Posted in General

Be prepared – find your family quickly in the 1940 US Census

It’s almost here!  It’s getting closer every day!  Only 4 more days!

April 2nd is the day many genealogists have been waiting for…the release of the 1940 US Census.

Archives.com has created a quick infographic to help you find your family right away, once the census is released.  Check it out below!

Don’t forget – Familysearch.org is still looking for indexers to assist the indexing the 1940 US Census.  Once that is completed it will be much easier for all of us to find members of our families.  To become a member of  the 1940 U.S. Census Community Project and help index click here.

1940 census archives.com

Posted in Family History, Stephens, Stewart

Those Places Thursday – Mountainair, New Mexico

Mountainair, New Mexico.  Small town with a population of approximately 1200. This picture is of, what we called as kids, “The Farm”. That is my grandmother, Rae, on my maternal side at the gate along with her sister Nadine on the fence. On the porch, her mother, Besse, her father, Ralph, and her brother, Nolan.

Below is a portion of a transcript written by my maternal grandmother, Letha Rae Stewart Stephens on her memories of life in Mountainair, New Mexico.

 
“…As the second December (1908) rolled around I arrived in a tent during a snow storm of such depth that Dr. Black had difficultly negotiating the trip on horseback to attend the event.
 
Next summer a two-room house was built.  One room was papered with blue building paper, the other with newspapers and pages of catalogues glued with flour paste. 
 
Our needs were procured from W.R. Orme Grocery, Howard Griffin Drugs and Dunlavy Mercantile.  We hauled our water from the Ranger Station wells.
Under the supervision of Mr. Carscallan, Forest Ranger, my father helped plant pine trees on burned over land in the Manzano mountains, also survey part of southwestern Torrance County.
 
Steam engines on the newly constructed railroad often lost chunks of coal as they sped around curves; several families augmented their weekly fuel by retrieving this coal.  On such a trip I recall how we were just ready to start home when one horse broke loose and took off, leaving us only one horse to pull a wagon of coal, a difficult six-mile trip.
 
In summer large crowds attended Chautauqua meetings in town.  There were big Fourth of July celebrations with a bandstand set up in the center of Broadway, which played lively music all day and evening.  County Fairs at Willard were well attended.  Many times after bean crops were laid by there would be a week of camping for us.  It took a long day to make the trip by wagon to Red Canyon campground with lunch at Manzano Springs.  Many lumber wagons passed our house daily on their way from mountain sawmills to lumber yards in town where lumber was in demand.”
 

This house is no longer there…but my Uncle now owns the land and has built his own place on it.  It’s nice to know that it will continue to be in the family for many more generations.