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Sugar beet farming can be profitable in Valley, especially around Alamosa, due to water and abundance of “Mexican” labor
Sugar beet farming can be profitable in Valley, especially around Alamosa, due to water and abundance of “Mexican” labor

March 18, 2019
Soil Map of San Luis Valley, showing soil composition, township grid, agricultural canals, and railroads during the early twentieth century. Made by Holmes J. Garnett, 1903
Soil Map of San Luis Valley, showing soil composition, township grid, agricultural canals, and railroads during the early twentieth century. Made by Holmes J. Garnett, 1903

300 skilled sugar beet raisers coming to Monte Vista, La Jara, and Romeo from Globeville, CO (NE of Denver)
300 skilled sugar beet raisers coming to Monte Vista, La Jara, and Romeo from Globeville, CO (NE of Denver)

The Lucero family pose by an adobe wall on the White Mountain Ranch in Costilla County, San Luis Valley. Undated photo
The Lucero family pose by an adobe wall on the White Mountain Ranch in Costilla County, San Luis Valley. Undated photo

Trujillo homestead, near Mosca, builtby Pedro Trujillo, a first generation Hispanic-American, in 1879. He was a small-scale pioneer cattle rancher
Trujillo homestead, near Mosca, builtby Pedro Trujillo, a first generation Hispanic-American, in 1879. He was a small-scale pioneer cattle rancher

“Spud Bowl”
Farm workers stand near a pickup truck in a field in the San Luis Valley. A man stands in the back of the pickup truck filled with burlap bags of potatoes, 1950-55

Vallejos Ditch before improvements
George G. Romero kneels beside the Vallejos Ditch near an old headgate, prior to the USDA Ditch no. 5 Special Improvement Project, San Pablo (Costilla County), 1965?

Acequia, Costilla County, 1990s
View of an acequia (irrigation ditch), possibly part of the Vallejos Ditch system in the San Luis Valley

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