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Roswell Web Magazine - the Web Magazine that Showcases Roswell & New Mexico

Colonel Jose Francisco Chaves 1833-1904
Soldier-Legislator-Educator
Bust of Col. Chaves by renowned sculptor
Robert Summers that resides in the newly restored historical Chaves County
Courthouse
Following
was published in Don Bullis' New Mexico Historical Notebook, issue 6-21-06, reprinted
herein with his permission.
Colonel J. Francisco Chaves
A True Son of
New Mexico
by Don Bullis
Chaves County in southeastern New Mexico was
named for Colonel José Francisco Chaves when it was created in 1989.
Or should it be Chavez?
George Curry, who would later become
territorial governor of New Mexico (1907-1910), claimed that the name was
deliberately misspelled to please a bunch of Texans living in the area at the
time: people who did not approve of naming the county for an Hispanic, even one
as prominent as this one. (Historian Leon Metz agrees with Curry.) Ralph Emerson
Twitchell, in the Leading Facts of New Mexico History, does not mention
the creation of the county, but throughout his book, he spells the Colonel's
name with the s. Historian Will Keleher, in The Fabulous Frontier,
spells the name both ways. T. M. Pearce in New Mexico Place Names does
not address any controversy over the spelling of the name. He simply points out
that in old Galician Spanish and in Portuguese the name was spelled with the
s. He also cites Fray Angelíco Chavez who says that Chaves is the older
form.1 Obviously
one can find sources to support either side of the argument.
But who was Col. Chaves? No consideration can be given to the history of New
Mexico in the last half of the 19th century without attention to him. Few, if
any, people living in the territory at the time had a background as broad and
eclectic as his. José
Francisco Chaves was born at Los Padillas in southern Bernalillo County in 1833.
He was the grandson of José
Francisco Xavier Chaves who'd served as the first Mexican Governor of New Mexico
in 1822. His father, Mariano Chaves, was Chief of Staff under Governor Manuel
Armijo. Twitchell reports that Mariano said to his son, "The heretics are
going to over-run all this country. Go and learn their language and come back
prepared to defend your people." At age eight, in 1841, Francisco was
enrolled in St. Louis University and completed his education with a two-year
course at the college of Physicians and Surgeons in New York by the time he was
19. He returned to New Mexico in 1852.2
In both 1852 and 1853, Francisco drove sheep from New Mexico to California for
sale to a burgeoning market of miners and settlers.3
Most sources also agree that he participated in military action against the
Navajo in the years leading up to the Civil War when his military career really
began. President Abraham Lincoln commissioned him a major in the 1st New Mexico
Infantry in 1861. He was subsequently promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and
participated in the Battle of Valverde in early 1862. By October of that year,
he was commanding officer of Fort Wingate in western New Mexico.4
Chaves was in command of four companies but the fort didn't amount to much as a
military installation. Soft, boggy ground made construction difficult and while
the vast majority of frontier forts were not surrounded by wooden stockades,
Fort Wingate was. The stockade was more than 4,300 feet in length and eight feet
high. And while he had to be concerned about construction, he also had to be
wary of the Navajo. This was on the eve of Kit Carson's incursions against the Diné,
which resulted in the Navajo defeat and their relocation to Bosque Redondo near
Fort Sumner in 1863.
Discharged from the army in 1865, he retained the title "Colonel" for
the remainder of his life.
While all of this was happening, Col. Chaves was elected to the Territorial
House of Representatives in 1858, and took his seat in 1860. In 1865, he was
elected delegate to Congress from New Mexico and served in both the 39th and the
40th Congress. He also studied law after his release from the military and was
admitted to the bar. In the late 1870s, he served as District Attorney from the
2nd District (Albuquerque and environs).
One incident serves to show how New Mexico
politics worked at the time. In 1871, Jose M. Gallegos, a Democrat, opposed Col.
Chaves, always a staunch Republican, in the race for congressional delegate.
Supporters of Gallegos organized a rally in the village of Mesilla, near Las
Cruces, for Sunday, August 21. Supporters of Col. Chaves, not to be outdone,
organized their own rally at the same time, at the same place. Things went along
well enough until the two events ended and the Democrats began parading around
the plaza singing "Marching Through Georgia." The Republicans then
began marching in the opposite direction. Historian Gordon Owen tells what
happened next. "One Apolonio Barela allegedly fired a shot into the air.
Democrat leader I. N. Kelley then hit Republican leader John Lemon in the head
with a club, inflicting what proved to be a fatal injury. Someone shot and
killed Kelley and mayhem ensued." When the smoke cleared, nine men were
dead and at least 40 were injured. No one was ever arrested in the matter.
Chaves continued to serve in the Territorial
Legislature, for years as Speaker of the House. Governor Miguel Otero appointed
him Superintendent of Public Instruction in 1901 and 1903. Upon completion of
that task, he began duties as the Territory's first historian. His task was to
write and publish the history of New Mexico to be used in the public schools. He
was working at that task when he was assassinated in late November 1904 at
Pino's Wells in newly created Torrance County.
It was a cowardly act. Col. Chaves was having
dinner with friends when a shot rang out and a bullet shattered the window
before it struck the victim, killing him almost instantly. In spite of a
sizeable reward, no one was ever arrested for the crime. Historian Marc Simmons
says this: "This writer talked, a few years ago, with an old-timer living
near Chaves' birthplace ... He declared that one of his neighbors, who had died
about 1950, once confessed to him that he had been the man who shot José
Francisco Chaves. For the terrible act, he had been paid by certain unscrupulous
politicians. This
story is as likely to be true—or
untrue—as
the other explanations that have been circulated from time to time. For the fact
remains that ... no person can say with certainty who killed the unflinching José
Francisco Chaves."
Endnotes:
1
The confusion about the spelling has been around for years. Until a few
years ago, the sign that greeted travelers to the county on U.S. Route 70, south
of Kenna, was spelled with the z.
2
Many sources agree that young Chaves was educated in St. Louis and New York
City, but only Twitchell reports that he began his education at the tender age
of eight.
3
Many others, including "Uncle Dick" Wootton and Kit Carson, trailed
herds of sheep to California in the earlyt 1850s, and made huge profits.
4
This was the first Fort Wingate, located near the present-day village of San
Rafael, south of Grants. It was moved to its present location in 1868.
Additional Sources:
Niel C. Mangum. "Old Fort Wingate in the Navajo War," New
Mexico Historical Review, October 1991
Rubén Sálaz Márquez. New Mexico: A Brief Multi-History,
Cosmic House, 1999
Daniel C. B. Rathbun & David V. Alexander. New Mexico
Frontier Military Place Names, Yucca Tree Press, 2003
Robert J. Tórrez. UFOs Over Galisteo and Other Stories of
New Mexico's History, UNM Press, 2004
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