The idea that the US/Mexico
border has been and should be static; immovable and impermeable, with the
exception of designated ports of entry, goes against the grain of American
history.
Just very slightly less than 200
years ago, when Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, the border was all
the way up at, what was then, the Oregon Territory. In 1845, 174 years ago, it
made its first move, when the US annexed Texas. Three years later, it moved
again, this time southward to the Gila River in central Arizona, with the 1848
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Its most recent move, to a straight diagonal line
from El Paso to the Colorado River at Yuma, occurred just 164 years ago, during
my great-grandmother lifetime, in 1854, when James Gadsden, as President
Franklin Pierce’s Ambassador to Mexico purchased of 29,640 square miles of Mexico
from President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna for $10 million. In the process it
split another nation in two; the border bisected the Tohono O’odham and Hia’Ced
O’odham lands in the first instance of government sanctioned “family
separation” in the borderlands.
Not only has the border not been
immovable, it has also not been impermeable. Long after the Gadsden Purchase,
ranches, cattle, ore and, most importantly, people came and went across the
border in the Sonoran Desert on a daily basis.
In the late 19th and early 20th
century the cross-border economy sustained Mexican, US American and O’odham
miners, ranchers and retailers.
One of the mine shaft at Ortega's La Americana mine |
Cipriano Ortega (1832 to 1904)
was all three. From his hacienda at Santo Domingo, (see Map in Part 2), Ortega
managed a cross-border empire that included the La Americana mine, located in
the Montezuma Mining District, now the Puerto Blanco Mountains in Organ Pipe
National Monument; a well, corral and butcher’s shop a few miles northeast of
Quitobaquito Springs and 25,000 hectares of land around Santo Domingo. In
addition to his own enterprises, Ortega rented his arrastras to miners from
Mexico and the US to crush their ore and separate their gold and silver.
Between 1880 and 1899, Ortega mined $80 - $120K in gold and silver from La
Americana. He was a savvy businessman so, intuiting that the US government was
not going to continue to allow ore to be extracted on its territory and walked
over to Mexico for much longer, in 1899 he sold the mine to another
international Sonoran Desert entrepreneur, Manuel Levy.
Manuel Levy (1859 to 1942) was born
on the US side of the border, like Ortega his business interests crossed the
international line. Unlike Ortega, his talents did not lie in the areas of
ranching and mining. Levy was a salesman. Like Walmart, Levy’s stores were
everywhere, at Ajo, Quitobaquito and Dowling Well in the US, and at Santo
Domingo, San Antonio and Sonoyta in Mexico. On purchasing La Americana from
Ortega, he renamed the mine Victoria, after the wife of his store clerk at
Quitobaquito, Victoria Leon. His goal was to drop the mine shaft an additional
500 feet. Sadly, for Levy, he hit water at 312 feet, where he aimed to hit
gold. Today, that water would be almost more valuable than gold, but back then
it represented a failed business venture for Levy. Thankfully, his retail
ventures fared better, in part due to the courage, determination and business
acumen of Dona Liberata Rodrigues.
Dona Liberata Rodrigues (1873 to
1925) was the daughter of a rich, highly respected Mexican family. Her life was
all planned out for her; a suitable marriage arranged, and a healthy
inheritance put by. She went through with the marriage, but only for a short
time. Dona Liberata fled from her, presumably horrible and possibly abusive
husband to the Gulf of Mexico, taking her inheritance with her. She purchased 8
wagons and horse teams to pull them and set herself up as long-distance freight
service, buying, shipping and selling merchandise between Hermosillo and Ajo,
with stops at Caborca, Santa Anna, Nogales and Sonoyta along the way. Dona
Liberata bought in supplies for Levy’s stores, she also bought in Mexican home
brew during prohibition to be enjoyed by miners, cowboys and, most likely,
Jefferson Milton, the lone US Mounted Customs Inspector for the Tucson sector.
Jefferson (Jeff) Milton (1861 to
1947) began his law enforcement career as a Texas Ranger. He moved to Arizona
around 1886 as a Deputy US Marshall under Sheriff John Slaughter in Cochise
County. In 1897, Milton joined the US Customs Service, riding the line between
Nogales and Yuma. After seven years, he moved from Customs to the Bureau of
Immigration, becoming a Mounted Chinese Inspector, tasked with enforcing the
Chinese Exclusion Act. Milton was a lifelong moonlighter. Early in his career, as a train guard for Wells
Fargo, where he was badly wounded in the arm during a gunfight. Then as a
miner, partnering with Manuel Levy to open the Monte Cristo mine, and prospecting
his own, Milton mine. And as a guide for local expeditions, including that of
zoologist William T. Hornaday in 1908. Milton did find time to open a small
immigration station at Quitobaquito, where he almost certainly interacted with
the then patriarch of its longest resident family, Jose Juan Orosco.
Jose Juan Orozco's Pozo Nuevo Well |
Like his ranch, Jose Juan
straddled the border, not a citizen of the US nor a citizen of Mexico, until in
1924 he was granted citizenship by the US government. His citizenship rights
were short lived, almost immediately the government began harassing Jose Juan
about his property rights, threatening to build a border fence right through
his land. After Jose Juan died in 1946, the pressure continued on his son, Jim
Orozco. In 1955, the government condemned the Orozco property, and in 1957, Jim
conceded the fight, selling his family ranch to the National Park Service for
$13,000.
Where are they now?
Possible site of Ortega's hacienda at Santo Domingo |
Manuel Levy;s store at the La Americana/Victoria Mine |
Dona Liberata has almost vanished into
history. If it wasn’t for the wonderful books of Ajo History by Charles J.
Gaetjens, I would have had no idea she existed. I would love to find out more
about her as she was clearly a remarkable and interesting woman. It would be
nice, perhaps to name Highway 85, between Sonoyta and Ajo, Liberata Way, in
honor of her success in keeping “agua de vida” flowing in Ajo during
prohibition.
Jeff Milton has been the subject
of a few books, and likely the inspiration for a few characters in Westerns. His
way of life and immersion into the communities of the desert is a thing of the
past for Border Patrol. For certain no environmentalist is going to ask any of
today’s agents to guide them along The Devil’s Highway. His Milton mine is
preserved on OPNM.
All trace
of the Orozco ranch was obliterated by OPNM when they took control of Quitobaquito.
The buildings were razed, and the threatened fence was built through the
property. The fruit trees are gone too. Only the spring and the pond remain. Further
north, possibly because, when OPNM got it, it was part of the Gray family
holdings, Jose Juan’s Pozo Nuevo Well is still there, like all the other wells
in the Monument it is dry now, but parts of the corral still stand and the windmill
still creaks eerily with the desert wind.
____________________________________________________________________________
Thank you for reading. I want to
take a few additional lines to acknowledge my sources, firstly for reasons of
copyright, and secondly so the reader knows I have not just made it all up.
The Ajo History Books by Charles
J. Gaetjens were especially informative on the history of the people of Ajo.
They are filled with personal anecdotes and witty asides. I am extremely
grateful to Gail Weyers of the Ajo Samaritans for entrusting me with them for a
couple of weeks.
All photos, illustrations and
anything that seems like an opinion are my own.
Source List
Ajo History Books 1 to 10 -
Charles J. Gaetjens, Ajo Historical Society (1997 to 2007)
Desert Heart: Chronicles of the
Sonoran Desert - William K. Hartman
Historic Resource Study: Organ
Pipe Cactus National Monument, Arizona - Jerome A. Green, Historic Preservation
Division, National Park Service, US Department of the Interior, Denver, CO
(September 1977)
The History of Ranching in Organ
Pipe National Monument: Thematic and Context Study - Preservation Studies
Program, College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, University of
Arizona (September 2009)
Organ Pipe Cactus National
Monument website
Pinacate Campmates - Bill Hoy and
Bill Broyles, Journal of the Southwest, Vol 49. No. 3 (Autumn 2007) pp 323 –
355
Sonoyta and Santo Domingo: A story
of two Sonoran towns and the river that ran by - Bill Hoy, The Journal of
Arizona History, Vol 31. No. 2 (Summer 1990) pp 117 – 140
Thanks so much for this series. I have really enjoyed it.
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