History San Pasqual Pueblo Īs part of ending the mission system in Alta California under territorial governor José Figueroa, Pueblos were created to resettle the displaced Mission Kumeyaay, of which some of the Kumeyaay from Mission San Diego were allowed to resettle and establish San Pasqual Pueblo in 1835. 21 people of 214 enrolled members lived there in the 1970s. Reservation population is approximately 752, and 435 tribal members live in the general area. The original reservation, founded in 1910, is now the San Diego Zoo Safari Park and Lake Wolford. It is made up of five, non-contiguous parcels of land that total 1,379.58 acres (5.5830 km 2). Reservation Location of San Pasqual Reservation San Pasqual Tribal Chairman Allen Lawson introduces a Habitat for Humanity project on the reservation, 2004 The San Pasqual Band of Diegueño Mission Indians of California is a federally recognized tribe of Kumeyaay people, who are sometimes known as Mission Indians. Other Kumeyaay tribes, Cocopa, Quechan, Paipai, and Kiliwa Native Kumeyaay Indians in Southern California San Pasqual Band