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The History of
Hidalgo County and other Genealogical facts
By Bill Cavaliere, Hidalgo County Historian
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Our sincere
thanks to Bill for this work.
LORDSBURG, THE COUNTY SEAT
A prominent town, now the county seat, is
Lordsburg, which was founded as a railroad town on
the Southern Pacific line in 1880. It was named for
railroad supervisor Delbert Lord, who decided to
locate a town exactly halfway between El Paso, TX
and Tucson, AZ. Elizabeth Garrett, blind daughter of
Pat Garrett, the famous sheriff who shot Billy the
Kid, wrote New Mexico's official state song, "O Fair
New Mexico", in Lordsburg in 1917.
Some early Lordsburg pioneers were John Muir,
Willard Holt, Joe Leahy, J. P. Ownby, Emma Marble,
E. M. Fisher, Sam Gass, and Nat Gammon, among
others. Some well-known celebrities to visit
Lordsburg in the early days have been silent film
star Tom Mix, 1912 presidential candidate William
Jennings Bryan, and 1948 candidate Harry S Truman.
Charles Lindburgh landed at the Lordsburg airport
during his cross-country trip in 1927 after his
famous New York to Paris flight.
Aviator Amelia Earhart visited the Lordsburg
airport as well. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor attended some of her school years here. And
Lordsburg was the site of a prisoner of war camp,
located east of town, where Nazi POWs were confined
during World War II.
HIDALGO COUNTY BECOMES OFFICIAL
Hidalgo County was created in 1919 after being
annexed from neighboring Grant County. This was
done, in part, to shorten the great distances that
the people of Lordsburg and towns to the south had
to travel in order to reach Silver City, the county
seat. Hidalgo County's birthday is Feb. 25th, 1919,
when the New Mexico state legislators met in session
and passed the act that officially created the new
county. New Mexico had just become a state only
seven years before, in 1912.
On Jan. 1st, 1920, Hidalgo County began the New
Year with its property valued by the State Tax
Commission at $6,498,358. According to the late Ena
Mitchell, long-time Hidalgo County resident and
pioneer, one of the names considered for the newly
formed county was "Pyramid County", after the
Pyramid Mountains prominent to the south of
Lordsburg. The name "Hidalgo" was chosen in honor of
Miguel Dolores Hidalgo, who led the revolution in
Mexico in 1810, which eventually led to its
independence from Spain. Hidalgo County's courthouse
was dedicated on Sept. 5th, 1927 and cost $40,000.
to build. Prior to this, the Muir & Birchfield
Building and the original Knights of Pythias
building (now demolished) were leased to house the
county offices. Hidalgo County shares 86 miles of
the Mexican border. It is bordered to the north and
east by Grant County, to the west by the state of
Arizona, and to the south by the country of Mexico.
Because of its shape, this area is known as the "bootheel"
PRESENT DAY
Many changes have occurred in Hidalgo County since
the early days, most notable among them the
construction in the early 1970s and eventual closure
in 1999 of the multi-million dollar Phelps-Dodge
copper smelter located in Playas. The town of Playas
was purchased in early 2004 by the Department of
Homeland Security, to be administered by New Mexico
Tech University for anti-terrorist training.
Lordsburg today is a modern, progressive town which
features a new Department of Public Safety building,
medical complex, Special Events center, nursing
home, museum, water park and more. Annual events in
Lordsburg include the popular Tejano Fiesta and the
Cowboy Poetry Festival. Other Hidalgo County towns
include Animas, with its well known school system;
Rodeo, known for its art galleries; Virden, famous
for its farms; and Cotton City, with its
chili-packing plant and geothermal-heated rose
greenhouses. All Hidalgo County towns boast low
crime rates and friendly people. Hidalgo County also
features the Mexican border crossing facility at
Antelope Wells, gateway the Mexican town of Janos,
Lordsburg's sister city. The mild climate of Hidalgo
County makes it the perfect place to raise a family
or to retire.
The mountains and deserts of Hidalgo County offer
sportsmen the opportunity to hunt mule deer, Coues'
white-tailed deer, black bear, mountain lion,
javelina, quail and other game. The Coronado
National Forest provides camping, hiking and rock
hounding, as well as offering bird watchers the
chance to see rare Mexican bird species. In the late
1970s, the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish
chose the Peloncillo Mountains as their choice to
re-introduce the endangered desert bighorn sheep.
For history lovers, guided tours are led into
Skeleton Canyon to Geronimo's surrender site, which
is located on private property. For information and
tour dates, call guide Bill Cavaliere at (505)
436-2371. Tours are also given at the ghost towns of
Shakespeare and Steins as well. Furthermore, the
remoteness of parts of Hidalgo County, as well as
its well-preserved ghost towns, provides Hollywood
producers with excellent locations for filming
movies. Some of the movies and television shows shot
in Hidalgo County have been "Doc Holliday", "The
Treasure of Skeleton Canyon", "Time Out", "Chooch",
and "Unsolved Mysteries", among others. Among the
movie stars to film in Hidalgo County recently have
been Tom Reese (The Greatest Story Ever Told,
Murderer's Row), Don Stroud (Mike Hammer, License to
Kill), Patricia Arquette (True Romance, Holes),
Richard Bright (The Godfather, The Getaway) and
Geoffrey Lewis (Every Which Way But Loose,
Maverick).
PREHISTORIC NATURAL HISTORY
Hidalgo County is rich in both natural and human
history. One of the earliest signs of prehistoric
animal life in the area is that of a duck-billed
dinosaur skeleton found just across the Hidalgo
County line, in neighboring Grant County, which
probably dates to the Jurassic age. Near the
dinosaur was a piece of its fossilized skin, one of
only a few specimens ever found in New Mexico. The
skeleton was partially excavated by paleontologists
in the late 1990s and the retrieved portion put on
display at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History
in Albuquerque. In May 1962, the fossilized
skeletons of two extinct mammoths were unearthed at
Lordsburg.
Paleontologists dated them at 10,000 years old.
Another prehistoric specialty, found in the southern
part of Hidalgo County, is the shoreline of an
ancient lake, which is a remnant from the
pre-Pleistocene era. Here, the implements of early
man, including a tool called an atlatl, have been
recovered.
Indian ruins are found throughout Hidalgo County.
In general, these sites belong to both the Casas
Grande and Mimbres cultures. These cultures
flourished from 100 AD until 1400, with little
evidence found afterwards. An exception to this is
found at the ruins on Deer Creek in the Animas
Mountains (on the present-day Gray Ranch), where
artifacts have been carbon-14 dated from 1565 to
1620. Indeed, early Spanish expeditions mention
encountering these particular Indians.
THE ARRIVAL OF THE SPANIARD
The first expedition of Spaniards into this area
was the Coronado expedition in 1540. Several others
followed in the years afterwards. Authorities are
not sure of Coronado's exact route, which consisted
of about 300 of his men and several hundred Indians,
but it is believed that they traveled through the
San Simon valley, past the present-day town of
Rodeo.
THE NATIVE AMERICANS
The Indian tribe that Hidalgo County is perhaps
best known for are the Chiricahua Apaches. The
Apaches arrived in this area in the 1500s. Cochise
is one of the best-known Chiricahua chiefs, and his
friendship with his blood-brother Tom Jeffords, a
white American, is a well-known story. After
Cochise's death in June 1874, his eldest son Taza
was elevated to chief. While on a tour of Washington
DC in 1876, Taza died of pneumonia, and Cochise's
remaining son, Naiche, became hereditary chief of
the Chiricahuas.
The US Cavalry fought for many years against the
Apaches, with many battles occurring in Hidalgo
County, most notably in the areas of Stein's Peak,
Doubtful Canyon and near Animas Peak. Cochise signed
a peace treaty, negotiated by Jeffords, in 1872.
However, in 1875, only one year after Cochise's
death, the US government violated the treaty,
causing the Apaches to once again wage war against
the Americans.
On Sept. 4, 1886, after years of being pursued by
both the American and Mexican armies, Geronimo,
along with Chief Naiche, surrendered to General
Nelson Miles in Skeleton Canyon, which is situated
half in Hidalgo County and half in Cochise County,
AZ. The surrender forever ended the Indian wars in
the United States.
EARLY HISTORY AND SETTLERS
Southern Hidalgo County was crossed in 1846 by Lt.
Col. Phillip St. George Cooke, leading the 500-man
Mormon Battalion (though not a Mormon himself) to
California to fight in the Mexican War. One of
Cooke's guides was Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, son of
Sacagawea of Lewis and Clark fame. Charbonneau
signed on with the Mormon Battalion in Albuquerque.
The Guadalupe Mountains were memorable to the
battalion because of the canyon that the men had to
lower the wagons down, by rope, in order to
continue, as well as for the grizzly bear that
Charbonneau killed to provide meat for the men. This
same trail forged by the Mormon Battalion was later
used by some of the 49ers en route to the goldfields
of California in 1849.
During this period, what is now known as Hidalgo
County was still part of Mexico. This all changed in
1853, with the signing of the Gadsden Purchase,
adding to the United States the area between the
Gila River and the present border with Mexico. Not
long after, the Butterfield Stage route was laid
out, with one of its stage stations located near the
current ghost town of Shakespeare
Near the east end of Skeleton Canyon, which runs
through the Peloncillo Mountains, the Clanton family
had a homestead of sorts, which consisted of two
dugouts. From this base, Newman "Old Man" Clanton,
along with his sons, raised, and some say rustled,
cattle. In July 1881, "Old Man" Clanton, along with
sons Ike and Billy and five outlaw friends, ambushed
a Mexican mule train smuggling silver coins through
Skeleton Canyon. Some say that the coins were buried
and never recovered, and thus remain one of the
southwest's most famous buried treasures. The
following month, "Old Man" Clanton, along with some
cowboy friends, were killed by Mexicans in Guadalupe
Canyon, in the extreme southwestern part of Hidalgo
County (near border monument #73). This incident is
generally believed to have been committed by
Mexicans in retaliation for the Skeleton Canyon
massacre, in which their relatives were killed. The
Clanton boys would eventually become famous for
their involvement in the shoot-out at the OK Corral
in Tombstone, Arizona. Clanton Canyon, located in
southern Hidalgo County, was named for the family.
Several ghost
towns are found throughout Hidalgo County, most
notably Steins and Shakespeare. Steins was the scene
of a train robbery by outlaw Black Jack Ketchum. In
Shakespeare, outlaw Sandy King and horse thief
Russian Bill were hanged from the rafters of the
Grant House dining room, due to the lack of trees. A
member of the lynch mob explained to startled stage
passengers that Russian Bill was hanged for stealing
a horse and Sandy King was hanged for "being a
damned nuisance". After Shakespeare's postmaster
received a letter from Russian Bill's mother
inquiring of his whereabouts, he sent her the
diplomatic reply that her son had died "of throat
trouble". Billy the Kid also spent time in
Shakespeare, as a youth, where he was employed
washing dishes. And Lew Wallace, author of "Ben Hur",
stayed at the Grant House while visiting
Shakespeare.
Hidden Cemeteries:
The Poteet Cemetery is not a municipal or town
cemetery by any means, but is actually just a small
family plot containing four graves. I was there a
couple of time many years ago.
It is on a dirt road off of Javelina Trail.
There are other family plots
in Hidalgo County including Poteet Cemetery, one at
Dog Springs, also one called Cowboy Cemetery. Cowboy
Cemetery has six graves of ranchmen killed near the
Mexican Boarder by Poncho Villa's men. The
headstones were originally made of poured concrete
with the names and dates scratched in. When a new
family bought the ranch in the 1990s, they paid for
new headstones and pushed the old cement ones down
into a nearby arroyo.
Dog Springs Cemetery is in the
extreme southeast part of the county, at the
"corner." This is on private property. Access is not
available and trespassing is forbidden. This is an
older family plot. It's located deep within Alamo
Hueco Ranch. Access is not possible by road or by
foot.
Bill Cavaliere |