| Santo
Tomas de Abiquiu Church
Baptisms:
Vol I: 1754 to 1811
NMGS Press Item
#A14, 264 pages, $26.00.
Baptisms:
Vol II:
1821-1824; plus
Loose Documents:
1794; 1817-1853; and
Folios
and Fragments: 1837-1850.
NMGS Press
Item #A15, 264 pages, $26.00.
Marriages:
1756-1826. NMGS
Press Item #C6, 154 pages, $26.00.
Transcribed from AASF #26 and Loose Documents AASF #52.
Each book is fully indexed
by names of all persons in the record:
Person being baptized or married, parents, godparents,
grandparents, and witnesses.
Spiral bound.
NMGS members pay no additional charges for sales tax or
shipping.
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| From
the Introduction, by Laurianne Huffman:
Geographically, Abiquiu is located 18 miles northwest
of Española on US Highway 84, "on a terraced,
rocky mesa (elevation 6,060 feet) overlooking the Rio
Chama, approximately 20 miles upstream from the confluence
of the Rio Chama and the Rio Grande."
[Alvar W. Carlson, The Spanish-American Homeland: Four
Centuries in New Mexico's Rio Arriba , p p. 160-162.]
The town of Abiquiu Grant was given in 1754 to
the Spaniards and genizaros jointly and is one
of the last Spanish-American community grants still functioning
and owned by the residents.
Throughout the years covered by these baptisms, Abiquiu
served as an active gateway to the Hopi lands (in present-day
Arizona), and to the northwestern interior. It was in
the church of Santo Tomas de Abiquiu on July 19, 1776,
that Escalante and Dominguez knelt to celebrate mass prior
to their departure on a six-month expedition to find a
possible route between New Mexico and California. [Though
the desired new route to the Pacific Coast was not found]
they mapped much of Colorado and Utah in the process,
and their efforts have had a significant impact on western
American history.
These baptisms represent Abiquiu's most active and productive
years, and the names you will read are those of pioneers
in the truest sense. They encountered a harsh wilderness,
saw its promise, and succesfully overcame its obstacles.
They were marrying and raising families in the beautiful
Chama Valley when the American Colonies declared their
independence from England in 1776. They were defending
their homes and families against Indian raids while the
young American nation was defending its coastal waters
in 1812. . . .
Hispanic researchers, often in search of their Native
American heritage and hoping to establish a tribe of origin,
may find that tribe named in the early marriage and baptismal
records of Abiquiu. If the tribal origin was known, it
was indicated [in the record]. If the individual was of
mixed ancestry, other designations, such as mestizo,
color quebrado (broken color) and coyote
were given. . . .
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