- by foxnews
- 18 Mar 2026
Excavators from Texas Tech University (TTU) unearthed remains belonging to Mission Nuestra Señora del Espiritu Santo (Mission Our Lady of the Holy Spirit), an abandoned settlement in Jackson County.
With the help of students, excavators discovered proof of the missing site, which resolves "decades of searching" and "fill[s] a long-standing gap in the historical record of early Texas," the university said in a recent release.
Pictures show excavators and archaeologists-in-training smiling at the site, located in southeastern Texas.
Her team also found pottery, plus fired clay and daub from the mud huts of the time - as well as brass trade rings, a part of a pair of scissors and "a number of as-yet unidentified objects."
The mission was related to Presidio La Bahia, a Spanish fort, and Fort St. Louis, a colony established by French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle.
La Salle's settlement, which failed, prompted Spain to reassert control over the region. The Spanish crown promptly launched expeditions, and Mission Espiritu Santo was part of Spain's effort to "pay serious attention to Texas for the first time," said Walter.
The religious settlement was only occupied from 1721 to 1725. The professor said that one of the main reasons for its early demise was difficulty in attracting Karankawa Native Americans to the mission.
"They relied heavily on the labor of Native converts, and without them, they didn't have the manpower to establish and maintain crops and livestock to keep the operation going," she said.
What makes the mission's remains so special is their rarity. Mission Espiritu Santo was "one of the earliest definitively located Spanish missions in Texas," Walter said.
She added that the excavation "helps to provide a rare, undisturbed snapshot of daily life on the Spanish frontier in the early 18th century."
Walter added that her students were "very excited" to be part of the search for the mission.
"They also had the opportunity to work with professional archaeologists from the Texas Historical Commission and even a team of researchers from New Mexico," she added.
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