In the late 1500's, after years of being ready to make his entrada into Nuevo Mexico, Don Juan De Onate, was given permission by the Viceroy of Mexico and the King of Spain. Marc Simmons did a great job in researching Onate, because Onate himself kept no diary. With Onate having paid for everything - food, wagons, cattle, sheep, pigs, and all manner of equipment for everyone, he finally left Santa Barbara, his staging area, and began the long arduous journey into New Mexico, believing that he and his men would find gold and silver in abundance. Also with him were Franciscan monks, families willing to settle there, soldiers and officers. The wagon wheels were wood, pulled by oxen.
It was, quite frankly, a disaster for Onate, from the start. I live in New Mexico. I know where El Camino Trail was and it couldn't have been easy for so many people, animals, wagons and their drivers to traverse from where they started to where they ended. Water was at a premium many times, food ran out, rivers had to be crossed.
I don't want to say anymore. It is an interesting biography, and for sure Don Juan de Onate was The Last Conquistador.