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Girls cooking in Home Economics class at Sopris School, 1915


Girls cooking in Home Economics class at Sopris School, 1915

Girls cooking in Home Economics class at Sopris School, 1915

May 11, 2019


Hispanic Woman and Horno


Photo taken 1940-1955 near Trinidad

Hispanic Woman and Horno


Women at a field day, Trinidad, 1919


Three women at the women’s nail driving contest at the annual field day in Trinidad. The picnic was held on August 23, 1919 for all CF&I miners and their families from Las Animas and Huerfano Counties. Two of the women are African-Americans. Woman at left (holding hammer) is Annie Rollins from Toller.

Women at a field day, Trinidad, 1919


Wooden cabinet with tin work, for keeping food


Wooden cabinet with tin work, for keeping food

Wooden cabinet with tin work, for keeping food


Stone mortars (molcajetes) used for grinding food


Stone mortars (molcajetes) used for grinding food

Stone mortars (molcajetes) used for grinding food


Maria Onofre Paiz at Gasoline Pump on Ranch, 1920s


María Onofre Paiz, a young woman, uses a handle to pump gasoline into an elevated tank outside a tin building on the Paiz Ranch in Gulnare (Las Animas County)

Maria Onofre Paiz at Gasoline Pump on Ranch, 1920s


Juana Maria Paiz, wife of Rafael Chacon, 1880s


Born March 10, 1844 in Peñasco, New Mexico, the daughter of Rafael Paiz and María Dolores Olguín. She married Rafael Chacon on April 15, 1858 in Peñasco, New Mexico. Her father and three of her brothers came to Colorado in the 1860’s. Juana and her husband came in 1872. She died in 1927 in Trinidad

Juana Maria Paiz, wife of Rafael Chacon, 1880s


Maria Dolores Gonzales


Born in 1831 in New Mexico, she married Felipe Baca in 1846 and they later moved to Trinidad. In 1873 they moved into what is now called Baca House. She had 10 children, including Felix Baca. She handled some of the family’s accounts and investments.

Maria Dolores Gonzales


Damiana Barela, 1890


Damiana Rivera de Barela, wife of Colorado State Senator Casimiro Barela, poses for a portrait in an embroidered cape trimmed in fur and a hat decorated with feathers, a bow and a veil

Damiana Barela, 1890


Maria Odlia Lobato


María Odila Lobato, probably in the 1920s. Her hair was styled (“marcelled”) by her cousin, Aurelia Cordova, a hairdresser in Trinidad, using a heated curling iron

Maria Odlia Lobato


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