spot_img

Costilla and Amalia celebrate 175 years of community perseverance and pride

Date:

You’ve heard of San Luis, Colorado being Colorado’s oldest town, founded in 1851. In actuality, Garcia, Colorado is the oldest town in Colorado, but San Luis filed the paperwork before Garcia, making it the official oldest town.

This past February was the 175th anniversary of the Treaty de Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican-American War. This very year, 175 years ago the community of Costilla and other neighboring northern New Mexico communities were already officially settled by our ancestors. Throughout history the residents remained in their respective areas, but the territory and borderlines changed between, first Spain, Mexico, then the United States.

Although, unofficially, (there is no official settlement documentation) there is proof that Costilla was settled in 1848 or earlier. Documentation of mail being delivered to the area residents is recorded history. Our calculations conclude that Costilla is older than San Luis, CO, at 175 years old.

Two years ago a committee was formed and led by Pauline Rivera, Publisher of LaVozColorado in Denver, in an effort to celebrate this incredible day in history. An event which includes a community parade, ceremony with guest speakers, cultural foods, a musical depicting the people and generations of people who grew up in the area. How many times in your life do you get to celebrate 175 years of any- thing. While I did have a paternal grandmother who reached age, 106, and two aunts that made it to 100, I don’t believe I’ll ever pass this way again, nor will you.

The weekend of August 4 – 6th will honor the hard work, determination, tenacity, perseverance, integrity and ambition of our ancestors. Family names like Arellano, Martinez, Trujillo, Valdez, Padilla, Torres, Ortiz, Santistevan, Rivera, Maes, Lucero, Lovato, Cordova, Pacheco, Segura, Vigil, Sanchez, Quintana and many more are spoken with pride.

You’ve heard the phrase, “I didn’t cross the border, the border crossed me”, a phrase that correctly and pridefully represents the people of Costilla, Amalia, and other northern New Mexico communities, as well as nearby Garcia and Jaroso, Colorado. The battle for land between Spain, then, Mexico and lastly the United States did not rock the determination and strength of a people who remained in their land. Just to confirm, our Spanish and Native American ancestors were here before the Pilgrims.

In 2019 a similar committee, led by same chair organized a community reunion drawing over 2,000 people to the community. As the late New Mexico Sen. Carlos Cisneros, reported at the 2019 reunion, “I’ve never seen so many people in Costilla.” They came, they ate, they stayed, they enjoyed, ate some more, and posted their memories on social media or on the Families of Costilla & Amalia site and still talk about it today.

We often hear people say they wish they had recorded their grandparents, their stories, their history. Some do, others didn’t. Here is your chance to come home again and revisit the home of your ancestors, and reminisce.

Born and raised in this inkling of a town and all that it stands for, is forever in my heart. Why? Because that is where familia worked so hard to educate, protect and make a better life for you, because it is the place where you enjoyed the very best of all cultural foods known to northern New Mexico, because it is the place known as God’s country, because the dirt country roads, the uneven fence posts, the little green apples in September, the piñon picking every 4 years or sooner, the stacked enchiladas only your mother could make, the fresh tortillas off the comal, the taste of crunchy chicharonnes, the blaring radios (KOMA in Oklahoma) with 50’s, 60’s and even 70’s music that connected you to the rest of society, is forever your home town. It is the place where you were educated and thought everyone else was bilingual, the place where, a few Black families, an “Arabe” store owner, some white families spoke better Spanish than most, created the diversity who made us who we are today. It is the place where Box Canyon, La Uta, Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Blueberry Hill, Poleo, Ventero, Garcia, Jaroso, Amalia Elementary, Costilla High and more are memories we can never shake.

Looking back at a 175-year old community that created thousands of professionals, farmers, politicians, musicians, doctors, surgeons, dentists, CPA’s, attorneys and everyday people with a heart of gold. We are not all perfect, but we’re pretty close.

Photo courtesy: Donny Ruybal

On August 4-6, Costilla, Amalia and neighboring communities celebrate life, in the heart of this little town, at the Plaza de Arriba, hosted by owners Dennis and Miriam Santistevan, remember our ancestors, enjoy our food, practice our faith, and celebrate our culture. Our day’s events will be announced soon.

Meanwhile, the New Mexico sound of Roberto Griego is scheduled to play, along with other northern New Mexico talent. Another one-of-a-kind event is a musical performance by the local Torres family. Current sponsors include LaVozColorado, Duran’s Gas & Grocery, Farmers Insurance Agency (Taos), Kit Carson Electric and more.

For more information on this awesome event, please visit costillareunion.org

Share post:

Popular

More content
Related

Omaha, a great city, lacks Latino representation

Our northern neighbors. The very name conjures up an...

Johnny Canales, long-time promoter, dies at 81

Juan José Canales, known as Johnny Canales, who inspired...

The Florida Panthers take hone the Stanley Cup

The Florida Panthers, believe it or not came into...

Pueblo’s Hopscotch, your cookie stop

For those of a certain age, the idea that...