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The Maxwell Land Grant

 

Woodalls North American Directory

 

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The Santa Fe Ring tried to force the squatters off of the Land Grant which led to the Colfax County War, where 200 men lost their lives.

 

Lucien B. Maxwell Statue in Cimarron, New Mexico

Maxwell's only legacy to the area is this folk art statue in Cimarron, June, 2006, Kathy Weiser. 

 

Clay Allison, gunfighter

Clay Allison, 1871.

This image available for photographic prints and downloads HERE!

 

The pastor turned to Clay Allison, a local gunslinger for help. On the evening of October 30, 1875 a masked mob, who was said to have been lead by Clay Allison and the Minister McMains, confronted Vega. The constable denied having anything to do with the murder, blaming it on a man by the name Manuel Cardenas. Obviously, the mob did not believe him and he was pummeled and hanged by the neck from a telegraph pole. Unable to stomach the violence, the Reverend McMains had panicked and fled midway through the session.

 

Ten days later, Manuel Cardenas, the man who Vega had implicated prior to his death was arrested and questioned in Elizabethtown. He claimed that Vega had shot the minister, adding that Santa Fe Ringers Mills and Longwell were also behind the killing.

 

Mills barely escaped a furious lynch crowd in Cimarron as he alighted from a coach and was later arrested. Longwell fled in a buggy to Fort Union and safety just ahead of pursuers Clay and John Allison.

 

Mills was granted a trial, but during the trial, the state governor was informed of the events by telegraph and the cavalry was dispatched from Fort Union, arriving just in time to end the proceedings and release Mills.

Cardenas, during his protracted hearing, retracted his earlier accusations against Mills and Longwell, thus clearing the two men. Furthermore, he stated that in Elizabethtown he had been coerced at gunpoint into implicating the two when he was "questioned" at gunpoint by Joseph Herberger.  Evidently Herberger had been promised a political position by Ring men Mills and Longwell, during the earlier elections in 1875.

 

 

 

 

When the two had failed to follow through, Herberger reportedly forced Cardenas to implicate them. While Cardenas was escorted back to the jail when court adjourned one evening he was shot to death.  It was never known who killed Cardenas, though many thought that it was the vigilantes fighting against the Santa Fe Ring, lead by Clay Allison.

The truth about Tolby's murder later suggested that the parson unfortunately witnessed a man by the name of Francisco Griego shooting a man in an argument. When the man later died, Tolby planned to seek an indictment against Greigo, who set up Tolby's murder to silence him. Cardenas later retracted his statement about the Ring men. To this day, the murders of Tolby, Vega and Cardenas are officially unsolved.  

The reign of terror had begun in Cimarron and the town was out of control. Violence, lawlessness and apprehension fed the residents and many packed their belongings and left the area. At one time, guards were posted at all entrances to Cimarron and no one was allowed to leave town without the Colfax County Ring's permission. By November 9, 1875 the
Santa Fe New Mexican informed the public that Cimarron was in the hands of a mob. The Reverend McMains was the self-appointed commander of the vigilantes, though most felt like the leader was Clay Allison.

The Grant Owners petitioned the courts to allow them to demand purchase or rent monies from the settlers and on January 14, 1876 Governor Samuel Beech Axtell, a member of the Santa Fe Ring, granted the petition. The court's decision allowed the owners to kick the settlers off the land if they didn't pay the required rents or purchase the property from the Land Grant owners. Heaping more fuel on the fire, the decision attached Colfax to Taos County for judicial purposes, which forced the settlers to attend court in Taos 50 miles away, a trip which caused the settlers much hardship in time and money. Governor Axtell claimed the change would mean improved law and order. The citizens reacted in a fury over the bill, correctly surmising the interference of the Santa Fe Ring.

Sheriffs served eviction notices and further retaliation began. Grant pastures were set on fire, cattle rustling increased and officials were threatened at gun point. Grant gang members made nighttime raids of area homes and ranches with threats of violence to encourage their cooperation with the grant owners. It is estimated that as many as 200 people were killed in the Colfax County War.

In August, 1877 the Minister McMains was tried in Mora county for his participation in the Vega murder. Up until the very date of the trial he stormed up and down the valley speaking out against the Maxwell Land Grant Company. The minister was found guilty in the 5th degree and fined five hundred dollars. The Minister McMains dedicated the rest of his life in keeping alive the war against the grant company, hoping to have the grant land declared open to settlers as was done with the
Oklahoma Territory. Barns, homes, crops, and fences came under the torch of McMains and his vigilantes as he sought to bring the Grant Company to its knees.

In 1878 the law judicially attaching Colfax to Taos County was repealed and an honest governor, Lew Wallace, replaced the corrupted tenure of Governor Axtell. In 1879, the Grant was surveyed once again and was declared to include the total 1,714,764.93 acres (2,679 square miles), though the matter was in the courts for years.

So powerful were the Grant Owners that in 1884 they persuaded the territorial governor to field a force of 35 "militiamen," which were led by Jim Masterson (Bat Masterson's brother) from Trinidad, Colorado. However, George Curry, a resident of nearby Raton, rounded up a posse of ranchers, bought up all the guns and ammo for sale and when the "militia" arrived, they marched them at gunpoint back to the Colorado line.

The guns roared for another several years until, in the spring of 1887, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld the survey and reaffirmed the decision of 1879, thus legitimizing the Maxwell Land Grant Company in its efforts to drive out the settlers. Abandoned by their government, many of the homesteaders bought or leased their places, some just gave up and left, and a few continued the struggle, in the forlorn hope that the government might once again reverse itself. The Dutch Firm continued its exploitation of the many resources of the grant and it thrived for several decades.

During the 1900's the land was gradually subdivided, and ranchers, loggers, and private organizations bought the property. Five Hundred thousand acres became the hideaway home of Chicago grain baron, William Bartlett who built three mansions and a railroad for his guests' convenience. Later 200,000 acres of the private retreat were purchased and became the Vermejo Park Club, whose members included celebrities and the wealthy, such as Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Cecil B. DeMille, Herbert Hoover and Harvey Firestone. However, when the depression was evident, the club closed and the property reverted to ranching.

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