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In April the sheep are herded back to the mountains where they will graze till fall. Here they are heading to a communal corral below Mount San Antonio in the distance. |
Cuba and the timeless cycle of shearing, lambing,
tending, breeding and selling sheep is the story of the rural Hispano culture
of land, water, family and faith that permeates the valleys and villages of
northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. They have lived a life from the land for more than two hundred
years. Once upon a time a million and a half sheep grazed the grasslands of the
Taos Plateau, the San Luis Valley and Rio Arriba County from Española
to Chama. The roots of this deeply communal life pierce deep into the rocky
soil of villages in the San Luis Valley like Antonito, Conote, Conejos and Mogote. It began with the great migration
of Hispanic families from northern New Mexico in the years following the Treaty
of Guadalupe Hidalgo. In 1848 Mexico ceded Nuevo Mexico to the United States. In the
fifty years that followed most of the land owned by rural Hispanics in
New Mexico was stolen when Spanish and Mexican land grants were not protected by
the United States government as it had promised in the treaty. Deep-pocketed Anglo
interests conspired to separate the Mexicans from their land. Speculators,
lawyers and the courts collaborated to fleece the cash poor Spanish speakers. And they
were easy pickings. First the communal land (ejido) was stolen and the private property left over was bought for as little as $1.00 for an entire homestead. For more please read Willian Debuys' River of Traps.
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Patriarch Alfonzo Abeyta during birthing in March. It's a 24 hour a day effort with little sleep. Most ewes birth two or more lambs which are standing and nursing within five minutes. |
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A 24 hour day is written on Andrew Abeyta's weary face. If the ewe refuses to nurse Andrew and his sun Amos fill in. There's nothing sweeter. |
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Andrew and Amos with two newborns. Amos will to follow in his father's footsteps as Andrew followed Alfonso. |
Alfonzo Abeyta says that the Abeytas
came to the San Luis Valley from Rio Arriba County during the historic migration of the 1850s. They came from near Española, most likely from the
village of Chamita. They first settled
near Manassa in the 1850s. By the early 20th century Serafín Abeyta, grandfather to Alfonzo, was living with his wife Luisa and three young children in
Sanford. Then he abandoned his family and Serafín became the name not spoken. He may not have been a good man but he was a tough one. Reputedly he fought the
Manassa Mauler himself, Jack Dempsey, to draw in warehouse after a day bucking
100 pound sacks of potatoes. They say the bout went 49 rounds before both men
asked for a draw. Later Luisa Abeyta remarried Joe Garcia, the man Alfonzo
considers his real grandfather.
“My
great grandfather took in the Mormon settlers who came to Manassa in 1878. He
built them a barn, gave them shelter through the winter and sold them land
to grow crops. But they never wanted their daughters to marry our sons.” Alfonzo
told me. It’s true that local Mexicans,
that’s the term Alfonzo uses, gave aid to the Mormons and that a wealthy Mexican
farmer sold them 1,200 acres on which they built Manassa. The Mormons were directed in their pursuits by Brigham Young from Salt
Lake City and by his personally appointed emissaries called “elders”. Following
the model employed with great success in Utah, the Mormons built the town on
one side of the Conejos and divided the land on the other side of the river into
10 acre parcels, one for each family to farm. That was part of the well proven
formula, to reside in the town and to irrigate and farm the bulk of their
holdings. By 1880 they had arranged to buy an addition 2,000 acres from the State
of Colorado and almost instantly the organized and prosperous Mormons had controlled Conejos county. To this day they dominate banking and government and
treat the Hispanos as an underclass.
4 comments:
The photograph of the sheep below San Antonio mountain is wonderful as well as the shot of Andrew and Amos with the new lambs. Your writing included in today's blog is a perfect accompaniment to the photography, and I am glad you referenced William DeBuys' River of Traps as well. The northern New Mexico/southern Colorado area has a very rich and fascinating history. Thanks for bringing that to the fore.
Wonderful contrast of time and culture in the photo of the sheep and the pickup. Thanks for all the information on the Abeyta family.
Thanks, Daryl. It's a story that still captivates me.
Thanks. The only thing that' has changed since 1850 is that it would have been a horse and wagon not a pickup.
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