Por Lupe Kerr | 4:42 PM MST, Mar Noviembre 13, 2007
Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE RANCHOS GROUP
Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
Lupe Kerr wrote:
Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Yolanda,
Thank you for your reply in helping me look for my family. First, I
see you are
from El Paso, I was born and raised there. What a small world.
Anyway, I am looking for Cruz Bustamante Born 16, Aug. 1883 in Santa
Rosalia, D.
1-May-1931. I know his grave in El Paso. He married Rafaela Garcia 1896. I
believe at Guardian Angel Church in EP. Rafiela (another spelling) was born
16, Aug. 1883. I believe also in the Santa Rosala area. She died in El paso.
My problem is I can't seem to find anything beyond my great grandfather
Cruz. I
also can't find much on Rafaela's brothers or sisters. I have only one known
sister, Ramona Garcia. Never married or children, born and died in El Paso.
Any help would be appreciated. I've never given out info for help, so
I hope I
gave you what you might need. Thanks again. Lupe
Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez :
> Lupe
>
> Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de
> Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give
> me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info
> for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe
> parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE
> RANCHOS GROUP
>
> Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
>
> Lupe Kerr wrote:
>
> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I
> have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
LUPE
ARE YOUR MATERNAL G.GREATGRANDPARENTS JOSE FELIPE BENEDICTO GARCIA AND PETRA DOMINGUEZ ? DOUBLE CHECK YOUR G.GRANDFATHER CRUZ BUSTAMANTE'S DOB CAUSE ITS THE SAME AS RAFAELA. JUST TO MAKE SURE WE ARE TALKING ABOUT THE SAME PLACE, IS YOUR FAMILY FROM SANTA ROSALIA DE CAMARGO, CHIHUAHUA? JUST CHECKING, ANY OTHER INFO YOU CAN THINK OF JUST SEND IT, IT MIGHT HELP. DO YOU HAVE ANY DOCUMENTS, SCAN THEM AND SEND THEM IF YOU LIKE.
YOLANDA
tex1@clearwire.net wrote:
Yolanda,
Thank you for your reply in helping me look for my family. First, I
see you are
from El Paso, I was born and raised there. What a small world.
Anyway, I am looking for Cruz Bustamante Born 16, Aug. 1883 in Santa
Rosalia, D.
1-May-1931. I know his grave in El Paso. He married Rafaela Garcia 1896. I
believe at Guardian Angel Church in EP. Rafiela (another spelling) was born
16, Aug. 1883. I believe also in the Santa Rosala area. She died in El paso.
My problem is I can't seem to find anything beyond my great grandfather
Cruz. I
also can't find much on Rafaela's brothers or sisters. I have only one known
sister, Ramona Garcia. Never married or children, born and died in El Paso.
Any help would be appreciated. I've never given out info for help, so
I hope I
gave you what you might need. Thanks again. Lupe
Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez :
> Lupe
>
> Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de
> Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give
> me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info
> for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe
> parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE
> RANCHOS GROUP
>
> Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
>
> Lupe Kerr wrote:
>
> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I
> have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Yolanda,
I looked up my records...here's a good one. The death cert. (in hand) states
date of birth for Cruz was May 3, 1876. Info given by my great uncle. The
information sheets I have him as DOB 4-26-1882 I have checked the census for
1910 and 1920, both are different. one has him born 1884 and the other 1888.
I guess I really hadn't paid that much attention, as the family listed are all
correct. I just checked the picture of his grave and it says he was
born 1877.
The stone was put on by his daughters, it does not have DOB, just died at 69
yrs old. Do you have any suggestions. I will get back write on the Benedicto
and Petra names. I know I've come across those names. I want to talk to my
daughter to see what she has. Thanks
Lupe
Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez :
> LUPE
> ARE YOUR MATERNAL G.GREATGRANDPARENTS JOSE FELIPE BENEDICTO GARCIA
> AND PETRA DOMINGUEZ ? DOUBLE CHECK YOUR G.GRANDFATHER CRUZ
> BUSTAMANTE'S DOB CAUSE ITS THE SAME AS RAFAELA. JUST TO MAKE SURE WE
> ARE TALKING ABOUT THE SAME PLACE, IS YOUR FAMILY FROM SANTA ROSALIA
> DE CAMARGO, CHIHUAHUA? JUST CHECKING, ANY OTHER INFO YOU CAN THINK
> OF JUST SEND IT, IT MIGHT HELP. DO YOU HAVE ANY DOCUMENTS, SCAN THEM
> AND SEND THEM IF YOU LIKE.
> YOLANDA
>
> tex1@clearwire.net wrote:
> Yolanda,
> Thank you for your reply in helping me look for my family. First, I
> see you are
> from El Paso, I was born and raised there. What a small world.
> Anyway, I am looking for Cruz Bustamante Born 16, Aug. 1883 in Santa
> Rosalia, D.
> 1-May-1931. I know his grave in El Paso. He married Rafaela Garcia 1896. I
> believe at Guardian Angel Church in EP. Rafiela (another spelling) was born
> 16, Aug. 1883. I believe also in the Santa Rosala area. She died in El paso.
> My problem is I can't seem to find anything beyond my great grandfather
> Cruz. I
> also can't find much on Rafaela's brothers or sisters. I have only one known
> sister, Ramona Garcia. Never married or children, born and died in El Paso.
> Any help would be appreciated. I've never given out info for help, so
> I hope I
> gave you what you might need. Thanks again. Lupe
>
>
> Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez :
>
>> Lupe
>>
>> Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de
>> Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give
>> me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info
>> for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe
>> parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE
>> RANCHOS GROUP
>>
>> Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
>>
>> Lupe Kerr wrote:
>>
>> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I
>> have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
>> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
>> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I don't know if its close to Augacalientes.
Mary
-----Original Message-----
>From: Lupe Kerr
>Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM
>To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
>Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia
>
>
>Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
If you go to the Ranchos website you will find a link- Diccionario Geografico etc. by Cubas. In it you will find a list of 8 haciendas named Santa Rosalia. There is also a long list of ranchos with the same name. San Luis Potosi has three ranchos and Jalisco two. I'm not so sure that the ranchos in Potosi are closer than the ones in Jalostotitlan or Tepaatitlan.
David, Albany, CA
-----Original Message-----
>From: Lupe Kerr
>Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM
>To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
>Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia
>
>
>Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
> To Lupe Kerr,
>
> If you go to the Ranchos website you will find a link- Diccionario
> Geografico etc. by Cubas. In it you will find a list of 8 haciendas
> named Santa Rosalia. There is also a long list of ranchos with the
> same name. San Luis Potosi has three ranchos and Jalisco two. I'm
> not so sure that the ranchos in Potosi are closer than the ones in
> Jalostotitlan or Tepaatitlan.
>
> David, Albany, CA
>
> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Lupe Kerr
>> Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM
>> To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
>> Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia
>>
>>
>> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes?
>> I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
>> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
>> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. > Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:> >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
_________________________________________________________________
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Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another
question, on
one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua
Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out
what it
is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely different
area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a "born"
area? Thanks again
Quoting tony cobos :
>
> It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a
> town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a
> lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary
> wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. >
> Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net>
> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos]
> Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I
> don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original
> Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13,
> 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject:
> [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa
> Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from
> that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name
> of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be
> appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- >
> >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:>
> >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log
> on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
> Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another
> question, on
> one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua
> Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out
> what it
> is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely
> different
> area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a
> "born"
> area? Thanks again
>
>
>
> Quoting tony cobos :
>
>>
>> It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a
>> town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a
>> lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary
>> wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. >
>> Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net>
>> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos]
>> Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I
>> don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original
>> Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13,
>> 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject:
>> [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa
>> Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from
>> that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name
>> of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be
>> appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- >
>>> Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:>
>>> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log
>> on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
No I have never heard of that; I beleive Angola is an African country; I would try variations of that word unless you are sure it says "angola". > Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 18:31:26 -0500> From: tex1@clearwire.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> > Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another > question, on> one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua> Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out > what it> is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely different> area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a "born"> area? Thanks again> > > > Quoting tony cobos :> > >> > It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a > > town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a > > lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary > > wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. > > > Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net> > > To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] > > Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I > > don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original > > Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13, > > 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject: > > [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa > > Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from > > that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name > > of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be > > appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > > > >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:> > > >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log > > on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > > -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send > > email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your > > subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > _________________________________________________________________> > Boo! Scare away worms, viruses and so much more! Try Windows Live OneCare!> > http://onecare.live.com/standard/en-us/purchase/trial.aspx?s_cid=wl_hot…> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --> > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> > To post, send email to:> > general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> > To change your subscription, log on to:> > http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> >> >> > > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
_________________________________________________________________
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The best bet is Angola is a misswritten "Ags." or "Aguas", being the case they wanted to write "Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes" which should be the correct statement, take it for sure.
tony cobos escribió:
No I have never heard of that; I beleive Angola is an African country; I would try variations of that word unless you are sure it says "angola". > Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 18:31:26 -0500> From: tex1@clearwire.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> > Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another > question, on> one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua> Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out > what it> is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely different> area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a "born"> area? Thanks again> > > > Quoting tony cobos :> > >> > It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a > > town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a > > lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary > > wars), so the time frame is
important in tracking that down. > > > Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net> > > To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] > > Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I > > don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original > > Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13, > > 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject: > > [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa > > Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from > > that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name > > of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be > > appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > > > >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:> > > >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log > > on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org>
I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to share some information with the group that might shed some light on this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is a large country
(about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire, Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty. I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves, captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony) but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal. Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
I believe the people in the records in question were either African slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
Bill,
I was the one asking questions about Angola. My Great grandfather has that
written in several of the items I have found. I'd like to email you a copy,
but I am afraid I havent mastered the attach thing yet. I went on Ancestry
Search. I put in Cruz Bustamante 1883 It comes up to Border Crossing
from Mex
to US. Its the 4th entry down having him as Birth 1878 Arrival 13, June
1921....on there it has AguaCalientes, AguaCalientes, Angola...If you could
shed lite on this, I'd appreciate it. Also the info you gave on the bookstore
address was also helpful to me. Thanks again. Actually I have to thank
Nuestrosranchos...I have had very nice helpful people giving me help Lupe
Quoting Bill Figueroa :
> Tony,
>
> I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your
> last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to
> share some information with the group that might shed some light on
> this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is
> a large country
> (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire,
> Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very
> rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty.
> I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while
> working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly
> five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola
> has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil
> reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long
> way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to
> get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris
> or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from
> Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to
> Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
>
> While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other
> parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and
> civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves
> imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such
> as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
>
> While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent
> one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was
> located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders
> from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves,
> captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the
> highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives
> transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now
> a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and
> inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of
> the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee
> plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony)
> but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States,
> Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had
> visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal.
> Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
> bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
>
> I believe the people in the records in question were either African
> slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify
> this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
>
> Bill Figueroa
Two other people have suggested taking a second look at the documents you think say "Angola" because usually when someone has been born in the capital city (Aguascalientes) of the state of Aguascalentes, it is sometimes written as "Aguascalientes, Aguas", or they abbreviate the state name some other way (Ags).
I looked at the immigration record you refer to and I don't see the word "Angola" anywhere. The index for this record says Birthplace: Aguascalientes, and Birth Country: Angola, but I think it was the state abbreviation "Aguas" that they mistook for Angola. I just can't see how they arrived at that. In the indexes for the Census records in Ancestry many of the names are so fractured in the index that it is hard to find who you are looking for unless you tediously look through each page for the community or county they lived in then. In the 1930 census on Ancestry doesn't it list Cruz' birthplace as "Mex" ?
Emilie
Port Orchard, WA
----- Original Message -----
From: tex1@clearwire.net
To: general@nuestrosranchos.org ; Bill Figueroa
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2007 7:07 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
Bill,
I was the one asking questions about Angola. My Great grandfather has that
written in several of the items I have found. I'd like to email you a copy,
but I am afraid I havent mastered the attach thing yet. I went on Ancestry
Search. I put in Cruz Bustamante 1883 It comes up to Border Crossing
from Mex
to US. Its the 4th entry down having him as Birth 1878 Arrival 13, June
1921....on there it has AguaCalientes, AguaCalientes, Angola...If you could
shed lite on this, I'd appreciate it. Also the info you gave on the bookstore
address was also helpful to me. Thanks again. Actually I have to thank
Nuestrosranchos...I have had very nice helpful people giving me help Lupe
Quoting Bill Figueroa >:
> Tony,
>
> I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your
> last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to
> share some information with the group that might shed some light on
> this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is
> a large country
> (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire,
> Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very
> rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty.
> I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while
> working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly
> five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola
> has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil
> reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long
> way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to
> get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris
> or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from
> Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to
> Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
>
> While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other
> parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and
> civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves
> imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such
> as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
>
> While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent
> one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was
> located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders
> from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves,
> captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the
> highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives
> transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now
> a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and
> inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of
> the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee
> plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony)
> but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States,
> Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had
> visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal.
> Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
> bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
>
> I believe the people in the records in question were either African
> slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify
> this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
>
> Bill Figueroa
Emilie,
You are right, Cruz was born in Mexico, it just so weird to see Angola on so
many of the files I've found. It say's that on the "hits" from
Ancestry. When
they are open, it never indicates Angola on the actual doc. I'm just
confused.
It could very well be a mis translation, but it's on so many hits, that it's
hard to believe they are all errors. Thanks for your help and input. Lupe
Quoting Emilie Garcia :
> Lupe,
>
> Two other people have suggested taking a second look at the documents
> you think say "Angola" because usually when someone has been born in
> the capital city (Aguascalientes) of the state of Aguascalentes, it
> is sometimes written as "Aguascalientes, Aguas", or they abbreviate
> the state name some other way (Ags).
>
> I looked at the immigration record you refer to and I don't see the
> word "Angola" anywhere. The index for this record says Birthplace:
> Aguascalientes, and Birth Country: Angola, but I think it was the
> state abbreviation "Aguas" that they mistook for Angola. I just
> can't see how they arrived at that. In the indexes for the Census
> records in Ancestry many of the names are so fractured in the index
> that it is hard to find who you are looking for unless you tediously
> look through each page for the community or county they lived in
> then. In the 1930 census on Ancestry doesn't it list Cruz'
> birthplace as "Mex" ?
>
> Emilie
> Port Orchard, WA
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: tex1@clearwire.net
> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org
> ; Bill Figueroa
> Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2007 7:07 AM
> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
>
>
> Bill,
> I was the one asking questions about Angola. My Great grandfather has that
> written in several of the items I have found. I'd like to email
> you a copy,
> but I am afraid I havent mastered the attach thing yet. I went on Ancestry
> Search. I put in Cruz Bustamante 1883 It comes up to Border Crossing
> from Mex
> to US. Its the 4th entry down having him as Birth 1878 Arrival 13, June
> 1921....on there it has AguaCalientes, AguaCalientes, Angola...If you could
> shed lite on this, I'd appreciate it. Also the info you gave on
> the bookstore
> address was also helpful to me. Thanks again. Actually I have to thank
> Nuestrosranchos...I have had very nice helpful people giving me help Lupe
>
>
>
> Quoting Bill Figueroa
> >:
>
> > Tony,
> >
> > I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your
> > last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to
> > share some information with the group that might shed some light on
> > this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is
> > a large country
> > (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire,
> > Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very
> > rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty.
> > I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while
> > working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly
> > five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola
> > has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil
> > reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long
> > way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to
> > get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris
> > or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from
> > Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to
> > Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
> >
> > While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other
> > parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and
> > civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves
> > imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such
> > as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
> >
> > While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent
> > one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was
> > located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders
> > from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves,
> > captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the
> > highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives
> > transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now
> > a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and
> > inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of
> > the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee
> > plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony)
> > but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States,
> > Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had
> > visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal.
> > Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
> > bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
> >
> > I believe the people in the records in question were either African
> > slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify
> > this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
> >
> > Bill Figueroa
> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
> > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List
> >
> > To post, send email to:
> > general(at)nuestrosranchos.org
> >
> > To change your subscription, log on to:
> > http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
> >
> >
>
>
> -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
> Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List
>
> To post, send email to:
> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org
>
> To change your subscription, log on to:
> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
I just checked the Ancestry website and found the information about your great-grandfather. The index clearly says Angola. I didn't try to go any further into the website because I'm not a member of Ancestry and do not want to get a membership at this time. Most of my research has been transcribing church and civil records from Aguascalientes, Jalisco, Zacatecas and Nayarit, and exchanging info. with other researchers.
Now that I know your source for your great-grandfather's border crossing and date of birth, I have changed my opinion on the subject. A border crossing in 1921 and dob of 1878 probably has nothing to do with the people that arrived from Angola in the 16th and 17th century. Since I didn't read your first message, I didn't know that you were talking about recent history. You're absolutely right questioning the veracity of that information. It could be a blunder made by the person who transcribed the original records. To find out for sure try to find the original records used by Ancestry.com. Maybe they can help if you are a member.
One more on Errors on the records, I have a whole list of people from the Barrio of San Vicente, District of Tamazula De Gordiano, Jalisco Mexico listed ad being born in the Caribbean. I sent Familysearch a message years ago about the errors but nothing ever came of it, they are still listed online in the wrong country. Another error I've found online is when people are in the early records are listed as from Vallidolid, they are listed online as from Spain when they are actually from Michoacan Mexico.
Linda back in Everett.
Bill Figueroa wrote:
Lupe,
I just checked the Ancestry website and found the information about your great-grandfather. The index clearly says Angola. I didn't try to go any further into the website because I'm not a member of Ancestry and do not want to get a membership at this time. Most of my research has been transcribing church and civil records from Aguascalientes, Jalisco, Zacatecas and Nayarit, and exchanging info. with other researchers.
Now that I know your source for your great-grandfather's border crossing and date of birth, I have changed my opinion on the subject. A border crossing in 1921 and dob of 1878 probably has nothing to do with the people that arrived from Angola in the 16th and 17th century. Since I didn't read your first message, I didn't know that you were talking about recent history. You're absolutely right questioning the veracity of that information. It could be a blunder made by the person who transcribed the original records. To find out for sure try to find the original records used by Ancestry.com. Maybe they can help if you are a member.
Estimado Bill:
Tienes razón al suponer un vínculo cercano entre Angola y Aguascalientes, pues a mediados del Siglo XVII, existía el apellido "de Angola", particularmente entre gente sujeta a esclavitud. La cultura ibérica usó el Patronímico y el Gentilicio para la denominación de las personas. Para ejemplificar el uso del Gentilicio, es decir, cuando al nombre de la persona se le añadía la procedencia (de Avila, de Rojas, Avilés, Rojano, etc.), registros notariales relativos a la compraventa de esclavos, relatan un caso particular: la venta de María de Angola, junto con sus pequeños hijos, hacia el año de 1660. Los "de Angola", eran descritos como "prieto pasudo" o "color membrillo", para referirse al pelo muy rizado y el color muy obscuto de la piel, característicos de la raza negra pura. Esas familias se fueron mezclando y vivieron poco después en un barrio de muy mala fama, denominado "los Pachones", que se estableció entre el pueblo de indios de San Marcos y la Villa de Aguascalientes. El apellido ya no existe, probablemente fue suprimido después de la guerra independencia y la abolición de la esclavitud, o por que las suscesiones genealógicas se extinguieron con el paso del tiempo. Lo cierto que el tema merece una profunda investigación.
Saludos F. Reyes
> From: bill_figueroa@usa.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 23:37:05 -0600> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos> > Tony,> > I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to share some information with the group that might shed some light on this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is a large country> (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire, Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty. I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.> > While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas. > > While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves, captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony) but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal. Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam> bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.> > I believe the people in the records in question were either African slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?> > Bill Figueroa> -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
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Estoy seguro que el vínculo al que te refieres es real, porque he encontrado referencias en los registros de Aguascalientes que indican que muchos hacendados tenían esclavos originarios de Angola. Sin embargo, esto no tiene nada que ver con el caso del Sr. Cruz Bustamante. El hecho que alguien escribió en su record "Aguascalientes, Angola" es probablemente un error cometido por la persona que hizo el índice que de Ancestry.com. Yo supuse que Lupe se refería a tiempos más antiguos porque no había leído sus correos anteriores.
Bueno, ya que tocamos el tema de los esclavos en México, debo decirte que creo que muchos eran originarios de Angola. He visto en algunos registros que a esclavas negras no bautizadas se les daba como apellido el nombre de su país de origen. Así por ejemplo he encontrado algunas con nombres como María de Angola, Juana Angola, etc. Lo mismo pasaba con los indios. He encontrado a una María Chichimeca, etc. Es probable que así se haya originado el apellido Angola que mencionas en tu correo.
Como sabrás, los Portugueses llevaron grandes cantidades de esclavos a Brazil. Era un negocio que extendieron al resto de Iberoamérica, incluyendo la Nueva España. Otra razón puede ser que haya sido el idioma, ya que el portugués es muy parecido al castellano. El portugués suena como un español muy antiguo. Nunca he tenido dificultad comunicándome con Portugueses y Angolanos en su propio idioma, ellos hablándome a mi en portugués y yo contestándoles en castellano. Es mejor así que mezclar los dos idiomas en lo que se conoce conoce como "portuñol" (mitad portugués y mitad español.
Volviendo al tema, es un hecho que la mayoría de hacendados tuvieron esclavos en los siglos XVI y XVII. Mis propios antepasados tuvieron esclavos negros, no solo en México sino en Centroamérica. Por ejemplo, el registro de Defunciones de Aguascalientes dice que "En doce días del dicho mes y año [12 Sep 1634] enterré a un mulato de la estancia de San Bartolomé. Díjosele una misa". La hacienda de San Bartolo era propiedad de Luis Tiscareño de Molina y Lorenza Ruiz de Esparza. Más adelante hay otra partida de defunción que dice textualmente "En tres dias del mes de henero de el año de 1636 enterre a una negra esclava que truxieron de la estancia de lope ruis de esparsa dixosele una missa". La estancia de Lope Ruiz de Esparza era conocida como Morcenique, or Morciñique, por quedar en las márgenes de dicho río. Datos similares aparecen en casi todos los registros parroquiales y en los padrones de Aguascalientes, empezando con el de 1648. Claro que hablamos de 100 años después de la conquista, ya que los primeros esclavos africanos llegaron con Hernán Cortés. Ya por 1636 se habían multiplicado y mezclado con la población indígena y española, dando lugar a muchas castas. Esto es más notorio en el Estado de Veracruz, donde quedaron muchos de los descendientes de los primeros esclavos que vinieron a laborar en la zafra de la caña de azúcar y en la siembra de otras cosechas que se dan allí por la fertilidad de sus tierras.
Bueno Felipe, es todo por hoy. A ver que opinan los demás del grupo.
Santa Rosalia
Lupe
Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE RANCHOS GROUP
Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
Lupe Kerr wrote:
Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
Yolanda,
Thank you for your reply in helping me look for my family. First, I
see you are
from El Paso, I was born and raised there. What a small world.
Anyway, I am looking for Cruz Bustamante Born 16, Aug. 1883 in Santa
Rosalia, D.
1-May-1931. I know his grave in El Paso. He married Rafaela Garcia 1896. I
believe at Guardian Angel Church in EP. Rafiela (another spelling) was born
16, Aug. 1883. I believe also in the Santa Rosala area. She died in El paso.
My problem is I can't seem to find anything beyond my great grandfather
Cruz. I
also can't find much on Rafaela's brothers or sisters. I have only one known
sister, Ramona Garcia. Never married or children, born and died in El Paso.
Any help would be appreciated. I've never given out info for help, so
I hope I
gave you what you might need. Thanks again. Lupe
Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez:
> Lupe wrote:
>
> Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de
> Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give
> me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info
> for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe
> parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE
> RANCHOS GROUP
>
> Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
>
> Lupe Kerr
>
> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I
> have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
LUPE
ARE YOUR MATERNAL G.GREATGRANDPARENTS JOSE FELIPE BENEDICTO GARCIA AND PETRA DOMINGUEZ ? DOUBLE CHECK YOUR G.GRANDFATHER CRUZ BUSTAMANTE'S DOB CAUSE ITS THE SAME AS RAFAELA. JUST TO MAKE SURE WE ARE TALKING ABOUT THE SAME PLACE, IS YOUR FAMILY FROM SANTA ROSALIA DE CAMARGO, CHIHUAHUA? JUST CHECKING, ANY OTHER INFO YOU CAN THINK OF JUST SEND IT, IT MIGHT HELP. DO YOU HAVE ANY DOCUMENTS, SCAN THEM AND SEND THEM IF YOU LIKE.
YOLANDA
tex1@clearwire.net wrote:
Yolanda,
Thank you for your reply in helping me look for my family. First, I
see you are
from El Paso, I was born and raised there. What a small world.
Anyway, I am looking for Cruz Bustamante Born 16, Aug. 1883 in Santa
Rosalia, D.
1-May-1931. I know his grave in El Paso. He married Rafaela Garcia 1896. I
believe at Guardian Angel Church in EP. Rafiela (another spelling) was born
16, Aug. 1883. I believe also in the Santa Rosala area. She died in El paso.
My problem is I can't seem to find anything beyond my great grandfather
Cruz. I
also can't find much on Rafaela's brothers or sisters. I have only one known
sister, Ramona Garcia. Never married or children, born and died in El Paso.
Any help would be appreciated. I've never given out info for help, so
I hope I
gave you what you might need. Thanks again. Lupe
Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez :
> Lupe
>
> Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de
> Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give
> me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info
> for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe
> parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE
> RANCHOS GROUP
>
> Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
>
> Lupe Kerr wrote:
>
> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I
> have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
Yolanda,
I looked up my records...here's a good one. The death cert. (in hand) states
date of birth for Cruz was May 3, 1876. Info given by my great uncle. The
information sheets I have him as DOB 4-26-1882 I have checked the census for
1910 and 1920, both are different. one has him born 1884 and the other 1888.
I guess I really hadn't paid that much attention, as the family listed are all
correct. I just checked the picture of his grave and it says he was
born 1877.
The stone was put on by his daughters, it does not have DOB, just died at 69
yrs old. Do you have any suggestions. I will get back write on the Benedicto
and Petra names. I know I've come across those names. I want to talk to my
daughter to see what she has. Thanks
Lupe
Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez:
> LUPE
> ARE YOUR MATERNAL G.GREATGRANDPARENTS JOSE FELIPE BENEDICTO GARCIA
> AND PETRA DOMINGUEZ ? DOUBLE CHECK YOUR G.GRANDFATHER CRUZ
> BUSTAMANTE'S DOB CAUSE ITS THE SAME AS RAFAELA. JUST TO MAKE SURE WE
> ARE TALKING ABOUT THE SAME PLACE, IS YOUR FAMILY FROM SANTA ROSALIA
> DE CAMARGO, CHIHUAHUA? JUST CHECKING, ANY OTHER INFO YOU CAN THINK
> OF JUST SEND IT, IT MIGHT HELP. DO YOU HAVE ANY DOCUMENTS, SCAN THEM
> AND SEND THEM IF YOU LIKE.
> YOLANDA
>
> tex1@clearwire.net wrote:
> Yolanda,
> Thank you for your reply in helping me look for my family. First, I
> see you are
> from El Paso, I was born and raised there. What a small world.
> Anyway, I am looking for Cruz Bustamante Born 16, Aug. 1883 in Santa
> Rosalia, D.
> 1-May-1931. I know his grave in El Paso. He married Rafaela Garcia 1896. I
> believe at Guardian Angel Church in EP. Rafiela (another spelling) was born
> 16, Aug. 1883. I believe also in the Santa Rosala area. She died in El paso.
> My problem is I can't seem to find anything beyond my great grandfather
> Cruz. I
> also can't find much on Rafaela's brothers or sisters. I have only one known
> sister, Ramona Garcia. Never married or children, born and died in El Paso.
> Any help would be appreciated. I've never given out info for help, so
> I hope I
> gave you what you might need. Thanks again. Lupe
>
>
> Quoting Yolanda Bobby Perez :
>
>> Lupe
>>
>> Three of my grandparents were from that area Santa Rosalia de
>> Camargo, Chih. I have a small database for that area and if you give
>> me the names that you are looking for I will try and find some info
>> for you. Just give me a little information about them, a timeframe
>> parents whatever you have. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU AND ALL THE
>> RANCHOS GROUP
>>
>> Yolanda Medina Perez from El Paso
>>
>> Lupe Kerr wrote:
>>
>> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I
>> have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
>> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
>> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I don't know if its close to Augacalientes.
Mary
-----Original Message-----
>From: Lupe Kerr
>Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM
>To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
>Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia
>
>
>Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
To Lupe Kerr,
If you go to the Ranchos website you will find a link- Diccionario Geografico etc. by Cubas. In it you will find a list of 8 haciendas named Santa Rosalia. There is also a long list of ranchos with the same name. San Luis Potosi has three ranchos and Jalisco two. I'm not so sure that the ranchos in Potosi are closer than the ones in Jalostotitlan or Tepaatitlan.
David, Albany, CA
-----Original Message-----
>From: Lupe Kerr
>Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM
>To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
>Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia
>
>
>Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
Thank you, it helped. Lupe
Quoting "David P. Delgado":
> To Lupe Kerr,
>
> If you go to the Ranchos website you will find a link- Diccionario
> Geografico etc. by Cubas. In it you will find a list of 8 haciendas
> named Santa Rosalia. There is also a long list of ranchos with the
> same name. San Luis Potosi has three ranchos and Jalisco two. I'm
> not so sure that the ranchos in Potosi are closer than the ones in
> Jalostotitlan or Tepaatitlan.
>
> David, Albany, CA
>
> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Lupe Kerr
>> Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM
>> To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org
>> Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia
>>
>>
>> Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes?
>> I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any
>> record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth
>> cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe
Santa Rosalia
It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. > Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr> >Sent: Nov 13, 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:> >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
_________________________________________________________________
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Santa Rosalia
Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another
question, on
one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua
Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out
what it
is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely different
area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a "born"
area? Thanks again
Quoting tony cobos:
>> >Sent: Nov 13,
> It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a
> town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a
> lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary
> wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. >
> Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net>
> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos]
> Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I
> don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original
> Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr
> 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject:
> [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa
> Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from
> that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name
> of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be
> appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- >
> >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:>
> >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log
> on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Santa Rosalia
It appears to me that the handwriting on the document needs further
review! Marge:)
On Nov 14, 2007, at 5:31 PM, tex1@clearwire.net wrote:
> Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another:> >Sent: Nov 13,
> question, on
> one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua
> Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out
> what it
> is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely
> different
> area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a
> "born"
> area? Thanks again
>
>
>
> Quoting tony cobos
>
>>
>> It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a
>> town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a
>> lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary
>> wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. >
>> Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net>
>> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos]
>> Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I
>> don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original
>> Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr
>> 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject:
>> [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa
>> Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from
>> that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name
>> of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be
>> appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- >
>>> Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:>
>>> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log
>> on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Santa Rosalia
No I have never heard of that; I beleive Angola is an African country; I would try variations of that word unless you are sure it says "angola". > Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 18:31:26 -0500> From: tex1@clearwire.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> > Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another > question, on> one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua> Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out > what it> is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely different> area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a "born"> area? Thanks again> > > > Quoting tony cobos:> > >> > It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a > > town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a > > lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary > > wars), so the time frame is important in tracking that down. > > > Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net> > > To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] > > Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I > > don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original > > Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13, > > 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject: > > [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa > > Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from > > that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name > > of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be > > appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > > > >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:> > > >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log > > on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > > -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send > > email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your > > subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> > _________________________________________________________________> > Boo! Scare away worms, viruses and so much more! Try Windows Live OneCare!> > http://onecare.live.com/standard/en-us/purchase/trial.aspx?s_cid=wl_hot…> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --> > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> > To post, send email to:> > general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> > To change your subscription, log on to:> > http://www.nuestrosranchos.org> >> >> > > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
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Santa Rosalia
The best bet is Angola is a misswritten "Ags." or "Aguas", being the case they wanted to write "Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes" which should be the correct statement, take it for sure.
tony cobos escribió:
No I have never heard of that; I beleive Angola is an African country; I would try variations of that word unless you are sure it says "angola". > Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2007 18:31:26 -0500> From: tex1@clearwire.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> > Thank you Tony for your information. If you will permit me another > question, on> one of the Ancestry hits, it has my greatgrandfather being born in Agua> Calientes then it has the word Angola I've been trying to figure out > what it> is when written Aguacalientes, Angola.....That to me is a completely different> area not even related to Mexico. Have you ever come across that as a "born"> area? Thanks again> > > > Quoting tony cobos :> > >> > It is also a city in Chihuahua (now known as Camargo) as well as a > > town in Baja California Sur. Cities have changed names over time (a > > lot were changed after the Guerra de la Reforma and Revolutionary > > wars), so the time frame is
important in tracking that down. > > > Date: Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:40:35 -0800> From: mgervassi@earthlink.net> > > To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] > > Santa Rosalia> > If I am not mistaken, it is in Chihuhua, Mex. but I > > don't know if its close to Augacalientes.> > Mary > > -----Original > > Message-----> >From: Lupe Kerr > >Sent: Nov 13, > > 2007 3:42 PM> >To: general@lists.nuestrosranchos.org> >Subject: > > [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia> >> >> >Can anyone tell me if Santa > > Rosalia is anywhere near AugaCalientes? I have Garcia family from > > that area, but I can't seem to find any record with the actual name > > of Santa Rosalia, except for the birth cert. Any help will be > > appreciated. Thanks Lupe> >-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > > > >Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> >> >To post, send email to:> > > >general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> >> >To change your subscription, log > > on to:> >http://www.nuestrosranchos.org>
Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
Tony,
I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to share some information with the group that might shed some light on this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is a large country
(about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire, Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty. I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves, captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony) but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal. Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
I believe the people in the records in question were either African slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
Bill Figueroa
Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
Bill,
I was the one asking questions about Angola. My Great grandfather has that
written in several of the items I have found. I'd like to email you a copy,
but I am afraid I havent mastered the attach thing yet. I went on Ancestry
Search. I put in Cruz Bustamante 1883 It comes up to Border Crossing
from Mex
to US. Its the 4th entry down having him as Birth 1878 Arrival 13, June
1921....on there it has AguaCalientes, AguaCalientes, Angola...If you could
shed lite on this, I'd appreciate it. Also the info you gave on the bookstore
address was also helpful to me. Thanks again. Actually I have to thank
Nuestrosranchos...I have had very nice helpful people giving me help Lupe
Quoting Bill Figueroa:
> Tony,
>
> I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your
> last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to
> share some information with the group that might shed some light on
> this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is
> a large country
> (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire,
> Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very
> rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty.
> I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while
> working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly
> five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola
> has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil
> reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long
> way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to
> get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris
> or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from
> Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to
> Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
>
> While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other
> parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and
> civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves
> imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such
> as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
>
> While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent
> one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was
> located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders
> from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves,
> captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the
> highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives
> transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now
> a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and
> inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of
> the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee
> plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony)
> but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States,
> Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had
> visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal.
> Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
> bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
>
> I believe the people in the records in question were either African
> slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify
> this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
>
> Bill Figueroa
Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
Lupe,
Two other people have suggested taking a second look at the documents you think say "Angola" because usually when someone has been born in the capital city (Aguascalientes) of the state of Aguascalentes, it is sometimes written as "Aguascalientes, Aguas", or they abbreviate the state name some other way (Ags).
I looked at the immigration record you refer to and I don't see the word "Angola" anywhere. The index for this record says Birthplace: Aguascalientes, and Birth Country: Angola, but I think it was the state abbreviation "Aguas" that they mistook for Angola. I just can't see how they arrived at that. In the indexes for the Census records in Ancestry many of the names are so fractured in the index that it is hard to find who you are looking for unless you tediously look through each page for the community or county they lived in then. In the 1930 census on Ancestry doesn't it list Cruz' birthplace as "Mex" ?
Emilie ; Bill Figueroa
Port Orchard, WA
----- Original Message -----
From: tex1@clearwire.net
To: general@nuestrosranchos.org
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2007 7:07 AM
Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
Bill,
I was the one asking questions about Angola. My Great grandfather has that
written in several of the items I have found. I'd like to email you a copy,
but I am afraid I havent mastered the attach thing yet. I went on Ancestry
Search. I put in Cruz Bustamante 1883 It comes up to Border Crossing
from Mex
to US. Its the 4th entry down having him as Birth 1878 Arrival 13, June
1921....on there it has AguaCalientes, AguaCalientes, Angola...If you could
shed lite on this, I'd appreciate it. Also the info you gave on the bookstore
address was also helpful to me. Thanks again. Actually I have to thank
Nuestrosranchos...I have had very nice helpful people giving me help Lupe
Quoting Bill Figueroa>:
> Tony,
>
> I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your
> last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to
> share some information with the group that might shed some light on
> this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is
> a large country
> (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire,
> Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very
> rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty.
> I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while
> working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly
> five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola
> has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil
> reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long
> way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to
> get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris
> or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from
> Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to
> Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
>
> While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other
> parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and
> civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves
> imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such
> as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
>
> While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent
> one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was
> located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders
> from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves,
> captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the
> highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives
> transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now
> a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and
> inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of
> the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee
> plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony)
> but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States,
> Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had
> visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal.
> Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
> bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
>
> I believe the people in the records in question were either African
> slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify
> this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
>
> Bill Figueroa
Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
Emilie,
You are right, Cruz was born in Mexico, it just so weird to see Angola on so
many of the files I've found. It say's that on the "hits" from
Ancestry. When
they are open, it never indicates Angola on the actual doc. I'm just
confused.
It could very well be a mis translation, but it's on so many hits, that it's
hard to believe they are all errors. Thanks for your help and input. Lupe
Quoting Emilie Garcia:
> Lupe,>:
>
> Two other people have suggested taking a second look at the documents
> you think say "Angola" because usually when someone has been born in
> the capital city (Aguascalientes) of the state of Aguascalentes, it
> is sometimes written as "Aguascalientes, Aguas", or they abbreviate
> the state name some other way (Ags).
>
> I looked at the immigration record you refer to and I don't see the
> word "Angola" anywhere. The index for this record says Birthplace:
> Aguascalientes, and Birth Country: Angola, but I think it was the
> state abbreviation "Aguas" that they mistook for Angola. I just
> can't see how they arrived at that. In the indexes for the Census
> records in Ancestry many of the names are so fractured in the index
> that it is hard to find who you are looking for unless you tediously
> look through each page for the community or county they lived in
> then. In the 1930 census on Ancestry doesn't it list Cruz'
> birthplace as "Mex" ?
>
> Emilie
> Port Orchard, WA
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: tex1@clearwire.net
> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org
> ; Bill Figueroa
> Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2007 7:07 AM
> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos
>
>
> Bill,
> I was the one asking questions about Angola. My Great grandfather has that
> written in several of the items I have found. I'd like to email
> you a copy,
> but I am afraid I havent mastered the attach thing yet. I went on Ancestry
> Search. I put in Cruz Bustamante 1883 It comes up to Border Crossing
> from Mex
> to US. Its the 4th entry down having him as Birth 1878 Arrival 13, June
> 1921....on there it has AguaCalientes, AguaCalientes, Angola...If you could
> shed lite on this, I'd appreciate it. Also the info you gave on
> the bookstore
> address was also helpful to me. Thanks again. Actually I have to thank
> Nuestrosranchos...I have had very nice helpful people giving me help Lupe
>
>
>
> Quoting Bill Figueroa
>
>
> > Tony,
> >
> > I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your
> > last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to
> > share some information with the group that might shed some light on
> > this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is
> > a large country
> > (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire,
> > Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very
> > rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty.
> > I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while
> > working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly
> > five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola
> > has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil
> > reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long
> > way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to
> > get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris
> > or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from
> > Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to
> > Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.
> >
> > While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other
> > parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and
> > civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves
> > imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such
> > as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas.
> >
> > While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent
> > one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was
> > located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders
> > from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves,
> > captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the
> > highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives
> > transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now
> > a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and
> > inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of
> > the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee
> > plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony)
> > but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States,
> > Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had
> > visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal.
> > Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam
> > bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.
> >
> > I believe the people in the records in question were either African
> > slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify
> > this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?
> >
> > Bill Figueroa
> > -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
> > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List
> >
> > To post, send email to:
> > general(at)nuestrosranchos.org
> >
> > To change your subscription, log on to:
> > http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
> >
> >
>
>
> -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
> Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List
>
> To post, send email to:
> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org
>
> To change your subscription, log on to:
> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
Santa Rosalia - Angola
Lupe,
I just checked the Ancestry website and found the information about your great-grandfather. The index clearly says Angola. I didn't try to go any further into the website because I'm not a member of Ancestry and do not want to get a membership at this time. Most of my research has been transcribing church and civil records from Aguascalientes, Jalisco, Zacatecas and Nayarit, and exchanging info. with other researchers.
Now that I know your source for your great-grandfather's border crossing and date of birth, I have changed my opinion on the subject. A border crossing in 1921 and dob of 1878 probably has nothing to do with the people that arrived from Angola in the 16th and 17th century. Since I didn't read your first message, I didn't know that you were talking about recent history. You're absolutely right questioning the veracity of that information. It could be a blunder made by the person who transcribed the original records. To find out for sure try to find the original records used by Ancestry.com. Maybe they can help if you are a member.
Regards,
Bill Figueroa
Santa Rosalia - Angola
One more on Errors on the records, I have a whole list of people from the Barrio of San Vicente, District of Tamazula De Gordiano, Jalisco Mexico listed ad being born in the Caribbean. I sent Familysearch a message years ago about the errors but nothing ever came of it, they are still listed online in the wrong country. Another error I've found online is when people are in the early records are listed as from Vallidolid, they are listed online as from Spain when they are actually from Michoacan Mexico.
Linda back in Everett.
Bill Figueroa wrote:
Lupe,
I just checked the Ancestry website and found the information about your great-grandfather. The index clearly says Angola. I didn't try to go any further into the website because I'm not a member of Ancestry and do not want to get a membership at this time. Most of my research has been transcribing church and civil records from Aguascalientes, Jalisco, Zacatecas and Nayarit, and exchanging info. with other researchers.
Now that I know your source for your great-grandfather's border crossing and date of birth, I have changed my opinion on the subject. A border crossing in 1921 and dob of 1878 probably has nothing to do with the people that arrived from Angola in the 16th and 17th century. Since I didn't read your first message, I didn't know that you were talking about recent history. You're absolutely right questioning the veracity of that information. It could be a blunder made by the person who transcribed the original records. To find out for sure try to find the original records used by Ancestry.com. Maybe they can help if you are a member.
Regards,
Bill Figueroa
Los "de Angola"
Estimado Bill:
Tienes razón al suponer un vínculo cercano entre Angola y Aguascalientes, pues a mediados del Siglo XVII, existía el apellido "de Angola", particularmente entre gente sujeta a esclavitud. La cultura ibérica usó el Patronímico y el Gentilicio para la denominación de las personas. Para ejemplificar el uso del Gentilicio, es decir, cuando al nombre de la persona se le añadía la procedencia (de Avila, de Rojas, Avilés, Rojano, etc.), registros notariales relativos a la compraventa de esclavos, relatan un caso particular: la venta de María de Angola, junto con sus pequeños hijos, hacia el año de 1660. Los "de Angola", eran descritos como "prieto pasudo" o "color membrillo", para referirse al pelo muy rizado y el color muy obscuto de la piel, característicos de la raza negra pura. Esas familias se fueron mezclando y vivieron poco después en un barrio de muy mala fama, denominado "los Pachones", que se estableció entre el pueblo de indios de San Marcos y la Villa de Aguascalientes. El apellido ya no existe, probablemente fue suprimido después de la guerra independencia y la abolición de la esclavitud, o por que las suscesiones genealógicas se extinguieron con el paso del tiempo. Lo cierto que el tema merece una profunda investigación.
Saludos F. Reyes
> From: bill_figueroa@usa.net> To: general@nuestrosranchos.org> Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 23:37:05 -0600> Subject: Re: [Nuestros Ranchos] Santa Rosalia - Message for Tony Cobos> > Tony,> > I missed the previous correspondence on this subject, but read your last message this morning. On the subject of Angola, I would like to share some information with the group that might shed some light on this obscure subject. First, I would like to confirm that Angola is a large country> (about 2/3 the size of Mexico) in West Africa. It is bound by Zaire, Zambia, Namibia and on the west by the Atlantic Ocean. It is very rich in natural resources, but most people live in extreme poverty. I visited Angola once a month for seven years (1997-2004) while working as a contractor for ExxonMobil, and before that for nearly five years (1986-1990) while working for Chevron Oil Company. Angola has huge petroleum reserves and some of the largest deepwater oil reservoirs in the world. Luanda, Angola's capital city, is a long way from my home in Dallas, Texas. It usually took me two days to get there, flying via Europe from New York or Newark to Lisbon, Paris or Frankfurt, and from there to Luanda. Sometimes I flew from Atlanta or Miami to Johannesburg in South Africa, and from there to Luanda. Quite an exhausting trip.> > While conducting genealogical research in Aguascalientes and other parts of Mexico I've seen many references to Angola in old church and civil records. The parties involved were usually African slaves imported from west Africa to work in sparsely populated areas, such as Aguascalientes and Zacatecas. > > While standing-by in Angola in 2002 for an offshore rig move, I spent one Sunday afternoon visiting a slave museum near Luanda. It was located in a small building on a remote beach where the slave traders from Europe came to pick up their infamous cargo. The slaves, captured by the stronger African tribes, were sold on site to the highest bidder. The ships stayed at anchor while the natives transported their prisoners in dugout canoes from that building (now a museum) to the moored ships less than a mile away. Quite cruel and inhuman behavior, but that's the way it was in those days. Most of the slaves were taken to the sugarcane fields, mines and coffee plantations of Brazil (like Angola, Brazil was a Portuguese colony) but many ended up in the cotton fields of the southern United States, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central America. A few years before I had visited a similar slave staging area in the city of Dakar, Senegal. Most of the slaves sold in Dakar were from Gam> bia and Senegal, and ended up in the United States.> > I believe the people in the records in question were either African slaves from Angola, or their descendants. I may be able to verify this by reading some of those records. Can you email me a scan?> > Bill Figueroa> -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- > Nuestros Ranchos General Mailing List> > To post, send email to:> general(at)nuestrosranchos.org> > To change your subscription, log on to:> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
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Los "de Angola"
Hola Felipe,
Estoy seguro que el vínculo al que te refieres es real, porque he encontrado referencias en los registros de Aguascalientes que indican que muchos hacendados tenían esclavos originarios de Angola. Sin embargo, esto no tiene nada que ver con el caso del Sr. Cruz Bustamante. El hecho que alguien escribió en su record "Aguascalientes, Angola" es probablemente un error cometido por la persona que hizo el índice que de Ancestry.com. Yo supuse que Lupe se refería a tiempos más antiguos porque no había leído sus correos anteriores.
Bueno, ya que tocamos el tema de los esclavos en México, debo decirte que creo que muchos eran originarios de Angola. He visto en algunos registros que a esclavas negras no bautizadas se les daba como apellido el nombre de su país de origen. Así por ejemplo he encontrado algunas con nombres como María de Angola, Juana Angola, etc. Lo mismo pasaba con los indios. He encontrado a una María Chichimeca, etc. Es probable que así se haya originado el apellido Angola que mencionas en tu correo.
Como sabrás, los Portugueses llevaron grandes cantidades de esclavos a Brazil. Era un negocio que extendieron al resto de Iberoamérica, incluyendo la Nueva España. Otra razón puede ser que haya sido el idioma, ya que el portugués es muy parecido al castellano. El portugués suena como un español muy antiguo. Nunca he tenido dificultad comunicándome con Portugueses y Angolanos en su propio idioma, ellos hablándome a mi en portugués y yo contestándoles en castellano. Es mejor así que mezclar los dos idiomas en lo que se conoce conoce como "portuñol" (mitad portugués y mitad español.
Volviendo al tema, es un hecho que la mayoría de hacendados tuvieron esclavos en los siglos XVI y XVII. Mis propios antepasados tuvieron esclavos negros, no solo en México sino en Centroamérica. Por ejemplo, el registro de Defunciones de Aguascalientes dice que "En doce días del dicho mes y año [12 Sep 1634] enterré a un mulato de la estancia de San Bartolomé. Díjosele una misa". La hacienda de San Bartolo era propiedad de Luis Tiscareño de Molina y Lorenza Ruiz de Esparza. Más adelante hay otra partida de defunción que dice textualmente "En tres dias del mes de henero de el año de 1636 enterre a una negra esclava que truxieron de la estancia de lope ruis de esparsa dixosele una missa". La estancia de Lope Ruiz de Esparza era conocida como Morcenique, or Morciñique, por quedar en las márgenes de dicho río. Datos similares aparecen en casi todos los registros parroquiales y en los padrones de Aguascalientes, empezando con el de 1648. Claro que hablamos de 100 años después de la conquista, ya que los primeros esclavos africanos llegaron con Hernán Cortés. Ya por 1636 se habían multiplicado y mezclado con la población indígena y española, dando lugar a muchas castas. Esto es más notorio en el Estado de Veracruz, donde quedaron muchos de los descendientes de los primeros esclavos que vinieron a laborar en la zafra de la caña de azúcar y en la siembra de otras cosechas que se dan allí por la fertilidad de sus tierras.
Bueno Felipe, es todo por hoy. A ver que opinan los demás del grupo.
Saludos,
Bill Figueroa