Lands belonging to Diego Romero
measured on May 5, 1743 a share falling to the widow, Barbara Montoya. Bound on the east from the hill, a small
white flat which is on the same slope and at the foot of the said hill as far
as the boundary of Andres Romero, which runs from east to west and from north
to south as far as the very Hot Spring and a little wood which in in front of
the spring and from there, the mountain which is in front as far as the middle
road. I transferred to the elder son,
Andres Romero his share and that inheritance of his mother, Maria de San Jose
(Diego’s first wife), deceased and then all the three brothers are bound by one
another. Afterwards, Francisco Xavier
Romero entered into the same and after that Antonio de Atencio who received the
same for his wife, Ana Maria Romero.
They all signed content.
Francisco Guerrero, Jose Terrus and Juan Domingo Paez Hurtado.
In 1714, Diego Romero, a resident
of Taos, appear before you and exhibit a design of a brand at the margin of
this petition, in order that when being permitted by you, I may be entitled to
the use of the same on all my livestock and horses as also recover all
livestock with said brand, which has not been sold or given by me, or any
person authorized by me. Anyone without the right to use the brand and if
caught, should be criminally prosecuted, punished and fined. Diego Romero.
On August 5, 1724 at Santa Cruz,
the retired Alferez Cristobal Torres, Alcalde Mayor of said la Cañada appeared
Juan and Sebastian de la Serna, residents and legitimate children of Captain
Cristobal de la Serna and Josefa Madrid, both deceased, stating that their
mother sold a portion of farming land, which her father was granted by His
Majesty at the valley of Taos. Their
brother Ignacio de la Serna is out of the country and they sign for him. The lands were formerly owned by Captain don
Fernando de Chavez and deed said tract to Diego Romero for the sum not
mentioned. Jose Ph. Madrid, Cristobal
Tafolla, Francisco Aban Rivera.
At Taos on October 29, 1746,
Antonio Atencio and Maria Romero, resident of Taos, do sell to Antonio Duran de
Armijo, a two-storied house, which consists of eight rooms, also 2,000 paces of
farming land. Bounded on the east the
acequia nearest the land and farthest from the pueblo, west the river of the
said pueblo, north the camino real and south the first corn land of Francisco
Xavier Romero, for the price of 200 pesos of the land and was paid by one squaw
and four cows and calves.
References: Spanish Archives of New Mexico, Series I,
Roll 8, Twitchell #240, Frames 618-732.
©Henrietta M. Christmas
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