Los Angeles Plaza Church (1826-1848) and the Santa Barbara Presidio (1782-1848)
- Using the Early California Population Project (ECPP) website
Behind the scenes, the database, which was redesigned and simplified, is now hosted on a server at the University of California, Riverside’s College of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences where their IT department oversees database maintenance, operability, and sustainability
- Pobladores – Early California Colonists and their Families
The Pobladores Project is a database of vital information that covers the entire life spans of some 18,000 Spanish-speaking colonists who came to California The project follows these individuals from their origins in Mexico and elsewhere to their final days in California
- The Huntington Library’s “Early California Population Project”
For the descendants of California’s early mission Indians, this database provides information not only on their family members but the larger movements of native villages that entered missions over time
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