Article opposing unions as a “labor trust,” 1914
LHP_Intern2019-10-09T03:00:56+00:00Article reprinted from “The Literary Digest” charging unions with “conspiring to restrain trade and commerce” and mentioning indictments of two local leaders of the coal strike under the anti-trust law
Chronology of the coal strike in Trinidad District, 1913
LHP_Intern2019-10-09T03:01:20+00:00Beginning of a multi-part listing of events. This page includes visits /speeches by Mother Jones on Sept. 2-3 and Sept. 14
Western Union telegram sent to Philip Germer’s father, 1944
LHP_Intern2019-10-09T03:02:05+00:00It announced that he was killed in action in France on June 6 during the D-Day Invasion
Philip Germer in uniform, 1942
LHP_Intern2019-10-09T03:02:24+00:00In 1943 he was attached to the 101st Airborne Division
Philip Germer at Camp Toccoa, Georgia, 1942
LHP_Intern2019-10-09T03:02:39+00:00Born in Trinidad, he was the son of Melvin Germer and Dora Lucero. He enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1942 and trained as a paratrooper.
Rafael Chacon in U.S. Army uniform, 1900-1910
LHP_Intern2019-10-11T04:26:02+00:00Rafael Chacon in U.S. Army uniform, 1900-1910
List of men drafted in 1917 for World War I, including many Hispanic names
LHP_Intern2019-10-11T04:26:10+00:00List of men drafted in 1917 for World War I, including many Hispanic names
Police Officers in Training, undated
LHP_Intern2019-10-09T03:03:11+00:00Manuel Lujan and Alex Abeyta
Ruins of coke processing ovens in Cokedale: #2
LHP_Intern2020-01-18T05:22:48+00:00The ovens were constructed by Colorado Fuel & Iron in 1907 and later sold to American Smelting and Refining. The last ones were shut down in 1947.