Blog Layout

Veterans of the Valley, Part I: The Civil War

May 07, 2017

PictureHomelake Veterans Center cemetery where many of the Valley's Civil War soldiers are buried.

The story of the Civil War will be presented with a different point of view at the Rio Grande County Museum in Del Norte on May 20.  Mikayla Baird, Museum Assistant and Researcher, has approached this major part of American history by  telling the family stories of the veterans who helped to build Del Norte, Monte Vista, South Fork and the surrounding farming communities in Rio Grande County.  She will also give a talk on the Civil War with the politics and other historic events.


This research project was started by museum volunteer, Shirley Kernen, who compiled a list of names and grave markers in the Del Norte Cemetery.  The next step was conducted last Veterans’ Day with Steve Nicolais, Alex Colville, Louise Colville when Mikayla took them to the Del Norte Cemetery where they searched out and photographed the markers of the veterans that Mrs. Kernen had found in her research.

To date, Mikayla has researched approximately sixty to seventy veterans from Rio Grande County. It has shown that Rio Grande County has a mixture of Union and Confederates and how once the War was over and the movement west had started, these men and their families came together and built our county.  She has found that we had at least two black soldiers who lived and worked in Del Norte and one was an original “Buffalo Soldier.” These two men are buried in the Homelake Cemetery. This project will be ongoing as more veterans are found. Hopefully, the next step in our Veterans Project will be the Spanish-American War and World War I. This phase of the project has been researched for the last six months and will continue.

The result of this research has led to families coming into the Museum with their family stories of their ancestors. It is hope and desire of the Museum staff to have more families want to share their important stories. A benefit from this work is now the Museum can expand our ability to help with genealogy research.

The
Homelake Veterans’ History Museum has also contributed to the work with the information that is provided on their website database. The Find A Grave website listings for Monte Vista, Del Norte, Homelake has given dates and other information that has been very important in the project. Polly Cox and Rosalind Weaver have worked hard to keep good information on the Del Norte findagrave.com site and are providing information from their files.

The program, Veterans of the Valley, Part I, The Civil War, will be at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, May 20 with the reception starting at 10:00 a.m. to provide time to visit the exhibits, read the stories and enjoy the other artifacts. Members of the Fort Garland Memorial Regiment will be on hand during the day. Suzanne Bothell arranged with her sister and brother-in-law to provide re-enactment items to show the uniform and personal items from the period. Quotes and recipes of the time will be included in the exhibit. For the experience, “hard tack”may be available for sampling.

The exhibit “Summitville – Then and Now" is still open and runs until the end of June. 
For more information, please contact the
Rio Grande County Museum at (719)657-2847 or by email at rgmuseum@riograndecounty.org. Regular museum hours are Tuesday through Friday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Admission is $2 per person and $1 for children from 6 to 16. Admission is waived on event days, but donations are accepted to help with fundraising for museum projects. Rio Grande County Museum is a Blue Star Museum which gives free admission to veterans and active military members and their families.

21 Jun, 2021
Have a taste of the historic Hispanic homeland in San Luis Valley through the new book Teresa de Jesus Vigil: Herbalist, Storyteller, Poet at her book signing at Rawlings Library, 100 Abriendo Ave, Pueblo, on June 23, 6 pm and at Fort Garland Museum and Cultural Center on July 10, 1:30 pm.Teresa Vigil will give a short presentation on herbs and read from her book published by Vanishing Horizons. Her cultural perspective and life-long medical experiences make her presentations compelling.Teresa [...]
12 Jun, 2021
An historic mining structure near Creede. Photo by Terri Cook ​Article originally published in 5280 article by Terri Cook​"The Scenic Highway of Legends and Silver Thread, which were recently added to the National Scenic Byway system, celebrate southern Colorado's stunning landscapes and rich history.Call it the stuff of legend: Colorado’s scenery is so spectacular that the U.S. Department of Transportation recently added two of the state’s roadways to the America&rs [...]
10 Jun, 2021
Downtown Colorado, Inc. (DCI) and the Town of Center are pleased to announce the Solstice in Center, a creative event to engage and invite makers, artists, restaurants, and community members to celebrate the changing of season, the creative spirit, and envision the future of Downtown Center.​The Solstice in Center event will kick off at 12 Noon on June 19 and will feature a dynamic lineup of San Luis Valley creatives. Some of the entertainment includes “Colorado’s Best Latin U [...]
04 Jun, 2021
Attached is a PDF of the Rio Grande County Museum Newsletter for June and July 2021.Featured articles and updates include:​The Annual Art ShowWorld Ward II ExhibitArt Show with Amanda BlackLyndsie FerrellHigh Valley Community StudentsVolunteersSummer Programs and EXhibitsInterviews from the Past​ rgcm-2021-june-newsletter.pdfFile Size: 484 kbFile Type: pdfDownload File [...]
30 May, 2021
Original article from the Rocky Mountain PBS​by Kate PerdoniPosted May 27, 2021“People like us are not Native American enough. And we’re not American enough. And we’re not Mexican enough,” Rael said. “And so we walk this strange line of trying to decipher our identities. And we express them in different ways.”​Watch the video [...]
30 May, 2021
Original post by Rocky Mountain PBSPosted May 25th, 2021by Kate Perdoni​Junita Martinez, a resident of the small village of San Francisco [in Southern Colorado], hopes educating the next generation of parciantes will help sustain water rights and the acequia tradition. Here, irrigation canals dug by hand almost 200 years ago are still used — but nature decides how much water they have to work with.​Water Is Life - "We're a land and water based people. I am [...]
30 May, 2021
Original article published in the Valley CourierMay 24, 2021​To train buffs around the world, it’s an unprecedented historic moment. For the first time ever, a steam locomotive from the 1880s has been completely restored and will run on the exact same tracks it originally did from 1883-1938. The Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad , owned jointly by the states of Colorado and New Mexico, has completed this historic project and will unveil the remarkably restored engine No. 168 at t [...]
24 Apr, 2021
Contributed photo Billy LeRoy and his brother Sam Potter were buried in unmarked graves in the Del Norte Cemetery. Only one headstone remains today. by Lyndsie Ferrell from the Del Norte ProspectorNow, Billy LeRoy was not your typical looking criminal. The young highwayman was known for dressing on the up-scale side and one of his most infamous traits that kept lawmen guessing who he was, was his size four shoe.At many of the locations where LeRoy held up a train or stagecoach, lawmen would find [...]
24 Apr, 2021
Image courtesy The Newberry Library. https://www.newberry.org by Lyndsie Ferrell with the Del Norte ProspectorThe San Luis Valley has a rich history dating back to the early 1800s thanks to the many characters that lived rough and tumble lives in the great West. Lawlessness was a way of life for many in those early days and like the song by Jim Croce, “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” the San Luis Valley had a bad, bad LeRoy of its own.According to accounts provided by the Rio Grande County Mu [...]
19 Apr, 2021
Photo credit: John McEvoy Special to The Colorado Sun ​"Experts from across the country converged to restore Engine 168 for the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad straddling the Colorado-New Mexico border.When Engine 168 chugs away from the station here in late June with about 60 passengers ensconced in four refurbished 19th century train cars, it will be the culmination of years of dreams, historic preservation work and an investment of nearly $4 million.  And perhaps less visible [...]
More Posts
Share by: