This document was donated 3 April 2002 by Terry
Humble ©2002. We are very happy to share this this
valuable information. Typed in this format by C. W.
Barnum.
Santa Rita History
In 1799, Lt. Col. Jose Carrasco, a Spanish soldier
stationed in Janos, was shown a copper deposit by a
friendly Apache Indian. Thus begun Santa Rita del Cobre,
a property that has been mined almost continuously
since. A military presidio was established there and
convict labor used to extract copper that was shipped by
mule to Janos, Chihuahua and on to Mexico City. It has
been said that the metal in almost all of the copper
coins minted in Spain and Mexico between 1800 and 1840
originated in Santa Rita.
During the 1800s, Santa Rita was a stopping place for
all of the mountain men who were trapping beaver on the
nearby Gila River. Notable among them was Kit Carson,
famous trapper and scout, who worked for a short time at
the mine as a teamster.
Santa Rita was also home for such Apache Indian chiefs
as Juan Jose Compa, Mangas Coloradas and Victorio.
Indian depredations were a constant threat to the
occupants of this town until the 1880s.
Santa Rita was under Mexican rule for twenty five years
after that country gained her independence from Spain in
1821. The mines were abandoned about 1838 and not worked
again until just before the Civil War.
In 1846, a portion of the Army of the West, under
Colonel Kerney, marched through Santa Rita enroute to
California to battle the Mexicans there when war was
declared between the United States and Mexico. Five
years later, in 1851, Santa Rita was used as a base for
the United States - Mexico Boundary Commission while
they were establishing the boundary between these two
countries.
In 1873, clear title of the property was obtained by
Martin Hayes from the original Spanish owners and
underground mining continued until 1910.This year was
the beginning of steam shovel mining in the open pit
method. The Santa Rita mines have been owned by several
major mining companies such as the Santa Rita Mining
Company, Chino Copper Company, Kennecott Copper
Corporation and the Phelps Dodge Mining Company since
1986.
This small town underneath the mountainous bluff called
the Kneeling Nun has disappeared due to mining expansion
and is now the site of a giant open pit copper mine
measuring a mile and a half across and 1600 feet deep.
It has had the flags of Spain, Mexico and the United
States flown over it and has been the home of Indian,
Spaniard, and American. It began with a few mule loads
of copper and has grown into an annual production of
about 160,000 tons. The pick and shovel extraction has
given way to giant electric shovels scooping up more
than 90 tons at a time and loading the ore into diesel
haulage trucks with a capacity of 320 tons.
About the Cemeteries and their
locations
Santa Rita is located 14 miles east of Silver
City, New Mexico, on State Highway 152.The former town
of Santa Rita has been completely consumed by the large
open pit copper mine presently owned by Phelps Dodge
Mining company. An observation point is located next to
the highway overlooking the Chino Mine pit. There have
been a total of four cemeteries in and around Santa
Rita, two of which are still in existence.
The first cemetery in Santa Rita was located on the
south side of Santa Rita Creek, at the approximate
location of 32 degrees, 47 minutes, 46 seconds North
latitude, (0324746N) and 108 degrees, 3 minutes and 38
seconds West longitude, (1080338W).The exact location
was known by several old time residents of Santa Rita
but was never plotted on a present day map. was
evidently used by the Spaniard and Mexican residents of
Santa Rita from the early 1800s until the town was
abandoned in 1838.Graves in this cemetery were moved in
1911 in anticipation of open pit mining. There were
re-interred on the east slope below the Iron Hill water
tanks, probably the first burials in Cemetery #3, which
will be discussed more later.
More graves in this first cemetery were discovered when
steam shovel operations dug into them about 1917 or
1918. Oak trees eight and ten inches in diameter had
grown up through many of the burials. Some of the
remains had the appearance of Spaniards with the type of
facial beards used by them still visible. In one burial
a piece of a breastplate was found and a broken sword in
another. The relocation of these remains was not
documented but they should have been taken to nearby
Cemetery #3.
Santa Rita Cemetery #2 was located a short distance
behind the first Catholic church, built in 1902 and used
until 1910.The location of the graveyard was 0324724N,
1080345W, on the northern slope of what was then Gold
Hill. When mining operations reached this point in
March, 1916, the graves which were still marked were
moved to Cemetery #3.In August, 1916, three more graves
were found in this cemetery and were moved farther up on
the hill. Why they were not taken to the #3 cemetery
which was in use by time is unknown. A Chino Copper
report for August, 1916 stated:
"Three graves which were on the south end of the Sierra
Ore Body, were moved from a point in the northwest
corner of the cemetery to a point in the southwest
corner. This places them where they will be in no danger
of caving into the Hearst Pit. The graves were arranged
in the same relative position as they were originally,
with exception of the coffin of Myron L. Chase, which
was originally placed with the head in the opposite
direction from the other graves in the cemetery. This
coffin was turned around, which places the head in the
same relative position as all the others that are buried
in this cemetery. The graves are now at a point bearing
South 10 degrees, 15 seconds West, 150 feet from the
original location. Pictures were taken of the three
coffins and showed none had been disturbed and only one
of the three was opened, which was the one of the child
which we were unable to identify. Headboards are being
painted showing the names of the persons and a fence is
being placed around the cemetery. We had considerable
difficulty in learning who was buried in these three
graves and found that two of the graves were occupied by
E. Martin and Myron L. Chase, but were unable to
identify the child."
Santa Rita Cemetery #3 was also known as the East Santa
Rita Cemetery and covers a large area around the
coordinates 0324816N - 1080339W.This area is inside the
property fence of the Phelps Dodge Mining Company which
runs along the south side of State Highway 152 and is
not accessible to the public. The cemetery can be seen
from the fence at a point just west of the turnoff on
County Road 73, also known as the Georgetown Road. The
perimeter of the cemetery area is marked by several
large white barrels as the graves themselves are almost
indiscernible. An arroyo runs through the middle of a
graveyard area and has been used as a dividing line for
the cemetery. A plot map found for this cemetery shows
the burials on the west side are "American" and those on
the east side as "Mexican." This division, which was
prominent at the time, corresponds to the arroyo which
runs north and south. The cemetery was in use from about
1909 until 1917.The area on the east side of the arroyo
had been almost entirely filled with burials by 1917 and
Cemetery #4 had been started the year before in
expectation of this.
On a 1909 map only the cemetery on the east side of the
arroyo is shown while on a 1951 topographical map there
are two distinct cemeteries marked. They are about seven
hundred feet apart and are now considered as a single
area.
At present (1998) there is one headstone lying on the
ground on the western edge of the cemetery bearing the
name L. Harrison, 1867-1913.A short distance to the
south of this headstone is a single rusted cross made
from sections of iron pipe. Down close to the arroyo and
on its east side are two graves covered with cement caps
but no plaques. Several indentations showing former
graves are nearby and the remains of a few wooden fences
which enclosed plots are still visible. These are the
only items that remain today. In the 1950s, the author
remembers a military style headstone in this cemetery
but it has long since disappeared. This could have been
an IOOF headstone on Peter Mariotto's grave. If it
weren't for an old engineer's notebook which was found
in 1968 we would not have any idea of the people buried
here. More about this notebook will be covered later.
Santa Rita Cemetery #4 is located about three fourths of
a mile to the north from the #3 cemetery. It is open to
the public and can be reached by turning north off of
State Highway 152 onto County Road 73 and traveling .4
miles. The cemetery is on the west side of the graveled
road. If you have a global positioning, system (GPS),
the coordinates are 0324850N and 1080326W.Cemetery #4
was started about 1916 and has been in use up to the
present. In fact there was an interment in August, 1998.
Information about Cemetery #3
In 1968, several boxes of Santa Rita paper items
were bought at a yard sale by the author. These had
originally been picked up at the Santa Rita dump in the
1950s when the houses and company offices of that town
were being relocated or in some cases torn down. Among
the papers were several very well worn and tattered
notebooks of the type carried by engineers in the field.
One was labeled East Santa Rita Cemetery and contained
the field notes made by the Chino Copper Company
engineers who were in charge of the cemetery. Another
notebook had information for the Cemetery #4 which will
be covered later.
In the back of the East Santa Rita cemetery book was a
large fold-out plot map showing 73 grave blocks with 8
burial lots in each block. Half were marked" American
side" and" half "Mexican side". At the bottom of the map
a scale of one inch equals thirty feet is given. This
would show a dimension of 24 feet by 35 feet for each of
the 73 blocks and an area of 300 feet by 750 feet for
the entire cemetery. As mentioned before, there is an
arroyo running through the middle of this large
graveyard.
Dates for the burials in the notebook began with April
13, 1911 and run through January, 1917.There is an
August 1928 date on one of the notes in the front of the
notebook. The largest number of burials for any one
month was twenty-two in April, 1911, all on the 13th of
the month. These correspond to the burials made from
cemetery #1 on that date. Another date which showed a
large number of burials was in March, 1916 when thirteen
bodies were removed from Cemetery #2 and brought here.
The information in this field book was evidently copied
into a master book which has long since been lost. There
are 260 burials on the eastern side of the arroyo and 30
on the western side. They are given here alphabetically
and written down exactly as they appear in the notebook
even when spelling is noticeably wrong. Examples are
Gausman for Guzman and Rameras for Ramirez. Many other
mistakes will be noted but have been retained as they
were originally.
Some notes have been made when additional information is
known other than what was in the notebook. Supposed
and/or illegible information will be enclosed by
parentheses and a question mark. The date given is that
of the burial except when a d: is present indicating
date of death. Also, the last name of the next of kin is
not given unless it is different than that of the
deceased. This cemetery was on land owned by the Chino
Copper Company and only those who were employed by the
company or their relatives were allowed to be buried in
this cemetery.
Below, in alphabetical order, are the initials of the
engineers or engineer helpers who made the notations in
this grave notebook and initialed the various entries.
If the name is known, it is included after the initials
in parentheses.
CFA (Ames)
AGB (Burns)
FGC
EE (Ed Esquibel
CMF (Fleet)
LKG (Leslie Goforth)
RJG (Grissom)
JDH (Hynes)
SLH (Sam Houghton)
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DJ
RMK (Ralph Kiner)
WFL
EAM
ECM (McDowell)
JAM
MJM (McGrath)
REM
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JWP (Pats)
CGS
FTS (Snell)
KMS (KennethSully)
FET (Frank Thurber)
HET (Harry Thorne)
JT John Trevarrow)
FPW
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©2005
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