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Village History
The
small, rural community of Bosque Farms lies about 18 miles south of
Albuquerque. Bosque
Farms is situated along the braided routes of the famous Camino Real (the
Royal Road
) which follows the
Rio Grande
, and provided
connections among historic trading centers scattered throughout the
Rio Grande
valley. What is
historically referred to as the Rio Abajo, or lower
Rio Grande
valley, has
attracted settlers and traders to the
reg
ion for hundreds of years.
Before
the Spanish came to the Rio Abajo, Tewa lndians roamed the area and
settled in as many as five
Pueblos
(settlements). The nearby lsleta lndians became allies to the Spanish,
who first came to the area in 1540. Bosque Farms was originally part of
the Antonio Gutierrez and Joaquin Sedillo land grant in 1716. The
Gutierrez and Sedillo properties were sold to Nicolas Duran de Chaves in
1736 and eventually to Clemente Gutierrez. A few years later in 1739 a
flood moved the course of the river two miles to the west, and the area
became known as "Bosque de Los Pinos" or "Los Pinos."
Over
the next 200 hundred years, Los Pinos (now Bosque Farms) was owned by
several different people. In 1819, Francisco Xavier Chavez (Mexican
Territorial Governor in 1822) purchased the land from the heirs of
Clemente Gutierrez. Francisco's son, Jose Mariano Chavez, moved to the
area with his family and lived in a large hacienda that had been built
by his father. Jose Mariano Chavez later died; however, his wife Dolores
held on to the land and eventually was remarried to Henry Connelly, a
successful businessman from
Virginia
. Connelly was appointed Territorial Governor of
New Mexico
by President Abraham Lincoln on
September 4, 1861
.
In the early 1860's Confederate soldiers
marched up the Rio Grande
Valley in conquest of the
New Mexico Territory. In February 1862, Los Pinos was occupied by Confederate soldiers. The Confederates were finally defeated at
the Battle of Glorieta
Pass (March 1862) and while retreating down the
Rio Grande; however, the Confederates
remained at the well fortified hacienda in Los Pinos. Following
a canon bombardment on April 15, the Confederates fled across the river to
present day Los Lunas. This battle, known as the Battle of
Peralta, led to the deaths of three
Union
and four Confederate
soldiers, and was the last Civil War skirmish of any significance in
New Mexico
.
A horrible sandstorm that stopped the
battle and gave the Confederates a chance to escape.
Governor
Connelly never did reoccupy his Los Pinos estate; however, Los Pinos
became a supply center for the U.S. Army's Indian fighters.A gravel road
connected the fort to the small town of Los Lemas. At Los Lemas one could ford the Rio Grande
River
to reach Los Lunas. Also along this road,
a trading post served the area. The fort was later abandoned, the gravel
road is now buried, the trading post burned, and the small town of Los Lemas has disappeared. From May to July of 1884
the Rio Grande River overflowed its banks flooding the Bosque
area over the tops of the trees. (At this time and up until the WPA
project, the Bosque was swamp land covered with trees). This was the worst
flood of historical record.
Religion was not
forgotten in the 19th century. In the fall of 1871 the Methodist Mission
work was extended to the Rio Grande
Valley. A class of 42 members was organized in the Bosque-Peralta area under
Ambrosia Gonzales. A year later, Reverend John Steele became the first
minister. Between 1863 and 1868 Our Lady of Guadalupe, a Catholic Mission
church in Peralta, was built. After over 100 years of existence, the church
is still serving the Bosque-Peralta area.
In
1866, Governor Connelly died from an accidental opiate overdose, so the
property was returned to his widow Dolores who lived there until her death
in 1890. Following the death of Dolores, the property was owned by her son
Jose Francisco Chavez, and a daughter-in-law, Francisca Romero Connelly.
In 1906 Francisca Connelly sold the property to Eduardo Otero, a wealthy
land owner from Los Lunas. Otero settled in the area and built a house with a large barn near the
Bosque. He raised
Berkshire
horses, breaking them to pull loaded wagons to the Los Lunas depot.
In the 1920s, Otero sold his land in small lots to individuals, but due to the
depression, which began 1929, the
people were unable to make the payments. Otero
repossessed the land, and in 1934 sold 2,420 acres to the New Mexico Rural
Rehabilitation Corporation. The resettlement area was eventually taken
over by the Federal Resettlement Administration (part of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal) in 1935 and named the Bosque Farms
Project.
This
project divided the Bosque Farms tract into 42 parcels of 40 to 80 acres
in size. Forty-two families were chosen by a lottery in May 1935, and paid
$140 per acre on forty-year mortgages. The Works Progress Administration (WPA)
funded the drainage trenches, homes, and roads, thus beginning the
community of Bosque Farms.
Seventy-two
families came from the dust bowl areas of
Taos and Harding counties to the tree covered
swamps called the Bosque during 1935.
Many people kept right on moving, but 42
modern pioneer families stayed to build our present Bosque Farms
community. Some families lived in tents until temporary houses were built.
Fourteen of the families lived together in the barn next to the old Otero
ranch. The men worked in crews to build ditches to drain the swamp and to
clear the land of the trees. The people drew lots for their
properties. 2-3 bedroom adobe homes were built by the project for the families on their
lots. The loop road was called Alameda Road
while the road dividing the loop in half
and passing the school was named Esperanza Drive.

The
Bosque School
was built at the same
time as the homes. Prior to the school completion, classes were held in 3 frame
buildings directly west of
the present school. School was taught up through the eighth grade. Mr.
Iverson H. Burgess was the first principal and instigator of many ideas.
One of his ideas was a community newspaper that came out monthly. The
Bosque Carry-All, as it was called, was written by the community and
delivered by the school children. Burgess also talked many members of the
community into participating at the Valencia County Fair in 1937.
The Bosque Farms school has the honor of being the first school in
New Mexico
to serve hot lunches to their students.
The
citizens of Bosque Farms had to rent the land for a period of years before
they could buy it. Therefore the rent had to be calculated by someone.
This someone happened to be a council of five men. Bosque Farms was
divided into four districts. Each district appointed a councilman. Then
the whole community elected a chairman. This five man committee calculated
rent, collected it and peacefully settled any arguments and controversies.
There was a council meeting every month for about four years. The first
year the families didn't do too much in the way of farming. Most of them
put in ditches for irrigation and worked around their homes. By 1937
most people began to farm, but Lady Luck was not with all of them.
Some were lucky enough to get a crop, but many ran into alkaline
soil.
The
government then paid for a complete soil testing. They tested every acre
at least once then mapped out their findings. By 1939
many people found they couldn't make a go of farming so .they
turned dairy farms. Cas and George Jackson were among the first to switch
to dairy farming and to turn it into a
prosperous business. Federal Security loaned the money for cows and
the government built dairy barns for the families that wanted them. The
completion of the drainage ditches and irrigation system by the Middle Rio
Grande Conservancy District (MRGCD) in the 1930s permanently drained the
marshy areas and provided, to some extent, flood protection to the valley
communities. Subsequently, Bosque Farms became a well-known dairy and
farming community. Dairy
farming became the main agricultural industry and by the 1960s the area was referred to
as the "Heart of the
Rio Grande Dairy
Land."
Over the ensuing 70 years, Bosque Farms has gradually become more
residential, but still maintains a connection to its rural and farming
legacy. There are still large tracks of alfalfa fields. In the past they
provided forage for the diary farms. Today, there is only one active dairy
farm in Bosque Farms, and much of the alfalfa and the newer grass fields
provide feed for the many horses that are part of the Bosque Farms
environment.
Bosque Farms
was incorporated as a municipality in 1974 which enabled the community to
elect its own governing body. Housing and commercial development is the
primary source of revenues in the Village. However, the residents of
Bosque Farms are prideful of their agricultural heritage and the
associated pastoral character.
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