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First Families of Lincoln
County
File restored October 24, 2007
This file was lost for several
years, but is now restored from an old disk. Add
your First Family
history.
First Families of Lincoln County
To list your family, submit evidence that your
ancestors arrived in Lincoln County during or before
1912. Submit information in narrative form to our
Research Specialist Janelle Foster or Charles
Barnum. Limit your application to about three
thousand words. Clearly state the name of your
ancestor who arrived in Lincoln County, the date,
and the proof upon which you based your assertion,
such as census records, birth records,
death/cemetery records, and land/legal records.
Thereafter, your name and your ancestor's name will
be added to the file with a short statement of the
facts. Remember that it must be in narrative form
and include all the facts. Otherwise, your
application will not be considered. Please don't
include names of living persons without their
consent.
First Family: Thomas Alfred
BRAGG.
Jesse Bragg married Nancy WANEY in Alabama in
1807. They had ten children one of who was Alfred
Colum Bragg. Colum married Susan Emiline Harris, nee
Boggs. Colum served in the Texas C.S.A and moved to
White Oaks, New Mexico in a family wagon train from
Albany, Texas in 1887. Several other and related
families traveled in the wagon train. Colum’s young
grandson, Alfred Thomas Bragg, was a muleskinner who
took care of the mules that pulled his father’s
wagon. Thomas Alfred settled along Rio Bonito and
made his living training mules and herding. He came
to be known as Muloamo or mule trainer.
Thomas Alfred’s parents were Ben Bragg and Anna D.
Stanphill. Ben was murdered in 1896 on the Eagle
Creek trail as he brought supplies to Thomas who was
herding sheep beside the creek. Thomas was later
pursued by Sheriff Emil Fritz for taking revenge,
but was never brought to trial. Ben had nine other
children who grew up near White Oaks.
Thomas Alfred Bragg married Molly Delphora Goats, a
Texas lady with German ancestry, 2 April 1898 in
Nogal. They had three children, Charley Lee and Emzy
Everett Bragg, and Bertha Fanny Bragg. Charley and
Emzy were known as fist fighters, and Bertha once
won a wood-chopping contest.
Several landmarks are named after Ben Bragg’s family
near White Oaks such as Benado—Ben sin mas ni mas,
meaning it’s Ben’s place, and Canon Del Bragg, and
Canon Del Bragg Del Pequeno and Benado Gap and Bragg
Canyon and Little Bragg Canyon. A Veterans Civil War
headstone in the historical Cedarvale Cemetery of
White Oaks was erected in honor of Alfred Colum
Bragg. Ben Bragg was buried in Nogal Cemetery.
Thomas Bragg was buried in Angus Cemetery beside
relatives.
Sources: Texas and New Mexico marriage records;
censuses Texas 1830 through 1880, & New Mexico 1900,
1910 & 1920. Bragg Family Bible; Oral history by E.
L. Greer; the Ancestral File; book titled Cousins of
Thomas Alfred Bragg, A Little Family Book; book
titled The Saga of the Sierra Blanca & book titled
The Bear’s Den both by H. L. Traylor. First Family
contributed by Rianna T. Bishop.
First Families:
BROWN,
DALTON, HAMPTON, HUST, MAY: It's
inaccurate to say everyone in Lincoln County is
related, but many close families arrived in the
1880's from Missouri. One wagon train contained
twenty-one wagons, said George S. Brown recalling he
was six at the time. Mary Margaret Pfingsten, nee
May, who was nine when the train left Missouri, said
there were eighteen wagons. Others said forty wagons
headed westward. Several wagons left the train and
headed for Colorado after several weeks.
On 14 July 1890, Dea Richmond Hust said he lived
south of Springfield, Missouri after the Civil War
and went to Jefferson and Park Counties in Colorado
and lived there from 1878 through part of 1880.
Miles May, who had seen the area around Reserve, New
Mexico returned home to Cedar Valley Missouri. He
urged his family and others to move.
Miles thought the area around Reserve was so fine
that he returned to his home in Cedar Valley,
Missouri urging his family and the Browns to move.
Abe May, a brother of Miles May, was Maggie's
father. David and Almary May were the parents of
Miles and Abe. Maggie's mother was Cynthia Ann May,
nee Hust. They were part of the party that left the
main group and went to Colorado when Dea Richmond
Hust had lived earlier. Hannah Hust, a daughter of
Dea Richmond Hust and Hannah Harriet Hust was also
in the wagon train.
Cynthia's parents were Dea Richmond and Hannah
Harriet Hust, nee Hampton. Dea and Hannah moved
briefly from Colorado to Missouri. Hannah Hust was
another daughter of Dea Richmond and Hannah Harriet.
She later married Jeremiah Dalton. All of
them--aunts, uncles, cousins, sons, and daughters,
started West in June of 1883.
In later years, Maggie said, "Some of the party
dropped out along the way and...my parents and my
grandparents (Hust) went on to Colorado. The Browns
and the Mays settled in Tortilito Canyon. It took us
three months to get to Horseshoe, a little mining
town near Leadville.... The next fall we left
Colorado to come to Lincoln County. My grandfather
(Dea Richmond Hust) and grandmother (Hannah) were
with us and two of their young boys, George and
Clark Hust."
Dea Richmond wrote in 1890, "...in the fall of 1885,
I moved to Nogal..." Soon Abe May ran a blacksmith
shop in Angus. A couple of years earlier he had
homesteaded 160 acres. The family later moved to
Nogal where Maggie married Fred Pfingsten on 1
November 1894. Fred, a son of Henry Pfingsten,
called himself a freighter but went to work at the
Vera Cruz mine in 1907.
George Brown wrote of his trip from Missouri to New
Mexico in 1937, "My mother's father, David and
Almary May, drove one wagon drawn by two white oxen.
The rest of the crowd in the train were all uncles
and aunts and cousins. They had their own covered
wagons drawn by mules."
He also said at times there would be as many as
fifty wagons in our train. "We would overtake some
of them and some would overtake us, and we would all
go along together for awhile and then those other
wagons would drift off on their own way."
Originally, according to Brown, the intention was to
go to Mesa, Arizona. But it took the group he was
with six months to get to New Mexico. So, they went
to White Oaks and camped at the Manchester Rock
House, about three miles from town. The Browns lived
there for two months, then moved in October 1884 to
Tortolito Canyon, ten miles southeast of Carrizozo.
These folks are gone now and many are buried in the
Angus Cemetery and in the Nogal Cemetery.
US Archives, Washington, DC; 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880
Missouri Censuses, 1885 NM Agricultural Census,
1900, 1910 NM Census; Civil War records and pension
files, Carrizozo Newspaper and the May Family Bible.
First Family contributed by Hal Taylor.
First Family: Lin
Branum
was born on a farm near Dallas on 9 August 1861 to
Lindsey and Margaret Miller Branum. He died in
Carrizozo, New Mexico 3 May 1925. Lin and Nellie
Anne Henley--daughter of Thomas W. Henley and Nancy
Melvina Williams Henley, were married in Nogal, New
Mexico 6 June 1894. To this union were born five
children, Alice May, Nancy Margaret, Rufus, Linza
and Clinton. Lin was for many years were an
outstanding figure in ranching and cattle circles of
New Mexico with large holding in various counties of
the state.
Lin started his career in west Texas where he worked
on a cattle ranch in Eastland County. He then came
to New Mexico around 1877 and was employed on the VV
Ranch in Lincoln County, owned by James Cree. Lin,
in the meantime, accumulated some cattle of his own
and located on the Three Rivers. He worked for a
year for the Goodwin interests. W. C. McDonald,
first Governor of New Mexico after statehood, also
employed him for several years. In 1897 he moved his
cattle to the foothills of the Jicarilla Mountains
at Coyote Canyon near White Oaks and established the
Steeple M ranch. The Branum family remained at the
Steeple M ranch for 24 years. He sold this ranch to
the Warden brothers and bought the I-X Ranch near
Carrizozo. He continued ranching until his failing
health required him to sell his holding and retire.
First Family: Lewis W. BOURNE came to Lincoln
County, New Mexico territory in 1880. He was the son
of William and Mary Johnson Bourne in Knob Fork,
Grayson County, Virginia. He married Julia Ann
Fulton on March 13, 1857 in Grayson County as shown
on Virginia marriage records. Their children were
Pinkie Alice, born 1859; Cleveland was born in 1861;
an infant was born and died in 1866; Robert was born
in 1867; William Stephen was born in 1873 and Chloe
was born in 1877. Documentation by the Lincoln
County and Grayson County Census records. Lewis
served as a Captain in the CSA, Co B, 37th Battalion
VA Cavalry in Jackson's Brigade, Lomas's Division,
Second Corp, Army Valley District. The Union Army
near Lynchburg captured him on June 17, 1864. He was
imprisoned at Camp Chase, Ohio and Point Lookout MD.
He was wounded in the war and lost some of the bones
in his arm, having to wear a splint wrapped in
cloth. He called it his "corset". Records are from
National Archives in Washington, D.C.
Lewis and Julia arrived at Bonita City after brief
stops in Louisiana and Erath County, Texas. They
quickly became involved in village life. Lewis
became known as Grampa Bourne and was famous for his
tall tales with his Virginia drawl. Julia became the
area midwife and delivered more than 100 babies in
the county. The Bourne family moved to Parsons, and
Lewis became the Postmaster. After the death of his
wife, he spent his remaining years with his daughter
Pinkie Alice and her husband, John Henry Skinner, in
Carrizozo. He died there at the age of 94, never
losing his Southern courtliness of manner nor his
zest for living. Both are buried in Evergreen
Cemetery in Carrizozo. First Family contributed by
Janelle Foster.
First Family: Seaborn
GRAY.
It was because of none other than Pat Garrett that
Nellie Gray Reily became a pioneer in Lincoln
County. Pat Garrett and Nellie Gray's father,
Seaborn GRAY, were first cousins. The Gray family
lived in Grapevine, Texas having originally come
from Alabama by way of Louisiana. In 1855 Seaborn
Gray was suffering from tuberculosis. Pat Garrett
had been out west and thought it was a good climate
for him to come to. He persuaded Seaborn to come to
New Mexico. It was good advice because in a couple
of years he was perfectly well. He lived to quite an
old man.
The trip took about four months on the road from
Texas to Little Creek. They drove 500 head of cattle
and when they got to Ft. Sumner they had to lay over
for ten days because the water in the Pecos was too
high to ford. They had no drinking water, so the
cowboys got an old barrel and dipped some water and
got some prickly pears, beat them up and put them in
the water to make it settle and be good enough to
drink. The family went to Little Creek where Seaborn
Gay filed on what is now the town site of Capitan. A
Post Office naming the town Gray was established in
1894. Seaborn served as Postmaster until 11 October
1900 when the town was renamed Capitan. He also
served as County School Superintendent and was a
deputy sheriff. Seaborn Gray and William Reily sold
their land to W. H. Eddy for the railroad into
Capitan around 1907. Sources: WPA Interview 1935,
newspaper clippings, History of Capitan. First
Family contributed Barbara Branum.
First Family: Green Berry
GREER
was the son of George W. Greer. He married Julia
Ann Wheatly in Johnson County Missouri. He was born
3 October 1852 and was married 28 December 1873. He
moved to Pecos, Texas before 1900. From History of
Johnson County Missouri, 1881; marriage records of
same; family and Bible records of E. L. Greer; Texas
Census records.
Green Berry Greer moved to Lincoln County after an
expedition to find good land, about 1899. He settled
in Bonito Canyon about 1902. From New Mexico Census
1910. His family consisted of these children: Arthur
C.; Ella; John Franklin; Ethel Olive; Elmer; Ira
Aten; William Randall; James Ralph; Lola B.; and
Lester. From GREER family Bible. First Family
Contributed by Janet Greer.
First Family:
HENLEY:
Health brought the Henley family to New Mexico from
Missouri in 1879. Allen and Lucy Henley came to the
Roswell area for health reasons, from a plantation
near Jefferson City, and established a farm. Soon
after they moved to New Mexico their son, Thomas,
born in Missouri in 1841, developed asthma, and he
and his family moved to New Mexico from Texas where
he had been teaching school and practicing medicine
with an older Doctor. Tom and his wife, Nancy
Melvina Williams, born in Arkansas in 1855, and
their children landed on the Bonito on the first day
of November 1880. They filed on 160 acres five miles
above Ft. Stanton.
The second year on the farm Tom got a job at Ft.
Stanton as a blacksmith. After he left Ft. Stanton
he got a job at the "V" ranch as a blacksmith for
the Crees. Tom was a schoolteacher and practiced
medicine. He wasn't a licensed doctor, but he had
gone to medical school in St. Louis, Missouri, but
because of finances, he was unable to finish school.
He also served in the Confederate Army during the
War Between the States. In those days there were
very few doctors, and most of the farmers in the
area sent for "Uncle Tom." They paid him whatever
they felt they could give. He never set a price. Mr.
& Mrs. Pat Garrett lived on a ranch adjoining the
"V" ranch and Mrs. Garrett gave birth to a baby girl
and Tom attended her at birth. This baby girl was
Elizabeth Garrett who wrote our state song, "O Fair
New Mexico." After eleven years on their farm they
sold it and moved to Nogal, where Allen and Tom had
a store. There, Tom was the Preacher, Teacher, Post
Master and had a saloon. By Barbara Branum
First Family
HOFMAN:
My great-grandparents were M. S. Hofman and Pherabe
Wilson. They were the parents of my Grandfather,
John Jacob Hoffman, whose son, John Henry Hoffman,
was my father. Our great-grandfather, M. S. Hoffman,
and his family may have came to the United States in
1809 from Germany and settled in Fredricksburg,
Texas. M. S. Hoffman was born 6 March 1807 and
married Pherabe Wilson, who was born 15 May 1818.
They had twelve children. My grandfather was the
seventh child born on 11 October 1848.
My grandfather, John Jacob Hoffman, married Mildred
Rosella Shelton on 13 December 1891. They had four
children: Guy, born 14 September 1892 died 20
November 1893; John Henry, my father, born 22 April
1894 died 19 August 1965; James Arthur, born 16
February 1897 died in Perris, California in 1979;
Mary Ethel was born 17 May 1899 and died 21 December
1918.
John Jacob’s obituary stated: Mr. Hoffman was born
at Tyler, Texas October 11, 1848, moved with his
parents to Johnson County, Texas in 1855, where he
made his home until 1893. He joined the Texas
Rangers and served in Western Texas in the years of
1873 and 1874, where he rendered distinguished
service as an Indian fighter.
On December 13, 1891 he married Miss Ella Shelton at
Cleburne, Texas. To this union four children were
born, three boys and one girl. The oldest son, Guy,
died when fourteen months old. The daughter, Ethel,
died when nineteen. He moved with his family to New
Mexico, from Cleburne, Texas in 1907 settling near
Carrizozo where they have continuously resided.
John Henry and his family came to New Mexico ca.
1904 and settled in the Hondo Valley. He made his
living as a carpenter. Our dad told us that his
father helped construct the large water wheel in
Ruidoso. They stayed around Hondo for three years
and moved to Carrizozo where they homesteaded the
ranch. I remember as a child riding into town from
the ranch in my grandparent’s buggy. Grandpa died
when I was five years old, but my mother often told
us stories about him. After he died my brother spent
a lot of time at the ranch staying with daddy's
mother and doing chores while daddy was on the road.
My brother rode his horse into town to go to school.
When I was young, I helped work at the ranch. After
both his parents had passed away, my Dad keep the
ranch, because he had purchased land himself
adjoining the original parcel that had been
homesteaded by grandpa. Daddy raised Black Angus
cattle using the brand H LAZY H. After my dad's
passing in 1965, my mother sold the ranch to Brack
and Catherine Cornett of Carrizozo.
The following was taken from a Southern Pacific
Railroad bulletin in 1959:
Mr. J. H. Hoffman, engineer, holds assignment on the
Golden State run between El Paso and Carrizozo, New
Mexico. Mr. Hoffman started his railroading career
working during school vacation in 1909 and 1910. His
first job was assisting in laying the Bonita
pipeline between Nogal Lake and Coyote Pump Station.
In 1911 he was given a regular assignment as
boilermaker helper in Carrizozo Roundhouse, promoted
to locomotive engineer in June 1925.
Prior to my parents marrying, my mother ran a small
boarding house in El Paso. She rented a room to dad
and fellow railroader, Ernest Dingwall. They married
1 January 1931 in El Paso, Texas. They moved to
Carrizozo, New Mexico in 1932. In 1948 they moved
back to El Paso and stayed until Daddy retired from
the S. P. Railroad Company in 1962. Daddy passed
away in August of 1965.
The following was taken from my dad's obituary:
Henry Hoffman, age 71, passed away early Thursday
morning in the local hospital after a brief illness.
Mr. Hoffman has been a resident of Lincoln County
since 1907. He joined the Navy in 1918 and served
through World War I and was discharged September 30,
1921, returning to Carrizozo where he went to work
for the Southern Pacific Railroad. Mr. Hoffman was a
retired railroad engineer with the SP Co. He is
survived
by his wife, Mrs. May Margaret Hoffman, Carrizozo;
three daughters, Mrs. Mildred Hust, Alamogordo, Mrs.
Anna Belle Burrow, Roswell, Mrs. Dorothy Van Deren,
El Paso and one son Harold Hoffman of Dayton, Ohio;
one brother, Arthur Hoffman from Modesto, Calif. and
several grandchildren.
Mr. Hoffman was a member of the Carrizozo Masonic
Lodge No. 41. Funderal services were held August 21
at 3 p.m. in the First Baptist Church with Rev.
Milford Misener and Rev. Harold Ely officiating.
Masonic Lodge No. 41 held services at the graveside.
Interment was made in the family plot in Evergreen
Cemetery, Carrizozo. Casket bearers were: Elmer
Hust, Roy Harman, Brack Cornett, Elmer Eaker, Roley
Ward and Don Means. Honorary bearers: Frank English,
Albert Snow, Elvin Harkey, Byrl Lindsay, Bob
Ashmore, Tom O'Rear, Otho Lowe, Cliff Zumwalt,
Vernon Petty, W. H. Rickerson, Lewis Huffman, Roy
Shafer, Troy Sadler, Pat Withers, John McCollum,
Johnson Stearns, Frank McBride, Mark Sloan, Joe
West. Services under the direction of Chapel of
Roses. First Family Submitted by Millie Hust.
First Family: Henry Richard
HUDSON
came to Lincoln County in 1878 from Kerr County,
Texas, possibly the son of Henry Randolph Hudson. He
was born 27 February 1823 in Monroe or Montgomery
County Alabama. He married Hulda Joy--daughter of
Wiley Joy and Hulda Elizabeth Frazier, at Little
Rock, Arkansas on 7 September 1853 according to LDS
records. Daughter, Alice Alabama, was born 24
November 1854 at Ft. Smith, Arkansas. H. R. Hudson
was on the Sebastian County, Arkansas 1855 Tax list.
His son, Columbus Bradley, was born 23 September
1856 at Kerrville. Wiley Steven was born 12 October
1858, and George Bellmore on 3 July 1860. The
HUDSON’s were listed on 1860 Gillespie County, Texas
census. Last child, Edward Felix Lincoln Hudson, was
born 6 April in Kerrville. Henry Richard Hudson was
a 5th Sgt. for the Third Frontier District of the
Texas State Troops of the Confederate States of
America at age thirty-nine. Hulda Hudson's mother,
Hulda Elizabeth Joy, and sister, Alwilda McDonald,
were killed by Indians in 1865 near Harper, Texas.
In 1878, The Hudson family and a small band of
wagons made its way to New Mexico. It took three
weeks to reach the Horsehead Crossing on the Pecos
River. From there they went to Seven Rivers, New
Mexico. While camped at Seven Rivers, Ike Teeters
tried to rob the wagon train but was killed by Bell
Hudson. Later, Bell Hudson raced a stranger on
horseback for the stranger's bridle. Bell lost the
race and after the stranger departed, Bell was told
he was Billy the Kid. Ed & Bell worked for John
Chisholm and Bell was part of Pat Garrett's posse.
Ed and Bell played instruments, sang and called for
square dances. H. R. Hudson died 2 April 1901. His
wife, Hulda, died 11 November at Alma, New Mexico.
H. R. and sons Wiley Steven, Columbus Bradley and Ed
Hudson were buried at Reserve, in Catron County, New
Mexico. First Family contributed by Janet Hudson
Samuels.
First Family: Martin Benevides
LUCERO
was born in Lincoln, New Mexico in 1902. His father
was Francisco Lucero, and his mother was Juanita
Benevides Lucero. My father Martin Lucero was the
youngest of three children. The oldest of the
daughters was Felicita Lucero and the second one was
Otillia Lucero. All three attended elementary school
in Lincoln. My father often spoke of his early life
in Lincoln before getting married and later moving
to the Ancho and Carrizozo areas. My great grand
parents were Jose and Marita Lucero. They arrived in
the area in the 1800’s. My father’s family had a
cattle farm and trained horses at one time. They
last lived in Lincoln County about 1920.
First Family: Antonio
MONTOYA
and Petra Garduño RIVERA were from San Miguel
County and had eleven children. Their second son,
Adonio Rivera Montoya (1885-1973) was baptized in
Picacho in Lincoln County. Adonio's baptism 19
August 1885 is registered in the Carrizozo Santa
Rita Catholic Church records, as are those of his
wife and children.
Adonio married Antonia Vigil, (1889-1957) born in in
Lincoln County to Daniel Trujillo Vigil and Elfida
Fresquez Chavez. Antonia's paternal grandparents,
Manuel Vigil and Maria Polinaria Trujillo gave
eighty acres off the Pine Lodge Road on the north
side of the Capitan Mountains to Adonio and Antonia.
Valued members of their community, Adonio worked for
the Block Ranch as a cowboy. He was also a carpenter
and a brick and rock mason. Antonia, a religious
woman, was the epitome of a country wife known for
her generosity and hospitality. She grew and canned
her own food, raised chickens, and was a good cook.
Adonio and Antonia had eleven children. Mary taught
at the Richardson School, married Ruben Sanchez and
raised four children. Claudio married Juanita
Chaves, bought property at Encinoso, and raised
eight children there. "Chonita" married Damacio
Chavez, lived in Capitan, and raised six children.
Elfego lived in Capitan until his death in 1993.
Elvira, currently living on the family property in
Richardson, married Anatalio Lucero Sanchez and
raised four children. Cleotilde married Daniel
Vargas and raised three sons in California. Delia
married Ray Lucero and is the mother of two sons.
Flora married Evaristo Lucero Sanchez of Arabella
and currently resides in California with their three
daughters. Ben, who never married, died in 1957 in a
car accident just outside of Capitan. Rosa died at
the age of four. Tony, who married Mary Guillen and
had four sons, died in a 1966 automobile accident.
Submitted by: Flora Montoya Sanchez--daughter of
Adonio and Antonia, and her daughters, Martha
Sanchez Wilson and Edythe Sanchez Machado.
First Family: Henry
Pfingsten
was born in 1840 in Germany and came to the
America as a stowaway in 1855. He first settled in
St. Clair County, Illinois. In 1861 he joined the
army, probably to avoid deportation. He was in
Company C, 16th Illinois Cavalry, serving from 18
April 1861 to 16 July 1864. A pension claim notes
that he had a severe saber cut on his head. He
married Sophia Bahe on 27 Nov 1866 in Chicago. The
1870 Nebraska Census, lists Henry and his wife,
often called Sophia, Sofia, or Sophie as ages 30 and
23 respectively.
From 1865 to 1870, Henry and Sophia lived in
Illinois and Nebraska while Henry worked on the
courthouse in Omaha and for the Chicago Sash & Door
Company. By 1880 Henry and Sophia had moved to Del
Norte, Colorado. They arrived in New Mexico soon
after and were listed in the 1885 New Mexico
Agricultural Census. Henry was injured in the Old
Soldier Mine near Bonito City, New Mexico in 1886.
He had set off a blast of dynamite then hurried into
the mine while the dust was still in the shaft and
the air was bad. He signaled to be brought back up
on a windlass, but either he fell off a rope or it
broke, for he dropped 60 ft. to the bottom. Sophia's
pension claims indicate that he had contracted a
disability while in the service. He died 29 May 1887
at Bonito City and was buried at his home site.
After Bonito Dam was built and Bonito Lake was
formed, Bonito City was no more. Henry's remains lie
50 or more vertical feet above the Bonito Lake
overflow and out of sight of the lake, next to a
daughter, Minnie.
Henry's obituary in the 3 June 1887 edition of the
New Mexico Interpreter of White Oaks: "On last
Sunday morning, at the residence of Pete Lanham,
Henry Pfingsten [sic] died very suddenly. Mr.
Pfingsten was at work on Saturday on one of his many
claims, in the evening he complained of a severe
colic and thought that he would not live long, at
four o'clock next morning he breathed his last. He
leaves a wife and seven children, who live near
Bonito City. They have the sympathy of the entire
community."
His seven children were: Edward Lee Pfingsten
married Maggie Robinson; Fredrick George Pfingsten
married Mary Margaret May; Josephine Pfingsten
married Robert Bourne; Albert Henry Pfingsten
married Eva May; Emma Pfingsten married Ed Peters;
Minnie Pfingsten married Mac McKinney; Agnes
Pfingsten married Willis Hightower.
Information from US Archives, Washington, DC,
(Census, Civil War Records, Pension files) Newspaper
clippings, May Family Bible. First Family
contributed by Charley Terrell.
First Family: Andrew McNeely
RICHARDSON
(1843-1905), Melvin Emyor Richardson
(1851-1923), and Granville Addison Richardson
(1860-1937), sons of John Richardson and Louisa
DeLany, were all born in Hopedale, Ohio and all came
to Lincoln County in the late 1800's. Granville was
the first to travel to the New Mexico Territory,
reaching Lincoln, New Mexico in September of 1886.
He set up his law practice there and remained for
two years before moving to Roswell and becoming its
pioneer lawyer. (An Illustrated History of New
Mexico, The Lewis Publishing Co: 1895). He helped
write the New Mexico Constitution by which the
Territory became a state in 1912. He was elected
District Judge of the Fifth Judicial District in
1914 and again in 1927. He served as mayor of
Roswell from 1908 to 1910, and the citizens of
Roswell recognized him for his many achievements by
naming Richardson Avenue in his honor. (Little Town
West of the Pecos, C. S. Adams: 1909) He was born in
Hopedale, Ohio on January 5, 1860. He married Miss
Nina Evert on November 22, 1893.
They had one son, Donovan McNeely Richardson, born
in 1894. Granville passed away on July 26, 1934 in
Boston, Massachusetts. Nina Richardson died on
September 14, 1940. Andrew McNeely Richardson
arrived in Lincoln County in 1878, having traveled
from his family's farm in Pettis County, Missouri.
He settled at the foot of the Capitan Mountains in
Lincoln County and worked as a sheepherder. Two
years later, his brother Melvin followed him from
Missouri to Lincoln County and joined him in the
sheep raising business. (A Biographical History of
Central Kansas, Vol.II, The Lewis Publishing Co.:
1902)
Both brothers are listed in the 1880 New Mexico
census with Andrew residing in Rio Penasco and
Melvin at Las Tablas. Melvin married Miss Alice
DeLany of Hopedale, Ohio in 1884. On March 21, 1885,
the two brothers, together with Melvin's
father-in-law, John C. DeLany, Charles S. Thurber
and Horace K. Thurber, associated themselves as a
body corporate under the name of El Capitan Land and
Cattle Company of New Mexico. (Articles of
Incorporation dated 3/21/1885). The main
headquarters was located at the Block Ranch in
Lincoln County. Andrew married Benina Maria Lucero
of Las Tablas in 1887. He was elected Justice of the
Peace for Precinct 6 of Lincoln County New Mexico
and on 3 February 1890 posted bond for this office.
(Peace Bond dated 2/3/1890).
On Christmas Day of 1893, Melvin and his family
moved to Sterling, Kansas but continued his
association with the sheep business. On November 8,
1894 Andrew, Melvin, and Horace K. Thurber formed a
second association by the name of The Capitan Sheep
Company. (Articles of Incorporation dated
11/8/1894). On April 3, 1895 the Richardson Post
Office was established with Andrew Richardson
serving as one of its postmasters. (Old Timer's
Review, fall 1979) An agreement made on the 6th day
of June, 1900 between the associates of El Capitan
Land and Cattle Company sold the shares to Nancy
Thurber. Andrew and his family remained in Lincoln
County where he was appointed postmaster of the
Arabella post office on 15 February 1901. (Old
Timer's Review, fall 1979).
Andrew had changed the name of Las Tablas to
Arabella in honor of the daughter of one of the
townsmen after his appointment. There, Andrew and
Benina raised a family of 7 children: Jose,
Bonefacia, Edward, Thomas, Granville, Lavenia, and
Melvin. The family is listed in the 1900 and 1910
New Mexico Census living in Agua Azul. Andrew died
in December 1906 and is buried in Sterling, Kansas
next to his brother Melvin, who died in 1923.
(Cottonwood Cemetery records) Andrew's son,
Granville began raising his own family in Arabella
before moving to Hondo, New Mexico. He was a
lifelong resident of Lincoln County who died in
1963. Many of his descendants have remained in
Lincoln County settling in the villages of Ruidoso,
Capitan and Hondo. First Family contributed by I. J.
Richardson.
First Family: William Morgan
Reily.
Many years before New Mexico was admitted to the
Union as a state, William M. Reily of Tunica,
Louisiana, came to the territory of New Mexico to
establish his ranch headquarters where the present
town of Capitan in Lincoln County now stands. He
came to Lincoln County in 1892 at the recommendation
of his cousin Governor George Curry, who had spoken
and written to him many times relative to the great
possibilities of the livestock industry in the
territory. The Reily ranch comprised thousands of
acres in Lincoln County with ranch headquarters in
Capitan.
The Reily brand was one of the early registrations
in old Lincoln County. Running more than 3,000 sheep
and 800 head of cattle, Reily made a great success
in the ranch business in New Mexico. He lived in
Lincoln County from 1892 until his death in March of
1931, and during that time did much to develop the
country and civic improvements in the county. He
served as County Tax Assessor when the town of
Lincoln was the county seat. He served as President
of the Board of Regents of the New Mexico
Institution for the Blind in Alamogordo for more
than twenty years prior to his death. He also served
on the committee that proposed moving the county
seat from Lincoln to Carrizozo.
Shortly after arriving in New Mexico he married Miss
Nellie Gray, who came to the state in a covered
wagon with her father, S. T. Gray, from Grapevine,
Texas. Two of their daughters continued in the
ranching business, Jack, Mrs. Will Ed Harris, and
Kitty, Mrs. Truman A. Spencer, Sr. In 1907, he and
his father-in-law, Seaborn Gray, sold their ranching
interests to the Eddy Brothers, who were going to
build a railroad to Capitan. The Reily's went to
Picacho after their marriage, where they bought a
store. He became Postmaster and took care of the
stage horses. They then sold and moved to Roswell,
where he worked in the land office. They later moved
to Alamogordo where Reily became territorial land
commissioner. In 1907 they moved to Carrizozo and
lived until his death in 1931. Submitted by B. J.
Branum.
First Family
SENA:
The late 1800’s were times of great adventure,
change, lawlessness, and growth for the city of
Lincoln. Among those who settled in the town during
this vibrant time was a teenager named George SENA
(b. 23 Apr 1863, d. 20 Mar 1927) who would prove to
be an upstanding citizen dedicated to public
service. He was as much at ease with Anglos as with
his own people, and could speak and write eloquently
in both English and Spanish. If he is mentioned at
all in the Lincoln County history books, it is as a
footnote to the stories of law enforcement in the
Wild West era. But to read contemporary accounts of
his life is to begin to discover a complex
individual who likely played a role in the society
of Lincoln village and the early history of the
state of New Mexico. In the early 1880’s, George
moved with his parents, Ignacio SENA and Agapita
ORTIZ, from Las Vegas in San Miguel County, New
Mexico to Lincoln. Ignacio was a blacksmith as his
father Henriques had been. Ignacio could read and
write, which was unusual for an adult in this time,
and most likely was involved in law enforcement in
Las Vegas; the 1870 census shows two men whose
occupations were listed as prisoner in jail living
in the Sena household. It was in Las Vegas that
George received his formal schooling. Although it’s
not certain when the Sena family moved, they were
living in Lincoln by the time Billy the Kid escaped
from the Lincoln County Jail in 1881. Family legend
had it that George was a deputy sheriff at this
time. What the family failed to mention was that
Sheriff Pat Garrett had deputized every male in
Lincoln County old enough to carry a gun. In July of
1885, George married Teresa CARRILLO (b. 16 Aug
1867, d. 1911).
Teresa had arrived in Lincoln with her family during
the 1870’s. Her father, Jose CARRILLO and her
mother, Nicanora MONTOYA MARQUES had traveled to
Lincoln from Manzano, Valencia County, New Mexico.
George and Teresa started their new family soon
after they married and by their twentieth
anniversary Teresa had given birth to nine children.
In naming their children, they gave them one set of
names at baptism but then called them by nicknames,
usually anglicized versions of their Spanish nombres
de pila. Use of the nicknames was so ingrained in
them that years later one of the children declared
the name on her baptismal certificate to be
completely wrong. She continued to use her nickname
as her legal name for the rest of her life. Their
children were: Manuela called Mela; Vicenta called
Bessie; Soraida called Zora; Ignacio whose nickname
Nacho does not appear on official records; Martina
Agapita called Anna or Annie; Maria Adela called
Avie; Jose Candido called Joe; and two unnamed twin
girls who died soon after their birth. The family
claimed that the twins had been born alive, but that
the doctor who delivered them was drunk at the time.
In his excitement over having birthed twins, he
drowned them while bathing them. They were buried in
the front yard of San Juan Church. The Sena’s home
was across from the church, where the children sang
in the choir, and next to the Torreon, a place where
the children would often play. In the early 1960’s,
Zora returned for Old Lincoln Days and noted that
only one room of their house remained standing; all
the rest had fallen. To read Sacramental records of
the Hispanic Catholic Church in New Mexico is to
discover the names of extended family and close
friends among the witnesses and sponsors. The Sena
family records included many surnames you would
expect--Chavez, Lucero, Baca--and a few you might
not--West, Norman, Moeller.
In later years, George would play host to future
statesmen Octaviano Larrazolo (New Mexico Governor,
1919-1921) and John Nance Garner (United States Vice
President, 1932-1940). His social circle clearly
encompassed the Hispanic- and European-American
communities, political leaders as well as cherished
relatives and neighbors. It seems that George was a
man of many talents. Various documents recorded his
occupations while living in Lincoln as bookkeeper
and clerk in Andrew Richardson’s General Merchandise
Store, court interpreter, County Clerk, and Sheriff.
His tenure as sheriff, which began in 1895, was cut
short in March of 1896. Governor William Thornton
removed him from his position for failure to enforce
the law. This occurred during an era when many local
New Mexico lawmen refused to pursue a known criminal
unless the governor posted a reward for his capture.
Following this practice could be what cost George
his job. Despite this apparent ignominy, George
reveled in his role as Wild West Lawman. A studio
photo of him circa 1915 shows a beefy man in a suit
and ten-gallon hat holding his six-shooter. The gun
is pointed at the forehead of a young man playing
the hapless outlaw. The criminal’s left hand reaches
for the sky while gun-holding right hand is grasped
firmly at the wrist by the sheriff. What remains of
his writings shows a man who could display pride,
religious fervor, pathos and righteous anger all on
the same page. In a letter to his grown daughters
Zora and Avie, this stern disciplinarian scolds them
saying their disobedience is like a blow that splits
open his soul, and tears and saddens his heart. He
admonishes his daughters that life is very short,
very burdensome and sad at times.
To live in harmony, to give and take, is the best
motto for life, he tells them. In about 1906, George
moved his family to Santa Rosa, in Guadalupe County.
While he lived there, he served the county as County
Clerk, Court and Senate Interpreter, and
Superintendent of Schools. Though his professional
life was very successful during these years, he also
suffered much personal tragedy. In 1911 his wife
Teresa died of unknown causes at the age of 44.
George then married Matilde Tillie HENDERSON in 1913
and they had two children together: George Coronel
and Antonio Louis called Louis or Pershing. But even
as these children came into his life, three of his
daughters--Mela, Bessie, and Anna--died in the 1918
Flu Epidemic leaving behind husbands and small
children. Not long after that, George began to
experience the symptoms of pernicious anemia, a
painful, fatiguing disease. Then in 1923, George’s
son Ignacio was killed in a car crash while he was
en route to visit his ailing father. Finally in
March of 1927, George succumbed to his illness just
one month shy of his 64th birthday. On the day of
his funeral, schools and businesses in Santa Rosa
were closed. His obituary said his funeral
procession was one of the largest ever seen in the
city, citing it as proof of the popularity he
enjoyed from his fellow citizens and neighbors. The
article concluded, “With the death of George Sena
the state of New Mexico has lost one of its finest
citizens and the Hispanic American people one of its
most illustrious and noble defenders.” Sources: New
Mexico Census 1870-1920; New Mexico Parish records
for Santa Rita in Carrizozo, Our Lady of the
Immaculate Conception in Tome, Santa Rosa de Lima in
Santa Rosa; Las Nuevas Newspaper, Santa Rosa; United
States Marshals . . . and Desert Lawmen . . . books
by Larry D. Ball; Shaking the Family Tree, an
unpublished paper by Elizabeth Clements Mooney.
Submitted by Annette Mooney Wasno.
First Family: John Henry
SNELL.
John Henry SNELL was born 30 January 1864 in
Wilcox County, Alabama. He moved with his parents
and siblings, William, Joseph, David, Edward, Annie
and Mary to Falls County, Texas. He married in Falls
County to Benola Kirk also from Wilcox County,
Alabama. John's brothers and sisters remained in
Texas. After a short while in Cottle County, Texas,
John his wife and family traveled in a covered wagon
pulled by mules named Bill and Maude to Lincoln
County in 1908. At that time seven of their ten
children had been born in Texas. They homesteaded
land on the Mesa above Nogal. A photo of John and
children, Bernard and Alice, with the mules pulling
a plow in the field is dated 1911. John raised and
sold cattle and farmed. Benola raised chickens and
milk cows.
She sold eggs and milk. They took a photo of the
chicken house that a tornado demolished. Benola died
at the homeplace in 1937. Alice Beneter Snell
married Albert May. Walter 'Buddy' Snell and Alice
Beneter Snell remained in the area, while the other
children moved away to other counties and states,
they took a nice family photo before Benola died,
and the children moved away from home. Tommie to WWI
then Texas, Bernard to WY, Ernest to WWII then CO.
while Olive lived in Roswell and Lizzie Mae in
northern New Mexico. My mother Annie Kirk Snell
married Gean Dickey of Amarillo. The land John Snell
homesteaded was sold to his son Buddy, upon John's
death on 30 May 1948 in Texas at the home of his
daughter Bernice. John and Benola Kirk Snell and
many of the family members are buried in Angus
Cemetery. Submitted by Louise Wiles.
Copyright October 2007 |