St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM)

 - Class of 1959

Page 1 of 216

 

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1959 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1959 volume:

Copyright Sf Muchaels College Press 1959 fire! -Eff i J f l l fp' + .', I J' 'W' Ill I y 'f ll un ! ' I I all I ,lf 9.-x ew ixzisg E 3-5 -K fwm 'L K. 'A BEACON! LIGHT OV THESE WESTERV PLATEAUX SHEDDING ITS R-SYS INTO EY ILRY COMMUNITY Santa Fe New Mexxcan 1910 Printed an U S A by Q2 I J X . I 3 W -+ , , I Q -.7 gl .. ' 'I lil? I X e ' pf' ' -fs' 1 J i ' Q., V' , 1. ' X X, 7.2 . I ' I f' ' I X . X - - 1' wx H i f A ' fe - 1 U 4 1 ' X ,f:E.: - f - f'E'f:,, 1 4' 1? 2 e ig5i.,' L I I 'E 3-'iii - 'Q F9 1 . .. 1' h.2?f,,:.,g3,:,.3 h -if 9555.3 X ,,,.-2,g55gg5 I E of ,lf !l,.. 1, - .N , :P iggy 4 1 i ,Q -9:-X 4,7 - A , f' E e . - ,f . 1 f f - :uf s Y Lflffu ' f - :JS K I 5.5 ,sei I - -...I 5 55,51 , : :: l ga X ' .- ' -11 5-T- , 2 ' w iqpiifg 107' Q :T ,gpg X N ll Il., .-- ' -4'-- I Y' ' H 'gy ' r lip , Xb at - - I U -. I , l. ' T 1- - ,. .1 MW K : 1 ' Ieifr' f ee ee-, T ae, fx I X A .'-L, , ' - Z X 1 ' ,, X 5 ' 1 x ' . . . X K !,..nlKK 7 qilu-P ff I V' I -. 'X gfiii A, -Q Y, , . F .5 .YN .Q 1 ed Vx h 4, , '- , ,f 2 . .- 4 f X .. . . X Q f' ' - I5 1 If ix 'x if II l 2 ,S I . I V J , I, , , M I . '. , IIN fy X1 N ff 'JZ ,1 K e 'kj . I ' V V x V 7 i ' l! A I L A A . I A HUNDRED YEARS GE SERVICE SAINT MICHAELS HIGH SCHOCDL CONDUCTED BY THE BROTHERS OF THE CHRISTIAN scHooL 9 V . Q . 4 W- V W l Y Y wr VH Vu f f ,.Q V14 Op T ,A TlA1OflPl Qfpfgoawvugv Pwenabmcf fl? ,S in enem 17Qll111G11 'F 1 M elm enfennmf 1859 1539 Twiuwiblu bees? C1 no poqzwoac lemimmg Bra efacxrlfg Vfuknifm 145 fqlHZ11+ PGQQ' 41118 puesbenl' J QFSHIL1 bad-vw 1tY4a17,8,boo1 VCV f 9, fm! M-Q L-in-ik A centurx aeo the Chrrstran Brothers came to Qanta Fe rn prarrre Qehooners oxer the Bama Fe Trarl At the end of thrs trall they met the Apostle of the XX est Archbrshop Jean Baptrste Lamy whose sarntlrness rs rexealed refreshrnvlx rn Vlrlla Cathers Death Comes for the Arch brshop It was through hrs request that frxe Chrlstran Brotheers were eomrng to lay the foundatrons for Catholrc educatron rn a xast freld where the seed of Farth planted by the Francrscan mrssronarres was berng strfled by superstrtron and supposrtron Before hrs day rt was wrrtten The school master rs seldom seen among you He brought the Brothers from France to frll thrs w ant also Thev founded Sarnt Mrchael s rn a adobe hut rn 1899 on the srte where the school strll stands today close to the old San Wlrguel Church From the shadow of thrs Xenerable and hrstorrcal spot began one hundred wears of farth rnsprred labors hardshrps and struggles rn order to hold aloft the Cross of the Farth and the Toreh of I earnrng Here also he an the hrstorv of a school whose one hundred years rs as mueh a saga of the Vlest as any adventure ln recorded hrstorx Thrs xolume 1s rntended to grxe us a glrmpse rnto the proneerrng lrxes of those deelreated men therr courage thrr rnrtratrve therr resource fulness the rr slxrll rn path rndrng therr knowledge of men all great natural xrrtues whreh they supernaturalrzed by that unw rxerrng, farth rn a Provrdenee that has sard Why are you solrertous for the morrow 'P Why has Qarnt Nlrchaels stood rn frrr weather and rn foul through seasons grry and seasons golden as a Beacon Lrght on the se western plateaux sheddrng rts rays rnto exerv communrtx Bec ruse of the sturdy proneerrng sprrrt whrch was rmplanted by rts founders and whreh has been throughout thrs centurv the rnsprratron to the long lrst of Chrrstran Brothers who have not onlv kept apice of the trmes rn holdrng aloft the Cross of Farth and the Torch of Learnrng but have led the way The late Archbrshop Rudolph Gerleen wrote We frnd great eonsolatron rn the excellent work that has been done by Sarnt Mrchaels whrch has contrrbuted so larfely to the preserxatron of the arth among the manhood of the archdroeese but equally bv reason of the fact that St Mrchael s serxes a most essentral need today and holds out good promrse for that development w hrch the progress of educatron rn the land calls for Offrerals of the Church of the Instrtute and of the State haxe been most krnd rn supplyrng letters of felrcrtatron and commendrng the Brothers for therr frurt ul efforts rn extendlng Fhrrsts Ixrngdom and rn formrng loxal sprrrted Amerrcans bv the Chrrstran edueatron of xouth To all of them we are most r rteful and pled e that qt Nlrehael s Hrgh School wrll contrnue to strrxe for greater aehrexemcnts rn the future Qpeeral words e f rppreeratron are tendered Brother Augustrne Redw rn and Brother Nreholas lieeleer who haxe devoted therr trme and artrstrc talent for rllustr rtrons Thanks ire due to Jubrlee Nlagamne for permrssron to use the artrele on St lohn Brptrst de la Salle and to Edrtrons Fleurus Parrs for rarrte el request to use some of therr sketehes Grateful acknowl edgeme nt rs made ter the Santa Pe New Nlexrean for use of quotatrons and to former students anel frrenels that lent us photo raphs of the past Centennral General Charrman and Edrtor Brother Alphonsus Benedlct F SC V V.V. V . . . V K ff, V , . V, 1. V e ,L , V' '. ' , sa , V rv , - - V - - 'V . V, V ., . . ' ,' Y- -. rr N - V - hu r , ,, e - V, V V . . . . . V V VV . . . . . V . . . ' ' V V' . Ac ' V V, . . V . . , . . .- . V V ' e A . . . ' ' 1 V V ' V ' -' V - V V . -. . . V V . V. . , , ,, .. . , . e. A . , , . eu 'Q - V V'- V . ,., . VV , . 5. . . , . V . . 1Vref 1 1 x 1 -v .V V . . .V . V . . V. .V VV V .AV . VV . . .. . . xxV lx V V , , ,, , , . .., ' -' ' F' ' ' 'V 1 , V. V VV V , . l , ,ir , 1, ., - . VV VV V2 VV , V . . V ' . H ',' V V . V 'Y , e . . c e , . . . z . . 3 1, V up . . . V .V ,, V V .V ., . ' . e .. x. ' V V ' V ' V V' V V. V '. k ' '. ' , ', ak . Y c . . U . V V . . I V , .A . ., . ' ,' v V' .' ., V V .V ' , ,, D , . r ' . ' , , V ,V . , V . H .. . V . , , ,, V ,V V . , . . .VVV ,. . . A , . ., . e .V. . V , V. . V . V r -1'w V' gf? r ge V A VA . x V ' - 'r -rrx x -' rm r 1 ' .' V V V . V .' ' . V V ' V' L W e . I e X c ' . V ,V . 4 .VV. - V V ' ' ' ' . r. 1 . , V' V. .V ' V .VVE., I ' ,V A , 4' , ks' rl ' l ' X e .e e .4 s x.r ., -V .UVV , ., ,. ., . ' V . y, ., ,., . . . . .. A. 7 , '. V 'V 1 ' V , '. V ' . . . . . , , -V V ,.. , V V' . UV . l ,, . , u ,D , , . . UNIT Congratulatory Messages UNIT Brothers Vlsltors of the New Mexico St Louls New Orleans Santa Fe Dlstrlcts 18691959 UNIT Attorney larrazola Retrospects UNIT Education In the Early Perlod of New Mexlcan History UNIT V The Patron Salnt of Teachers Samt John Baptist de la Salle The Man Who Reformed Education UNIT VI Humble Blrth In An Adobe Hut UNIT VII The Founders UNIT VIII Brother Botulph Makes It Go UNIT IX Brother Botulph s Successors UNIT X The New Orleans Santa Fe Provmce UNIT XI The Good Work Continues Nmeteen Hundred Eighteen to the Present UNIT XII A llvmg Monument to a Great Chrlstlan Brother' UNIT XIII In Testlmonlal UNIT X V Appendlx I CPast DIFGCTOVSD Appendvx II CDeceased Brothers Burned In Rosario Cemeteryj Appendix III CAn Act to Incorporate the College of the Chrtsttan Brothers of New Mextcol Appendix IV fBUIlCllHQ Contract of March 15 18751 Appendix V CSamt Nlnchael s Men at Warl Appendix VI CGraduate Not Pacturedl Appendix VII QA Jomt Memornall Appendix VIII lSpeeches Delivered at Unvelllng of Brother Botulphs Statue l9lOJ Appendlx IX Wocattonsj Centennaal Class 1959 Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page 07 2 4 27 4 4 4 7 'I s if f l 'f' 'Y i I ' , . f 2 Q 1 ' ' .l I ,,-,--------------------,------- 9 Il ' ' I . ,sccmf-fccc,-ci ,,c,c,. ohm-- 27 IH ----g-------,------------Q-, 35 IV . . . . . -------0 37 -- g gg as-I A-c-,--,o , c,,, , 39 - - 11 ll ----8--------------------- -gg -,YYg--g-- - ---------- ------- -,,----,,- 53 11 ll ---------------------d------ ' ,A g,,--,,.,,,.-....., ..,.--... 70 - ' ----g.,--AA..--...,, Page 73 , A , n,- W, H W, 7, ,, ,-,------, 83 ,, . . . . , ---------- 95 . . -A-H-Y-------Ah----i-d-------------n----- 1 I ' ' N ,,---,,-,.,--,,,.-,,,--,,.. ..-. 111 . . . . -,-- II . . . YYY V ff--------- 118 . . . I m--------- 1 3 . . A , g----------------- 1 ' f ' ,.,- -..,..c,-...,.-,,- 131 . . . Wgkfw-Y--gk---Y--h-------- I3 ,,,-,------,--,-,------- 13 . I -----h---------------------------- 1 3 ' , e.--.......-..., .,--,,,,-......... 1 5 THE VENERABLE BROTHER PHILIP ANTOON VICAR GENERAL THE MOST HONORABLE BROTHER NICET JOSEPH SUPERIOR GENERAL ul lllf llli llli '-fue-41-ni s .1 Y s QQ-Q .bt-Q 5 -53' , L xf J Q Q41 f, I-+-H981 Unit I Congrafulatory Messages INSTITUT DES FRERES ECOLES CHRETIENNES ROMA F Sp Rome February 14 1959 Reverend Brother Norbert Director Samt M1chael's H1gh School Santa Fe N M Dear Brothe r Director In the absence of the Most Honored Brother Supenor General lt becomes my happy priv1lege to extend to you the Brothers students alumn1 and fnends of Samt M1chael's the congratulat1ons and best w1shes of the Superiors of the Instltute as you celebrate your Centenary A hundred years ago the f1Ve p1oneer Brothers four from France and one from Canada planted m the shadow of the Old Church in Santa Fe the seed dest1ned to produce a flour1sh1ng tree 1ndeed The1rs was truly an act of subl1me famth for on that far off October day m that m1serable adobe hut open to the four W1ndS bereft of every con ven1ence and comfort who but men of 1I'1V1l'l.C1b16 fa1th would have dared to bel1eve that Sa1nt M1chael's could ever grow mto the magnihcent 1nst1tut1on we know today? The1rs was an act of supreme conhdence humanly speak1ng the school they started had only the slen derest chances of surv1v1ng yet survmve lt d1d Nurtured by the1r selfless devot1on watered by the1r tears protected by the srlent herorsm of the1r l1ves lt grew and prospered All honor to those early heroes and to the1r successors and may those who carry on the1r work today show themselves not unworthy of the task and the trad1t1ons they have 1nhe r1ted Nor should we forget on an occas1on such as th1s the constant generous collabora txon of so many others w1thout wh1ch the efforts of the p1oneers and of the later generat1ons of Brothers m1ght well have gone for naught Who can 1gnore the debt of grat1tude Saint M1chael's owes to the clergy of Santa Fe part1cularly to the Archbxshops from that sa1ntly m1ss1onary Archb1shop Lamy who called them to the dlocese down to H15 Excellency Archblshop Byrne ? Thelr gu1dance help encouragement and back1ng have been deC1S1V6 elements 1n the growth and success of Salnt M1chael's over the years A SPCCIB1 word of commend:-1t1on to your fr1ends your many d1st1ngu1shed and fa1thful alumn1 and especxally to the generous benefactors whose help f1nanc1al and otherw1se has 1n large part bu1lt the phys1cal plant at Sa1nt M1chael's and furmshed the Brothers w1th the means of carry1ng on the1r work Some l1ke Mr Mlguel Chavez have by the1r outstandmg benefact1ons won a place of honor among those whose mun1.f1cence have enabled the school to surv1ve and expand others whose crrcumstances l1rn1ted the1r collaborat1on to more modest proport1ons have yet made an 1nva1uable contr1but1on to the l1fe of Sa1nt M1chael's st1ll others whose sons have come to Jo1n the Brothers' ranks and ded1cate the1r l1ves to the cause of Cathol1c educat1on that Samt M1chael's stands for deserve to be counted among our most effect1ve helpers To all w1th sent1ments of deepest grat1tude and cord1al apprec1a t1on a very hearty THANKS and GOD BLESS YOU' May these Centenary fest1v1t1es 1nsp1re the Brothers to re ded1cate themselves w1th renewed zeal and self abnegat1on to the noble task that has devolved upon them may th1s year mark a new departure towards ever h1gher ach1evements worthy of the long and glo r1ous h1story of Samt M1chael's Beheve me Very cordlally and frate rnally yours Q, Q vt oo-1 V1car General .a.M..1. 4.3. oss ave, vm Aunsuix - van.. same: 'cv P. on nw C 1 . ' se u erneur General 1 1 - 1 1 . . 1 1 . . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . . . . . . . I l e . . . 1 1 . 1 9 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 . 1 1 I ' 1 . 1 1 1' I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . , . , 1 1 1 1 1 1 - p ' 1 1 ' ' I 1 . 1 1 I s t 1 . 1 Y 0 . W? I Mfgvail 3 Qs wiv 'E ii? CI l' NII' NTI' CARDIN XI HIC AR X Sure Dean ot the Sacrml College C ardmal Bishop oi Welle-trl Klear of tre Holy I-ather for the Diocese of Rome Protector ot the II1Stltllt9 of the Brothers of the Chrnstlan Schools smce 1900 , Qi ?z5 h E ,J ' 1 . . Fldeset era v ' ' Q 2? 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WW KW 'mme ai' ' Ffiqzt mWdi 1 Tvwnr ..? bfmmmmlu THE MOST REVEREND URBAN J VEHR Archblshop of Denver ARCHBISHOP S HOUSE 7 PE RL Dsuvan 3 conomxoo March 18 1959 St M1chae1's H1gh Centenmal 413 College Street Santa Fe New Mex1co Dear Brother Alphonsus I am sorry that local engagements prevent my attendance at your centenary celebratmn 1n Santa Fe on May 17 but w1sh you and the Brothers of the Chr1st1an Schools mv sxncere congratulauons and best w1shes on th1s h1stor1c OCCHSIOH We of Denver are deeply apprec1at1ve of the splendxd servlces of your Broth ers durmg the past quarter century 1n the rehglous and mtellectual gludance of many hundreds of our youth durmg the cr1t1ca1 per1od of adolescence. May the good Lord contmue to bless and prosper your efforts and may He g1ve you many unusual consolatxons. Faxthfully yours , of r mb Urban J. Vehr , Archbxshop of Denver ,,, - .. -f . ,g..mm WR lf? -AM. t J ' ' s ' 3 : :L E 5 - lu ll! -A, , nl x nfl...-'mu 1, - ' s f ,N ,l. -F3-K J ,us at-1 'W WI U0 Q 2 Q 'U Y M J oy 'V' Y ff v 1-. A X 1 F f t . . 77 A Y a . 7 9 . Wg! 4 TV V4 +4 0 'S 42+ fo eo 'bo oe ,R Lf l 4r THE MOST RPA LRLND BERN -XRD T LbPELAbE OFM Blshop of Gallup Or so ge' 'Q' 'O 'cf ok ok 9 0 6 Q Q10 :CO ob' Z 'Q QR' Af 03'v -oz we ,S K' 5,4 9 6 Z 4. ovoaazv do QOWQQQQSQ -9? 9 HQQQ' K 'JK' K 6 xg, Z W cess-S 0 A' 'rf' :FO 'Coe 0 fs Z Kioon 09 QCP Z Xe 'Q -X0 0 ,yo 0 C, we eel od lg. fs. in CP Q, Z Ox ox, Q5 '4-va no K. .006 Oz' D' X' x' do 50 c' K' 4' 4, K, 'Z' '0 , 0 O -9 -QQ' '9 0 x :S 'rf 'w sez' x 4' Q' 9 ' ' A ' ' fo X 6,5 go Q . 61' .5 U3 'Q 45 'N N fn. o x, Q90 0 fb 0 fo ' Je? Q, .4 ,Q-yo 'Q . e, e, 'CO C 'W Q 'v QQ' 09 , 'P 'ss ' N 'wo 5 ox ,J 0 5 ' A xnxx x K . n 6 5 'OOGQSI-'p 0 SJK Q O Q-.9 5 2' 'O Q K. we -0 '46 ,ge ef oo ' ,vt Z 61 ,B 0 V V J -A ff. 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M 0 1 -1 O 0 THE MOST REVEREND QQfQCoJJe?6'9oJgo'50 760 4'2- I Bishop of El P350 Os he 90 0 Q0 -J' 6? QI, .f 65 Q49 4 .9 -'lf 4- 21 ' 'Ya '5' ,, em s 6 O e- 6 O5 el' OG 'SQ . ,JJ + 6 41 o 1+ sf 'B Oz' Ge- S+. fe '99 Q 'N 60 'Yj JC' QQ- Q0 is-9,9 Q, 'EGG -445, 'is' , A6 O 'ef 9 Qg.. WJ- 'D 'IQ 00 Qc 126, Gb JQ 455 GQ f,f2.b,5 'Q5 12 'Q-- fe Q' , 0 1' o A 4660615 6GQfo.5Oi'.1- QEGQQIOQQKJQQ, G 006 Qffoobe GQ96 15 2-I Qodje :Ji 451.160 339 0692 JLO6 A506 Gb G-ff .bee 69?-,QP '05 O05 QSQQ, f' Q6 232 O45 6506 Q98 Q55 def' 65' 6,90 'be 3151: 006015, 76? off'-93-Q6QQ0Q, of Q51 0Q6SQ,Q Qc 93,9 Q06 abs tho We 6e- c--'PO J' 0 095- 2' Q 'L . 1- I f' fl- QQ 9' '29 1 .5 90 Q3 4- 0 G 1' 0 0' . 0 5:1 'bay the , 42255 690696592806 1,5 'O Q 04-'ey dates of, 6: I 1.9 deb? bo 058 QQGQQ OQJQ -boo 00 Q6-68 'bb wolf, Q c'Q5.Q,Q ' -7, P0 org- 'bf fb 16046 QQ 0,5 , QQ 02.6 'oo ada 4,0 GQOOQJ6, 98, Oo q,5BQJ6J e5b 01050 For Q0 Qobz' C336 6 6of5IfQ56Jfbb'?1. 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'io 10 6 ' JG O 6618 0.0 . 00x 0 1, lj '91 so SUCK: X ai? f sg Q Q X1 5114 ff fmvap slr QD, Brother Asslstant EllphUS Wlctor CASA GE ERALIZIA ROMA CASA GENERALIZIA ROMA February 11 1959 Dear Brother August Conrad Vlsxtor It IS a dlstmct pleasure to 3o1n wlth the many well W1shers for your DISIYICI Centennlal 1859 1959 What great hlstory IS wrapped 1n that perlod of One Hundred Years' Certalnly, cooperatlon of several DISIFICIS, poverty obedl ence and the Spnnts of the Institute-Falth and Zeal have made such vltahty pOSS1b19 In that area, Samt Joseph, the Well beloved Patron of our glorlous Instltute has always been a favorlte, one upon whom to call ln need. May he in the days ahead be ever there to aid. Cordlally 1n J M J, Brother E Vlctor, FSC tl Q 1 f by W' ggi! Vg WW fin' W if 'i . I I ,PQI v 1 i A- fa kk lxtg Wx f 5 :I wif Nl K X N Q ,f v ! , 'ff K 1 , ' ' fvoyingf-, '- fl L4 K X. I x X '- 41 S ' .UQ N f' , .?4 i3'f' gr i 'g 14 9?vf?gi? F 1 ,ii lib' l,1f,i!,3 f , 'x.'Q'gf!VP . 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I' ov1rr1a s liar 12121 DE LA SALLE HIGH SCHOOL I f 1 ' 5300 St Charles Ave Q New Orleans 15 Lu April 4 19 59 To the Alumni, Friends and Student Body of St Michael' College Hlgh Schod Dea r Friends Whenever my itinery took me to St M1chael's College High School, I felt as if I were going home The hearty greetings of the Brothers and the smiles of welcome of the boys told me that I belonged to them and they to me Besides this friendliness, there were other character istxcs of the students that always called my attention The cooperation of the students with the faculty, their seriousness of purpose and their application to studies, explain why so many graduates came to occupy honorable positions in life St Michael's College High School can boast of having given to the Church, the State and Cities, holy priests, a governor, senators, representatives, superintendents of schools, mayors, bankers, successful business men, etc For one hundred years St. Michael's College High School has served New Mexico at large, and Santa Fe in particular, exceed- ingly well. Its alumni are known for their integrity, their loyalty, their thoroughness. It can boast oi achievements and success. May the next hundred years be as glorious, and may future generations profit by the examples of preceding ones and give leaders for God's glory. to the Church, the State and the whole Nation. God bless St. Michael's College high school and all its friends. Ad Multo Annos. 1 .1 9146 4 Uffwt ' Brother A. Arsenius. E Brother August Conrad 'Mx Brother Antel Arsenius Q . lgrllest Arldffhn Br0fher JMJ ST. MlCHAEL'S COLLEGE CERRILLCIS ROAD s-mm FE. NEW Mexico V, N?f Anril I, 195' 5 'V I .war Rmiker- Alnhonsus: !,t.,,pfL' Tire centenary of any institution is always an event wf cb vo I7ffl'F1T' bv allowed to pass without notice. 'f is an occasion for serious annraisal of the work core Cf fm ' Ufffcn, as well as fcr ss greater imnulse for future rro hav!! PSO icabt 31. I-fichael'f' Hifi .School in Yentrs F0 can be '-mo c rff rvcwflerful reslzlw obtained during this cmitury of worn vmver fvez ci'sris'nf' Circurrftances: itff numerous alumni can tc::ff!'j,' tc kr mms' f-ffvzsrfvficzu They Hrvc received 11116021 the 'ihriqtian Erothsri. for tkr celenration of the centenar-,v he fhf5PG.fqCPG a Ptrcrf invg t'vn ff' Mr rvecrrle of New I-fexfoo tc helh old Alma Hater of' P of fltc fiildfen so that His inznortant wer-if be continued and mfr' t1ll vvrlw vffe-ctive For lor? years to come. 'fOVli'!'82ClE?fOI'1P for ,Good work done, and orayers For fur-ther Cor-cially yours, X NX gh .Q 4 - . .5 if- .iv s . f Teacher Salnt 0 I t I av Sane Patron Salll ' STATE FIAG S The State Flag shows the sun symbol W0 of the anc em Ind an Pueblo of Za n r d on a fe d of yellow The colcrs I Z2 a wh Red and Y Ilow of Old spa n -xx' Wu STATE OF' NEW MEXICO OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR SANTA FE JOHN BURROUGHS oovanmon February 5 Brother Alphonsus General Chalrman St Mlchael s I-hgh oentennlal 413 College Street Santa Fe New Mexlco Dear Brother Alphonsus Your letter of January 15 and the brochure enclosed are rnost lnterestlng The future of New Mexlco becomes more dependent each year on the quallty of educatlon whlch we can prov1de for our youth St M1ChaE1 s Hlgh School 15 deserv1ng of convrat ulatlons and of the gratltude of our c1t1zens for 1ts hundred years of devot1on to 1deals ln offerlng outstandmg tra1n1ng to New Mexlco s young men The more than twenty flve thousand students wh1ch have been educated by the Fhrlstlan Brothers 1n 'Nlew lVl6X1CO have made contr1but1ons to our State s progress too numerous to 11st As Governor of Yew lVl9X1CO, I f1nd real satlsfactlon In comrnendlng St 'Vllchael s on thelr Centenmal, and look forward to th1s flne School's devoted servlce to the youth of our State Slncerely, ow-r 40' V JOHN BURROUGHS Governor 'fs 6 , I 2 Y Q A I Q I I I .,,-' . , -fa - - I 5 .. Ii I 2 I I . .,,iA.-Aj: U -5 rs Q I e I . 735, 9 pw-- fe' --4 61 'f2'Z' I X - 1 . , . ,. . , I I I ' . . , . . . . B - I Y ' I J . .7 5 . A . Riga, vvf'9a0'K ' 115 xv s ,nt pvc. fav. . .spa ,alum if .wmv .ofa ,df nw -M1 ,fam-o L. ul wsff. v. f,. 'Dm' D Erwin. Smww c vldlxd u. u9x :l ' ' 4311. ov' 'IL'-ff.-...-1 'I-CI '-7 fl paul ,w'Ju'.v4 '- ,wr ..1.,.v ...-.,. U'5 gJ-'i' V 23 9 1959 'JJ5',.n-1 ,,.wv-...wt XABTC BTO het' none-.us al Chair!! 'e Gen nvlsl e 1' Wlchae Xl Go leg Sxafe Sant Fe, lieu xflexlco Dear robber Llp 'n who Oozn mn vex-sad if St xklctxaelw College memorable occasion vlan e fees keen 5 K. s action s The atb uxls lnablhoblon cl to yubllclq acxm vita c ntrlbutlo 'che edu at on xlco olces with gon this O edge l s of xl vl We Mexico roy stem e all New Slncerely, l am sur l00R'Xx Blribbfla Sen atm, D ellnls ay ez Dfiffbd Sena tor C li ' nton P Anderio - n Cl, w laguna ww 'tf., 'f.,,::.'11' 'n:u. Q A 'L Z,- 'L1f':-'nf-.2.-F'-31... . ,UWM 511 In nm. 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A 59 wide 106,959 1 BR- ykicroutwe, Ks Q65 o or 'oe vlv.-1,21 wh aim we ,fix 1 a od 5,595 10 in me nov wed' cami osxov od Q tpixxaz x. at oe ,soo -,N eo asf- M mv mov -we an 499995 cL'c.'s.1.,o9 o -Ie do S4052 9:0 ee G xv 93 'Le-aan!! no 9.09 OM 0919 K. o'f oe e fed' 5 cxxaex e 1,-,G 919396 me ,KP 6 45130 BA 09219 S 8 ao T13-'LG vit'-e tsxemo oi V91 Yu X -30's-do 'xexb at cough an A ve so L99 xx. :QQ eegow 'me sg :vc 4 e 1. z a 'oo Q4 at cmxmesa oi XMI V-dice, 1 .Ap 1 ot me vom. gf en ofpa .iv 'V Q me Q! 95 o e Q R L Dre Sc ntathe J 0,0 hh WI Ont as a. 19 Ko s -a ecvxgs 'no 'Sag e in 9 xuwe Sk. gba dx. 9 42 ai 1 me 'wie 600 0 'Avm do reg -a 596 o pe cz 599' Oz SBK., X. if gneerz 1 o of Le oak Q' o Wx .1 0 QA Q 020 F' 6 .9 f' Rf .br esentatl 'e T1 lin WI Orr I9 M nun df' 5 6, 1 fpf M if nv J' 4' BQ N, ,x B9 'o Q 91 etsxfmsx 3 1890's Ceo 993. 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Q ds .r P 9 X '19 W7, -1.. levi' e,unv ' Q MON SIGNOR W ILLIAWI T BR ADLPY Diocesan Superintendent of Schools A95 V Z4 , A 4,1 1 444 4 :M 'Ji' MR TOM WILEY State bupermtendent ot Schools vi v -A uxx C5 on x 'Xxi ww X' A 1 0 Oo J O b O l :Q M O41 64 O c 0066, f Q 500 K' ff-C04 1 f iq? 40 0 C rv e- ,I V1 I S 1, cs 0 0000 f JO' S Q 1 cf I4 W- 0 0 1, c 1 1 6 C lc +46 L lo o 1 1 4 S 0 1 f 10' J! 1- f 4 1 ,J Q ff -9 1, 1 44 7,4 1,0 1, 6 C ffogkf w K I I fe aff ' I 5 f ' r .9 0 4 1 4 , r 1 V! I f f I f' , c v 1 0 1 r X '+A 1 1' CZ 0 JV of l 1 4 ,104 6. 1 0 I f 1 f O 4 'VI 4 I ' I 5 10 Q, 1 f 1,, 'S f 4' I 1, 1 ' 6 A sf 1 IQ 1,44 1,1 A Irv ok? Q, ff U 10 1, 0 '94 1 4 1 92, 07, S, 1, f fe uf, mn, f, ll! f I1 or jf O I 4- 'J f I 1 Y I '17 5,4 14,4100 6 .1 fr If lr 11,4 0,7 X of ff! QU 'G 1 'I' of 4,0 H4 z 31 '7 x I-fn' ,x ,X 4 5 '77 'Go Zn! ,fix '19 ,Ol 1, , ob .I '4 Jil, 01 , X 11 O 11 ', 'ff r r' -1700 if 606 I 08040 0,10 0 x ,x ' nj -'. f . 41 444, SX. 44 X ' ,N 3 - I '5 . 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C st ,yu ju, '-ff., Q 47,6 e n 0 4 Ion fe all o arab: p u :lawn MR TQM MURPHY S hools Supermtendent County c uh ,,o '.o'1' fr , ,A 5264 o 9 4 7s E 1- K1-ca , a Sag-W 494 x. ,fy 5 c ci C0 QD x f, 5 1. bg evo O K- dex' Geo 59 L xo?x,5'1' cog 90' 'CP E 'Q X59 WZ: sl 'oe 0' 4 coco vivo dvr Lai 0 'C bg' N 9 045 V' 'bf-0 have on K' -giyzx 69.66.995 co Cx as K 'O Q, x J N' o e, x 0 0 -a A N -.1 -n N X Q o 0 e N 0 Y- q, xk N 5 50 Z o 0 xy , ,BCP 6 X xx 65 0 ca ix, 09-A564 0 U95 z 4: o Q h'X- 5,9 P' DX' 5 fb 4 6 K9 A, 9 -Q, 9 6 O vo 'L V az, Q 50 x- C9 1 yo v 5 xxq' 2 Fee A e v A500 ' 'PY X -1- 0 0 X x ,Q C9 5 ep 0 'O x Q Q5 Q Q90 5 6 O ,Q 1. -Q, X0 z 0 50 '4f,Ng 0 znowgco K bbzipai- 0 060 94659 c X .sn 9 Q o 5 6 x- 0 if-3 M-1 J 6 Xa O ani Qi Q- D- G-ga Q 1 'J' 5' Suv? -ff' 0 x- 0 9 2 K. 9 15 1 1 6 fy, 'sw QQ 1 o x 0 X G W, 5' Q 3, 5 C kio 5 0 o 2 Leos 'bw' 53' Oi' 1' X- Q09 Q Nc 4 Y' '99 o A 9 z biioicvhyz ,C ' K. xovmk 5 C6e1e556c:i Q ,C xv 0 51 H' e n w, o G rf ob ,Da 9 A A xr 0 X-6 cp 'X G, as Y- o 1 O Q X C' X 99' B -5 1. 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CP ON 0 , GSW 5 N Y-Q L' . -f 50 oi' v. 0 +64 9990 'Cp 9' A 4 XP, x J' v L ax if - 4 .g.' , V r ,G+ 0109 0 V. ' 0 ,Q '92-A rs' QF ob 6919 0 1 Lx, Cv: vo if o s , ey Z4 C01 ave, O 0' , 4,4 9 ,6 xq,'1,xb'6 c, 0 6 2 zz Q0 7 X X ag, O 5 'ad .L f Q. aw? 0.9 o , 2- 0 sf' 5 6' -. 0 x G O , ' 5 ' . v. z S 5 '0 - ' P VJ. . 'Y 'bf' 6 N i K-0 ox' X Q 9 ' -04 5' oi P0 99 ce 0 V X6 I 95- xc . , . Q 9, - x , vp, ,gn v te .5 ,hp Qu, V A f Q 1 ff 1. Q Q XO o Q , -5, 5 K. 3, 5 -0 X 1 X 0 o bo Q5 4- me s od C: 1. 9 3, XV 4-59 0- L. - A 5 cs A , 1 9 5 . 9 oi' 5 f 09 Q - 'Z me 6- GY' 0 Q Ao 'C oi. ' fe N 0 x ee' G 'L ' 9' ff Q 3' 9 5 1 cc .YN N - ,, twig. 6,0 Q exp '0 6 O I 9 f, '59 usa Y- Q' JA 'O 9' is -.296 e xo ,.-X, ye ao - ,ie 1 .tag eb' . X O Q, ' 69 - '04-KC 4,9 e 5 5 ,491 Q Q, 5 17' ad 0,5 X- 59 O A ce 109 1 1 o 1 I .3 4.1 ob 0 '1 9 xc, ,io Q O V x, QL .00 Z 530 cu o o ., at to 99 19 . to. ' 3 ,I on - Q Q2 'o . Q6 D ,oe to 4 I so I 91 9 dc-cb -1- Y, U 0 A- 1 O qeg- . ' 50 X5 x J ,c' . ci 4 he 9 ,660 6 owe 66- :L cot 0 1 J A e x ye Rho K 4 .cyl o Q, A v A 4 Q -1 49' if A ' cog ' K xx C0 ' 'O 1 og C ' X09 A O 4, is ,G 1 'oo of .po The Brothers are instituted under the protection of THE MOST HOLY INFANT Jlfglfb an tht, patrfmfife of SKINT JOSLPH. tBu11 of Approbationj 'S Mtg f' 332' + fa? Q Uh ,, PWA 55 W Statue on the Campus presented by Graduates of 1936 U Brothers Vlsltors Ot The New Mexico St Louls New Orleans Santa Fe Dlstrlct 1869 1959 in If Q ' Brother Paullan 3' Brother Domltlan 1869 1872 1880 1889 S f-If' kgs WSP 65' PA Brother Botulph 1872 1880 Brother Gerardus Camlllus 1899 1910 Brother Emerv ldelfonsus 1910 1916 Brother Nlceas Bertm 1916 1918 Brother Agnel Isldore 1918 1922 were ' x Brother A Arsemus gy sh 1922 1930 1934 1940 QW-'wavy Brother Almare August 'W 1930 1934 Brother A Ernest 1940 1949 Brother B Edwin 1949 1900 Brother August Conrad 1950- Brothers In U.S.--World--And Southwest I - ' - - -- - . . . -- --- A., 'xii Q I -wi V , , N 4 1 .9 Q1 U 9 ,- g . . - ,I . 'X x' f - . A X I - . or ,ti -Q . ff ' 'V WW -. A W 1 .L ' ff QU! Y ' 'kgjhgyf 3 '-1 9' 'rm-wiv ' ' , 2 , ui I . v' P. - FP ,B , , 6 iw tIwC S0lw0l4 'fl in the United States N J '-5' 0 s Q N Q Y N 19. ,gr 4-, gd' ec' BJ' 5' N . ,P +0 og OF QQ? X 52 T'..x..,.,s X5 xxx x. dk Q 90 Ox? . HN 5 , 16 4 v o 4 94 Pup 6 ,-v.. L-. Jun or Nov ces 5-not Nance-1 2 3' 5016105116: Missionaries 19 238 27 3 2 47 56 anized 9-I A in on'r ' other Brothers 2a9 536 323 l5B 124 5' 1,430 i 1.. le, TOTAL PKPSONNEI. 307 749 458 243 ies 2,025 ,16..,6f9 1, 195s Ijupls 12,839 14,314 13,356 726 8,056 ,944 1,285 i N imlorrtiduxes 39 IYJ9 77 62 A8 I7 if ,Senior Novam 30 28 38 ll 25 I7 149 H., 151116165115 9l 99 109 Al 56 59 455 l A-. iMiSSi0norieS I0 9 I2 13 7 1 47'1 '-7-4 lone: awww 351 462 420 194 196 173 l,B04I TOTAL 1 PERSONNEL 511 698 652 308 325 266 2,760 ' minded in 111. -Viifqnem w1l1.'f6.Qfn 1945 l,64l 16161 pupils in 1948 , 44,247 1 1 sfofms win: HM in 1958 2,259 116101 mucus an 1958 ..., , . 61,285 CA. . . ,,,, W- , C, -,., U .24-. -.1 I! S, -'N s...., , i .3 ren... ' s 4... I ..,,,, mm., Q . Q. , ' ,Mm JM W In ' I ---.-.-., .. ,IM ' -.ms - W- 1 ,.,.:. 66. I .2 . .. -1. 411, ' ,eh H ' 'MM PNY I ' N N ..,.. ..-I wr, .MW fs, W.. ' I C, 0 '- n.-.4 -...... N, M- ,nn- .., 1. ,,, . . rp., tw. v-M-4 , ,M X i,,,.,, C., 5.4.4 X N--w-tv' I Y ' ...,,, - I 'f-f -'-' en.-4 ' ' . -.... -,., ' , - --f I :- 4 -.. W... .,...... X. 9 : -. -...,- ,hm .w... 'sw WL A-...-.60 ,?g:,.,,G.. -N .-. I ft., .i..f4... C . . 5-' - 'M,m.:4y 4... .u. wg ,mm is... ..,.. -B.. 'M ., n .6... W-. .--f .Md .,- 1. '-. 1-un X A.-- B DISTRICT SUPERIOKRS Baltimore: Brother E. James, FSC, Visitor New York: Brother Anthony John, FSC, Visitor xx K: X -iv. ,-4.-. x 2'-. Brother Bernard Peter, FSC, Auxiliary St. Louis: Brother I. Philip, FSC, Visitor Brother Joel Damian, FSC, Auxiliary New Orleans: Brother August Conrad, FSC, Visitor San Francisco: Brother U. Alfred, FSC, Visitor Brother S. Albert, FSC, Auxiliary FSC, Visitor R. X -in -4- SAN ANTONI Le Salle High Scho 2 G.. fl, -44.1. Ju- ,:... Colegio San Jose BLUBFIELDS. NICARAGUA Long Island-New England: Brother Charles Henry, Indilufo ucflsfobal Colon HA fi-I' n-1 W4 ,... MM.. M-1 1... nn' l ..- A , ...W nv all :pa- di-v' ...- ,vw .,, 1ssxsSiP fins- nu-L I,-av ANKLIN ,ALABAM , . .uf- xa- IDICW ' ,...- ,..,-f .Mn ...- A',.2 A-1' V...- za M.--N LA nson Memgrial Aigh School ,.,- Q .1- .,w. Q.-. .,,. -f' ff . .,.,.-- -0.4. An nv-0 ,- QV. .4 4.1 ,XNNMX 1...- -rb if 5 -14-in 'W ff,-A QET7? 'M' fe. , sr- And thou hast patience, and hast endured for my name, and hast not minted, Apocalypse Q I I3 1'-L' , 4' I f . s 'O w ifes E 25 155- 43' .5 . 'E' I e IOHN BAPTIST SALPOINTE FIRST VICAR APOYOLIC OF ARIZONA I869 CO ADJUTOR AHCHBISHO9 CF SANTA FE IBB! Second Archbishop of Sonia Fe 'BHS IB94 muuuc AIICHBISHOP or rom new more 5 rg - II'fr. i 3 Ma S nclz V r PETER BOURGADE VICAR-APOSTOLIC OF ARIZONA IB85 FIRST BISHOP OF TUCSON I897 Fourih Archbishop of Sania Fe xawivoa 1 X., B www -Q ll.-, -. Q ri g ,, I 1 , vi li H14- ' L! Xl, rrv flzziizn' FR. ALBERT THOMAS DAEGEE 0. F. M. Srlih Archbishop of Sanh Fe' of 1- I ' ur wir 1911 - QTTIE , L ,. qiiwkmn gg Twwg 5 . ' I-I I Q' :nf ffl-Ai.-1' lil- PLAc1n Lours CHAPELLE COADJUTOR ARCHBISHOP OF SANTA FE IB9I Third Archbishop of Sania Fe iswew ARCHBISHOP OF NEW ORLEANS I897 I905 APOSTOLIC DELEG-ATE FOR PUERTO RICO AND CUBA IB98 APOSTOLIC DELEGATE FOR THE PHILIPPINES IE 5255? .T 4 pv ,r,T,J4,r T ek! iii. fi ,. KET-,W Q 3 M13 -I . Q M A . .I Al' par mln IOHN BAPTIST PITAVAL AUXILIARY BISHOP OF SANTA FE I902 Fifih Archbishop of Santa Fe I909-ICIIB TITULAR ARCHBISHOP OF AMIDA I9I8-1928 .4nrQM 'V . Y ll! WQTPQI ,I A-or I FEEZQV RUDOLPH ALOYSIUS GERKEN FIRST BISHOP OF AMARILLO W77 Seventh Archbishop of Slnh Fo imma 31 Rev Rev, Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev J. V. W. Cooney Ph. Martin C. Seux H. Keil Ci. Baliand M. Olier H, Girma Adr. Rabeyrolle Ed. Paulham J. B. Courbon M. Dumarest G. Charrie J, Deraehes Fr. Gatignol P. Peltzer Joseph Hintzen Jos. Giraud V. Thomas A. Cazales S. Alveruhe Cyp. Barran J. S. Garcia A Priest In the Archbishop's Garden .T OF 1904 1. Most Rev. P. Bourgade, D.D 2. Rt. Rev. J. B. Pitaval, D.D. 3. Very 4. Rev, 5. Rev, 6. Rev. 7. Rev, 8, Rev. 9. Rev. 10, Rev, 11. Rev. 12. Rev. 13. Rev, 14. Rev. 15. Rev. 16. Rev, 17. Rev, 18. Rev. 19. Rev, 20. Rev. 21. Rev. Rev. Anto. Fourchegu J. M. Coudert Bernabe Marinas J. B. Railliere P, Gilbertson C. Lammert P. Moog M. A. D. Rivera A. Cellier J. G. Splinters Jas. Gauthier A. Jauveneeau G. Haelterman A. Redon G. Juillard Joseph Krayer A, Doeher J. A. Picard J, M. Garnier Restored Reredo or Retablo to original appearance 1798 , . W., 'r .Y uv -.1 ,S A A in I ge.: g, Veg I? .8 A L I Y .,.,+ , 3 '71- ,56,,.?vr I, om f r I ,nf au, 'QA 41, '.- . ' 'ffMwK:,L? A . : ' nl x , A ff, , 'V f ' .QR , -' f .XX ,f K 5 e1fw4f.1 W fm'.'E3?c1. f'f' 2 4 A 'Iggy I lfimti 'Q is ,l M, A 'sg r'ffff-:12?3'g4,ZTff 2' Qfiffiqb :, x . 3, . My! ,HI 4. g 'JA I4 px xx V yd A' vi 13,1 ' Q ' LW ' X mf- JV ' 31,4 I x ul it If ,Q I. ,Q ' , 1 1 s -3 1 ,: 4 X , 4.53 2 1 -- 4 1 xl' t, 4 f E I f 6 X i. 4 1 f' ' i A, r -l- f , i u, ' -5 4 4 Wa V-N f :Q A. . . . ,. l 1 -lu.--4, nn- r mn- ff .fv,.m--1' 'sap-1 igilgi. 1 1 sw ,E E . 2 , .-.. , . 1 , I , . f' iv ' , 1' w V 1' V x X X 4 Q 1 r Aa g V i why, 1 X J ij: 3 Q if Z' igksb gn I .. TRANSFORBIATIONS UNDERGONE BY OLDEST CHURCH IN U.S.A. SINCE IT BEC.-IME THE BROTHERS ORATORY IN 1859 Q 'NSN 8 2 San Miguel between 1872 and 1888-Ladder standing on roof of original Adobe Hut San Miguel in 1859 San Miguel between 1888 and 1954 Present San Miguel ua , V 1 4 In Q t A 3 K 3 Inside San Migmel prior to l955 Visited by thousands of tourists every year in 33 O O O E 'Rx E -3 -L.. 'Q S.. Q -22 N Q 34 VOWS zeal fhrough his 'U c fu .c It ru '+- .c I 3 'U O LD .E 'Is R .Qm 3 r L Q2 .E 'U as 'U 1: :s -9 uf T: o -C U an C .E 'O- ID ': .C O rchyzbus teacher rs of fhe H of Broihe 0 .C 'O- X ,aw-an Q oi' A S v'f.!: V S .Q11!'lf.Jf!P v uZ..Y.T.:!' 5-' fg- f :EZ ou.: E2 U u. c :O o fm . 'oy 0 c u '54 5 'SLE I? 9 'U 'U ua -9: .Q M605 3 -:Y-' : OO fu 311: -U Q 5? cq5'g J, 'uczgp fb new -C 1050- U Q49 - 'aa z- f3f 3-'Sw fum 0ST.m.c D-bm'-+ H-S2-ms oQmI.2 -C - 2.252 .7,:.'! m.:q,U, fu-C:-2 ..1O.-8 00 ' -o-.5 . , :- E25-'S 9-'Oiic 43005 Q,-,CSA C7232 'S-35 0 wr-355 .- vu i5.'i'.s.E Q an LQ- SS-sm - x3,,tD 602.35 07-5 Oi 'UQ'-o-.CQ .ELC .: .2-9 '6 U E-4- 6 .2 --204,-E 0030.0 'E 'Ur-ru 'UQD-b--o- -QE , Q S -N I -9 -b. ro l I 5 CU CD ih f V6 all 0 S'-.Q Om +N SI 1-65 Nm .E- ...R +16 SCI? .all '53 i Y' of L-A-I E1-if 5 2 35 + CD CNJ 2 is - E 119 1 Q0 +155 3 C03 .EQ 39' Gai o S-33 Cxl . no Us .c 5- .Ei Ol in 5 :N C2 i ia Q .- i :E fi? muon 01511- 2 M ,Ji QT, I.-A 35? Li :EQ- is n--Z F475 ia-, QS Q-oo -3 c-+ No +cxi 2:3 co5 NO KY Sa E ,pre-. 1859 to 1959-A century of high service to many genera- tions of young people in our own country and in countries to our south. Such, without exaggera- tion, may be truly said of St. Michael's High Scho'-l-v'hic'h until recently was widely known, first as El Colefzio de San Miguel and then as St. 'Michael's College. The Christian Brothers brought to our southwest the light of Christian education, insight into the sci- ences and the knowledge of cultures and literatures of the world at a time when no schools existed here. They were the great pioneers in th education of youth in this part of the United States. No one but they can possibly know the hardships which had to be overcome in establishing and in developing this edu- cational institution out of the bare wilderness that was in those days the present site of the school. The century of distinguished service which St. !Michael's has given our country bears witness to the thoroughness with which they accomplished their mission. Only dedicated men-dedicated to unselfish service of humanityicould have succeeded in this tremendous accomplishment. Young men from practically all states of the union, from a great many states of the Republic of Mexico from the Central American countries, young men from Canada, have lived and learned the ways of God and the answers to the problems of life at St. Michael's. Thus, in the true sense, St. Michael's has been not only ours all these years--it belongs to many nations. If it be true that a sound basic education in the habits and methods of study is the key to the devel- opment of the individual, then it must be said that St. Michael's has for 100 years provided the key which has opened thousands upon thousands of doors lead- ing to fields of worthwhile endeavor and useful citi- zenship for untold numbers of young men. And this it has done in the face of the acknowledged fact that in the early years of American Sovereignty over the States of New Mexico, Arizona and a great part of Colorado it stood practically single-handed as the center of education in this area. St. Michael's pro- vided the nucleus, in those hard days, from which the public educational system we have today was born, nurtured and developed. With outstretched arms, St, Michael's stood in a vast wilderness beckoning the young of an undevel- oped territory to come under its benevolent influence to prepare themselves for their share of the burden in developing this country in the years to come. And how successful it has been in doing this! -this wonderful school, built and developed next to that earliest temple of Christianity in the United States--Old San Miguel Church. From this educa- tional institution, at the foot of the great Sangre de Cristo Range in Santa Fe, have emerged men of many races and many creeds embued with the ideal that man is a noble being, free in spirit, possessed of the power to make of himself that which his own will and ability may enable .him to, that each man has a des- tiny in life to be fulfilled through the use of his own faculties as a free being, that, moreover, every man is endowed with inalienable rights, co-existing with corresponding duties towards his Maker, his family and his country. Attorney Larrazolo Retrospects Unit Ill And the men of St. Michael's have been true to the teachings of this great institution. From this, our Alma Mater, boys .have gone on to become leaders in the world of business, agriculture, education, govern- ment, law, medicine and in practically every other vocation, profession or business one may imagine. One cannot travel anywhere in the Southwest or in Mexico and other republics to the south without even- tually running into a St. Michael's man leading a successful and useful life in his own community. Such has it been over the last hundred years and such, we are sure, it will continue to be in the future. Included in the solid character-building policy of the school through the years has been a well-rounded and respected athletic program which for many years past to the present has kept St. Michael's in the forefront in all athletic endeavors. It has con- tributed greatly to the concept that a well-rounded high school education includes an athletic program devoted to clean play, strong competition and good sportsmanship on and off the field. St. Michael's and its friends have seen the school weather its share of disasters during its historical de- velopment from the 1850's to the present. But the institution grows on steadily and undauntedly. With each stroke of ill fortune it gathers new strength and emerges a bigger and better seat of learning-as witness the great fire of 1926 which was a blessing in disguise, as that great teacher of boys, Brother August, so aptly described it at the time. This year, St. Michael's begins its second century of service to youth, It is not the struggling school of the 1850's and 1860's. It has stood on its own merits many years. It has accomplished much. Its founders and those who followed them were wise men, To them and to the present guardians of this great institution of learning, we say Well-done.-Your fellowmen have judged you and have not found you wanting. Yours has been a great undertaking. You have suc- ceeded in the most important and in the most delicate of mankind's endeavors-the education and charac- ter-building of young men. That much is history. We must now concern ourselves with helping the future leaders of St. Michael's carry on where their predecessors left off. St, Michael's has a very definite place in the educational institutions of our day. It must continue to lead the way into the future. Today, more than ever, its ideals and its faith in the quali- ties of youth need reaffirmation. The standard it has held aloft as its guiding light in its great past must be given impetus, moral and substantial, in order that others may take added strength and determination in facing the problems inherent in the education of our children in the future. To this end, we are certain, the Christian Brothers are dedicated today as their predecessors were in the years past, The Alumni of St. Michael's salutes the Christian Brothers. The people of the Southwest, we know, wish you much success in the years to come. The founders of Old San Miguel Church, of which St. Michael's is a worthy child, brought the principles and ideals of Christianity into our New Mexico many centuries ago, You have continued to lead the way. May Our Lord, the Teacher of teachers, bless your efforts. May you walk confidently into the future. By Attorney Paul F. Larrazolo Graduate of 1929 . 13 4- W V Q, v ,X :na .- I GRADUATES 0F 1900, 1902, AND 1903 Identified in the picture: Front row 3rd from left Gilbert Mirabal '03, 4th CLASS OF 1893 Frank Chavez '02, Brother Patrick, 3rd from right Manuel Montoya '02g , , Seated: Miguel Castaneda and Charlie Middle row: 2nd from left Ernest Digneo '03, Alfred Kaune, Adolphe , , Y , Standing: Felipe Xaldes and Juan B, Elias VVeiller, Yincente Alarid '03: Last row: 2nd from left Jose R. Martinez '03, Jose R. Mirabal '02, Remijio Mirabal '02. Other Graduate Class 1900 Antonio Castillo, Albino Mejia, Telesforo Mirabal, Federico Valdez. Class 1903 Grover C. Abbott, Jerry J, Kelly, Francisoo D. Luna, John Maher, Max Tafoya. .53 o T AN- 625' GRADUATES OF 1908 CLASS 0F 1895 Seated: Samuel J, Forwood, Antonio de la Ossa, Ernesto de la Ossa, Sfandingr: Fred 'M0Cabe. Jvse Valdez standing. Mmm J. o'Boy1o, Juan B. Arroyo, Hilorio A. Delgado 36Seated: Francisco Bias, Onesimo Martinez unit iv History represented in its boarding MlRACUi.OUS STMRCASE CHAPEL OF OUR KADY OF l 'GHY Education In The Early Period Of New Mexican The fame of Saint Michael's High School. formerly known as St, Michael's College, or El Colegio de Santa Fe, as the oldest and most renowned Institution of learning for boys in the vast and rapid growing Southwest, has spread throughout the country as may be seen by the number of States and Nations students. Without detriment to other Educational Institutions in the State we may say that Saint Michael's has exerted a more powerful influence, in the last one hundred years, on the educational develop- ment in Santa Fe and in the State at large than has any other establishment, It may be well, before starting this historical account, to take a rapid glance at the educational situation in the Territory prior to the founding of Saint Michael's High School. The Franciscan Fathers who accompanied the explorers to New Mexico spent their time in christianizing and educating the Indians. In 1655 there were twenty-five mission schools conducted by sixty Franciscans, The natives were taught religion, reading, writing, music, and several trades. However, all these schools disappeared in the revolt of 1680. In 1695. at the time of the reconquest, the good Fathers returned to rebuild their missions and schools. The work of educating the Indians was a tedious task which taxed the ingenuity of the missionaries. They could not learn the language of the tribe by study, as this language, generally different in each Pueblo, was not written but had to be learned by practice alone time. Meanwhile instruction was given by the use of signs and pictures, If the Indians manifested a desire to keep the priest among themselves hc, of course. very willingly acquiesced in their wish and remained, trying to learn their language and making himself all to all, as the Apostle says, to conquer souls for heaven. 1 and this required plenty of 1 Rev J. H. Defouri However, the children of the Spanish explorers and soldiers were without schools until 1771, when a Royal decree ordered several to be established. Barreiro says that in 1832 there were six public schools in New Mexico: viz., Santa Fe, Taos, Santa Cruz, Albuquerque, San Miguel, and Belen, When in the summer of 1851, Bishop Lamy arrived in Santa Fe to take over the newly erected diocese, New Mexico was already ancient, it was only the diocese that was new. La Villa de la Santa Fe de San Francisco de Assls, CThe City of the Holy Faith of Saint Francis of Assisil, destined to be the Metropolitan See, had been a capital since 1610 and settled before that, The priests were few and only a small portion of the Catholic population received adequate attention. The zealous vitality of the genuine missionary was lacking and this did not improve the situation in the three decades that the faithful lingered without the ministrations of priests. The great Bishop, a man of clear vision, soon found out that the educa- tional picture was at its worst, Illiteracy and religious ignorance, the malignant cancer gnawing at the basis of the economical and intellectual misery that existed, had to be removed immediately. Re-education and re-christianization of the flock confided to his care headed the agenda of the Apostolic Bishop. Significantly and intentionally had Bishop Lamy chosen as his motto, Faith and Work. 6 I . 'ffr+4i9 i 21- .V,, ,,...,..,, E s'li . ...- . . --A .:::-- '. 1 J :pg a csc' I is f H Wafiifiil W ' , Q 1 i xg, ' c . f E 1 ,, - I - wells 4. A-f .ai I 'T , W to A I ,,,,, ., Z , 'fi U's,q1 i N 5 I a it fl, . 1 if Knwv 'ewwffa , KLA.. ., ACADEMY OF OUR LADY OF LIGHT BUILT IN 1852 SISTERS OF LORETTO , Immediately after it became feasible the first English School in the Territory was opened under his sponsorship, This institution was conducted .ia by a gentleman named E. Noel, The Bishop's next step in the same direction i V11 yi . fi Ei Sta . S4 lvf - sacrifice, 1 xii! opened before one for boys. ilfll Cv!-'JEL G5 GLN LAD' G? FGM? 1 8: 2 Salpointe: Soldiers of the Cross was to introduce the Sisters of Loretto, who founded the Academy of Our Lady of Light for girls, in 1852. 'AAs the source of evil here is the profound ignorance of the people, the first remedy must be instruction and for this we need Christian Schools for the youth of both sexes, but especially for young girls. The means of forming them to virtue and good example is the establishment of religious houses conducted by persons devoted to their calling and filled with the spirit of self- This quotation from a letter written by the devoted co-laborer of Bishop Lamy, Father Machebeuf, who later became the first Bishop of Denver. not only emphasizes the need that existed for schools but also why a girls' school was Bishop Lamy and Father Machebeuf, in bringing the Sisters of Loretto to New Mexico, built better than they knew at that time, for humble, painful, and unpromising as that beginning was, it was fruitful in consequences for good. The new era in the history of religion in New Mexico had begun. From the very beginning the efforts of the good Sisters were crowned with success. 2 37 CI ASS 1912 Standlng Wenceslao Serna Benjamin Sm neros Seated Fernando Armlgo l'el1x Gomez CLASS 1910 Felipe Hubbell GRADUATES 0F 1904 AND 1905 Front row Feorge 'VII nardot Manuel lfsqulbel Alfredo Valdei, Daud Armljo Felipe Qulntanes Mlddle ron Sexero Soto Pedro Urtw Camllo M1gllaYll0t Fed CFICO Soto Lorenzo Flores lNest10r Baca Rose Gibson Standlng Juan Aland Ramon Martlnev Selauso Romero, Charles Kaune Eugene Hampel Graduates of 1904 are Juan M Alarld Lorenzo Flores Camllo Mlgnardot Pedro Ortlz lfederlco Soto Alfredo Xaldez Graduates of 1905 are All the rest and Felipe Martinez not III the picture SAY NIIGUEL STAFF 1911 Graduates of 1911 Seen m the picture are front row last three, Agustin Slaneroe Manuel Lujan and Apolmar Lrrutla mleslng Henry E Kaune Others m picture are front row Benjamln Slsneros Fernando AFUIIJO Standing F Goldlng J Lucero, R Kelley J Qulnlan F Gomez A sl 1 . . , 1 , . . . . . , ,' .. 1 . W ' ., , , 1 v . v 1 . . 1 - . . . l . 2 , 1, ,l .1 Y V' ' v lv 1 ' 'X 1 . . , ., , ,. . . , 1 ,, lf Y . 2 . 1 -v . . , . , Y 1 Y ' 1 , g 1 ' . y . -. . . ' -'r , W., 'F W., 'L ,A .A 9 J rn 5 ff.. Q A Va' MX ' ,i 'Q V, W y' 4 i ' x ' .f E Z 1. mfg 'fx I A' A, . ' 5 ,pfw ,K A r 1 , NV L4 A A 4 1 1 . . 4 . . . . v . . . , , ., . , , , , Lv . . 5 V : , . , .. l . I , . Y 1 - . 1 - - n ' , . Unit V The Patron Saint Of Teach Saint John Baptist de la Salle The Man Who Reformed Education One day in May of 1684 twelve laymen and a priest, meeting in a large house in the city of Rheims, France, began seventeen days of deliberations that were to have an important effect upon the future of France and in turn affect the development of popular education in Europe and the Americas, The priest. to whom the mansion belonged, was named Jean Bap- tiste de la Salle, and the twelve laymen, who may or may not have been aware of the scriptural signifi- cance of their number, were young elementary school teachers he had trained. At the end of the sessions the group decided to form a religious congregation called the Brothers of the Christian Schools. They settled details of the organization, determined on a habit and took a vow of obedience which was to be renewed yearly. Having accomplished all this, they had then to endure a surprising storm of abuse that immediately broke over their heads. The focus of the criticism, which came from or- dinary citizens of Rheims, from educational circles throughout France, and from within the Church itself, was directed toward the peculiar status of the new organizations members and to its declared in- tentions. Except for their leader, t.he men were nei- ther priests nor, strictly speaking, laymen, and thowfh this was not entirely unprecedented it was sufficiently unusual to cause suspicion. Most startling was the fact that the new congregation was bent on combining a religious life with a pedagogical one, Teaching had always been the province of laymen, or, where it had been undertaken by religious. had been considered a minor aspect of their vocation and an undignified one at that. A century before, when the Jesuits had opened schools, they had been denounced for an activity beneath their honor, one which de- tracted from the sacerdotal character of the priest- hood and exposed it to debilitating influences, But the Jesuits had not attempted to teach t.he lowest orders of society, the children of paupers who could pay nothing for their education, which is what the Brothers proposed to do. Nor had the Jesuits or any other segment of the Church provided much more than religious instruction, the Brothers, on the other hand, had put forth a program of genuine popular education, and. what is more, were going to teach in French rather than in Latin. If the whole thing was not a quixotic idea, well-intentioned but imprac- tical, it was surely a dangerous piece of insanity! The very habit which the Brothers had adopted became a target of derision. De la Salle had deter- mined to clothe his teachers in the simplest of out- fits, and in that age of elegance, when even priests often wore the finest clothing they could get and were unsparing with embellishments, the Brothers' black cassocks that fell halfway down the leg, their peasant's mantle of heavy black serge, huge ungainly hats and thick double-soled shoes, seemed the height of ridiculous dress. People hooted at de la Salle's men in the streets of Rlieims and children threw stones at them. but the Brothers bore this treatment with stoic patience, as de la Salle had taught them to do. In their schools they were subjected to an even greater ordeal. In an age of extreme social stratifi- cation one in which money was replacing lineage as the foundation of power and privilege -the idea of teaching poor children was revolutionary, Chil- dren at this period seem to have been generally undisciplined, but this was particularly true of those whose poverty kept them out of school and left them to roam the streets and indulge in seventeenth-cen- tury forms of juvenile delinquency. Nowhere in France was juvenile gambling. drinking and fighting more rampant than in de la Salle's city. In fact. one of .his contemporaries wrote, 'tthere was probably no place in the whole world where children were naugh- tier, more disobedient or more perverted than in Rheimsf' Herded into the Brothers' new schools by their frantic parents or by the municipal authorities, the boys made their teachers' lives a continual hell by their insolence, violence and refusal to learn, This constituted one of the gravest problems which the new Institute faced, and to its solution de la Salle devoted much of his impressive energyg the result was a revolution in pedagogical methods. This period of French history is known to us as the splendid century. It coincided roughly with the reign of Louis XIV, le roi soleil, who became king in 1643 when he was five years old, was crowned at sixteen and remained on the throne until his death in 1715, the longest recorded reign in European his- tory. It was a reign marked by lavishness and splen- dor, great intellectual accomplishments and rapid commercial expansion, an extreme refinement of manners and a robustness of individuality. Yet it was also a period of bitter religious dissensions, increased political despotism and widespread physical suffer- ing on the part of most of the population, A Brother Constantius wrote later about the condition of the masses: The incessant foreign and internal wars, with their consequent evils, told wit.h disastrous effect upon the people. Exorbitant demands on the part of army officials, the violence of the soldiery, the rapine of supervisors, the wholesale plunder of crops, followed by famine and ruin, left whole pro- vinces of France under the weight of terrible suffer- ings and untold misery. The peasants frequently had no bread, and when they had it the circumstances were such as to deprive them of any hope of susten- ance for the morrow. Evidently, morals among the masses under these dire circumstances were threat- ened with ruin, as were their social and economic conditionsg for false doctrines were spread and took hold among the people, destroying their faith and stultifying their consciences, Schools there were, but they were poorly attended and shamefully neglected. Th children and the people generally were ignorant, and vices, according to con- temporary authorities, were rampant among all classes, l'nder le grand monarque France was almost continually at war. under the mercantile system of his economic advisers poverty was intensified for many men, and under the influence of the new relig- ious tendencies Jansenism, Gallicanism. Quietism, the lluguenot separation France was quite literally being torn apart. Jean Baptiste de la Salle was in some ways an en- tirely typical representative of this era, and yet in other ways its near-antithesis, llis lifetime covered almost exactly the years of Louis XIV's reign: the son of a well-to-do family that had come to France from Spain 300 years earlier, he was born in 1651, three years before Louis was crowned. and died in 1719, four years after his death, De La Salle's back- ground was a distinguished one: among his ancestors there had been statesmen, warriors and even 3 saint. Both his father and his paternal grandfather were magistrates of the Rheims judiciary. and the family occupied one of the highest social positions in the city, Jean Baptiste was the oldest of ten children, three of whom died in infancy, and though we ac- tually know little of his early years it is possible to form an idea of them from our knowledge of the training which the children of the aristocracy re- ceived in those days. The sons of the upper classes, we are told, were taught never to refer to their father except by his title .. . never to cross their arms or their legs: never to examine books left lying on the table: never to gestieulate when speaking. or poke the fire or stand with their backs to it. It' someine asked the time, they had a wait for more distinguished persons to answer. Before entering a room they were told never to knock. but to scratch with the nail of their little finger. which was allowed to grow longer than the others for this purpose, Any deviation from these or the multitude of other practices and prescriptions constituted a shameful breach of aristocratic stand- ards. It is important to remember this in considering the radical changes that were to enter de la Salle's life, Jean Baptiste seems at an early age to have de- cided on a priestly career. When he was nine he en- tered the College de lions l-Infants, a school run by the diocese. and two years later received the tonsure, a common practice at the time. At sixteen de la Salle was made a canon of the Cathedral of Rheims, through the making over to him of a benefice be- longing to a distant relative who was a member of the Cathedral Chapter, :Xt the time the making over of bcnefices was considered a grave abuse. but in de lfa Salles case it was received with approlizition. Ile was a sober youth, and a good student 'w ho did well in the rather heterogeneous eouises then taught - Aristotelian philosophy. astronomy. heraldry. ltotany. etc. In 16450, at nineteen. he was sent to the seminary of Saint Sulpice in Paris, Saint Sulpice was a stronghold of orthodoxy in zu ,Ma this doctrinally troubled century. De La Salle was happy there and soon achieved a considerable repu- tation for piety among his fellow seminarians, But it was an extra-curricular activity that brought de la Salle his first contact with what was to become his life's work. The seminarians were obliged periodi- cally to go to the poorest sections of Paris and in- struct the local children in the rudiments of their religion. De La Salle was impressed with the magni- tude of the problem, His stay at Saint Sulpice was suddenly cut short by the death of his father in April, 1672. As the oldest son, he was expected to return home to take charge of his orphaned brothers and sisters this mother had died the year beforel. When he arrived in Rheims it was with the convic- tion that his hopes for the priesthood had been per- manently shattered, But on the advice of his spiritual director, a saintly canon of Rheims named Nicholas Roland. de la Salle decided to continue studying for the priesthood while at the same time attending to family afQairs. Very soon he was drawn into a new activity, Roland had taken over an orphanage and had instituted what he called the Community of the Holy Child. He asked de la Salle to help him run it, and the two began to make plans for extending the charitable work. De La Salle determined to give up his canonry in favor of becoming a parish priest, a step which was highly unusual at a time when. as an historian has written, The care of parishes was so despised that even those of Paris were abandoned to the care of strangers, as being unworthy of persons of quality. But de la Salle's request was refused by the bishop, and he did not succeed in making the change for another ten years. In March, 1676, he was ordained deacon and 1678, a priest. Roland died a few weeks later. leaving the orphanage to de la Salle, He did not yet have a par- ticularly strong interest in education, but he was soon to encounter a powerful new stimulus in that direc- tion, It came in the person of one Adrian Nyel. who arrived in Rheims with the intention of setting up a charity school for boys, He went to see de la Salle, who, against his inclinations. agreed to help him and 'if 0740 s 'af ' QW 5 Iii? soon became deeply involved in the project. Rounding up several young men as teachers, Nyel---who was shortly to drop out of the picture--and de la Salle opened their first school in April, 1679, and their second a few months later. From the start the schools were plagued with difficulties, Besides the recalci- trant boys, de la Salle had to face the fact that his teachers were badly trained, that they lacked offi- cial status and that there was much opposition to the entire program. The problems were interrelated. But what was perhaps most pressing was the lack of qualifications of the young men who had come to de la Salle. even thou?-Sh they were of higher type than the ordinary run of teachers of those days. A contemporary de- scribed the latter as gamblers, drunkards, and l XD 152, Who, N 1ibertines, and another considered them low pot- house-keepers, second-hand clothes shop proprietors , . . barbers, fiddlers, flunkeys and marionette-string pullersf' Teaching did not attract a distinguished class of meng compounding the dififculty was the general opinion that teaching possessed an inherent principle of corruption, so that any good man who practiced it would quickly be turned into a ruffian, In his dilemma de la Salle went to Paris to consult an eminent priest named Nicholas Barre who was considered an authority on education. Barre gave de la Salle some hard advice, lie told him that the only solution lay in de la Salle's as- suming more direct control over the teachers, guid- ing them, training them and overseeing everything they did. And, he went on, it was necessary that de la Salle take the men into his own home and live with them. To appreciate what this meant to de la Salle we have to remember the immense gaps that existed between social classes at this period and that de la Salle was a thorougngoing aristoerat with refined tastes and cultivated sensibilities. Years later he wrote about this decision: 'A'll'lOS9 whoin I was first obliged to employ as teachers I ranked below my own valet, hence the very thought of having to live with them was unbearable. That he triumphed over his own nature in so intimate an area is one of the many remarkable accomplishments which he himself put down solely to the action of grace, In June, 1681, he brought the first group to live with him in the family mansion. He .had to face the outraged sentiments of most of his family, the total disapproval of Rheims society and the dismal pros- pect of literally having to rub elbows witn men VVIIOSQ manners he considered barbarous, Because he wanted to eliminate as many distinctions as possible, he shared the nien diet, iorcing himself to eat food he could not bear even to look at. After some months of the most severe asceticism, marked by periodic and lengthy fasts, he reached a point where he be- came totally indilferent to food, He also came in time to abandon nearly all the material values which nad been so deep-seated in him. He was never to give up his insistence on good manners, and indeed his writ- ings reveal a curious identification of gentility with moral excellence. 'lhougn he was far more severe on himself than on the Brothers, many of them found the regimen too harshg most of the original group soon left the house, but were almost at once replaced by others. Requests for new schools came in to de la Salle, for within the widespread opposition, there were pockets of appreciation for his work. By 1684 he had seven schools in Hheims with fifteen teachers, But as time went on he became aware ol the funda- mental weaknesses of the organization. llis men had taken no vows, there was no systematic train- ing procedure, and his educational program had no articulated theoretical basis on which to build, Ile decided to remedy all this by holding deliberations at the house. They began on May 10, 1684. i AEIOU lil ,u X 'QW kg. Having settled the nature and structure of the new organization, de la Salle had now to work out its educational program. Earlier he had become con- vinced that the prevailing classical education, which emphasized Latin and Greek. Aristotelian philosophy, rhetoric. etc.. was entirely unsuited to the penniless boys who attended his schools. A contemporary of his. the English philosopher John Locke, wrote about this time that he could not encourage the ordinary way of learning Latin in a grammar school. and went on to say that Though the world be full of systems tof pholosophyy yet I cannot say I know any which can be taught a young man as a science, wherein he may be sure to find truth and certainty. De la Salle determined to teach his boys in French, and to give them such basic subjects as arithmetic, spelling. etc, Though he was not a pioneer in efecting this great shift from the classical to popular educa- tion, one which has had profound effects upon the contemporary world. he is certainly to be regarded as the first educator to put the non-classical curricu- lum on a practical basis and to institute it on a large scale. Besides this change of curriculum, de la Salle is also to be credited with a major modification of teaching methods. The so-called system of Hsimul- taneous instruction had actually been discussed be- fore his time, and the Jesuits had practiced a form of it in their schools, but de la Salle was the first to use it on a wide scale, and in -act to make it the keystone of an educational system. By the simul- taneous method is meant the practice of grading pupils according to their intelligence, putting those of roughly equal capacities in thc same classes, giv- ing them the same textbooks and placing them under a single teacher for their lessons. Previously the lec- ture system. open to all students enrolled in par- ticular courses. prevailed in elementary education. as it does today in universities, and de la Salle's in- novation was therefore an important one. But the primary purpose of de la Salle's school was to train its pupils to be good Christians. Lessons in religion were therefore given great prominence during the day: pupils were to be taken to Mass every day: they were to recite prayers at stated in- tervals and be given moments for recollection. Coupled with this religious training was instruction in manners and deportment, some of whose specific points. as we read them in de la Sal1e's manuals. seem rather strained. though they were a commonplace of upper-class education at the periodg de la Salle never forgot the importance of the basic intellectual dis- ciplines. In one of his works we find a pointed warn- ing to the Brothers: Have you taught your pupils all the other subjects, such as reading, writing and the rest, with all possible earhestness? If you have been wanting in these matters, you will have a serious account to render to God. De la, Salle's educational ideas did not come to him all at once, but were theproduct of a number of years of reflection and of a certain amount of cau- tious experimentation. But once he .had created the formal organization of the Brothers his basic theories were quickly put into practice. An important event of these years was the foundation of a training school for his teachers. The idea of what we would call a normal school had been discussed before de la Salle's time, but he was the first to create a successful one. By 1668 both this institution and his elementary schools in Rheims were doing so well that he thought the time right to expand the work. He had been in- vited to open a school in the Paris parish of Saint Sulpice, and in February he left for the capital, leav- ing the Rheims schools in the hands of the brothers. Though de la Salle had never been free of opposi- tion and criticism, they had until then been of a general nature, confined to muttering against him and an occasional broadside of abuse, In Paris he began to encounter specific attacks based on legal grounds, and also the unremitting hostility of power- ful elements and personalities within the Church. In fact, the entire history of the Christian Brothers from 1688 until de la Salle's death thirty years later is one of endless disputes, bickering, lawsuits, seiz- ures of his property, betrayal and setbacks of various kinds. It is a tedious story, lightened only by the calmness and serenity with which de la Salle endured it, qualities which were to be given their due recogni- tion when the case for his sanctity was later made. De la Salle, like so many innovators before and after him, had to accomplish almost everything he did against the stiffneeked resistance of many of the representatives of the Church he was attempting to bolster. Despite these vicissitudes, so typical of the his- tories of new movements within the Church, and despite the sometimes perilous poverty in which the Brothers lived, the Institute continued to grow, New schools were opened and de la Salle began to be known in many parts of France. In 1691 he obtained a house called Vaugirard on the outskirts of Paris, which he used as a rest home for his men, a number of whom had become illg there were even several deaths because of their exacting work and exposure to the variety of diseases which their pupils brought to the classrooms. At the same time he opened a novitiate and began to write manuals of instruction and a series of Meditations, Finally, in June of 169-1 he took the final step in the solidification of the Institute by assemblying twelve of his most loyal Brothers to make perpetual vows, The portrait of de la Salle that emerges from these years is in some ways an obscure one. Like many founders, he tended to hide behind his work, and so appears selfeffacing, taciturn, stripped of indio- syncracies. In general his spirituality was that which is known as the French School, an austere, strict sort of piety which strikes some observers as almost arid and others as containing features of nobility. His biographers have practically no incidents to re- port, and few anecdotes. One that has come down tells of the time he was accosted by robbers: he had no money so he offered the pair his threadbare cloak, which they silently inspected and then handed back to him in disgust. His austerities deepened as he grew olderg his caution increased. Ile had always preached absolute obedience to the will of God. but now he seemed to react to each near-disaster, as well as each suc- cess, with perfect faith that God had intended it to happen just as it did. As he grew older he seemed to deelre mereamngly to g1V9 up aeuve leadershlp of the 11191111116 I'1l1dllV 111 1117 he Qtepc d doun supex uscd thc clcclxon of a Bxothu ac Qupfuol md IQ tncd to the hdekglound though he ILI'T1illlf.d bv far the Qtrongest lnfluence on the BIOIYILIQ and thelr real SIJIIIIUHI head He had suffered gxeatly flom a SQFIQS of d1Qab1l1t1eQ and non hm hefzlth lapldly h1S last IHDCQQ after some days of Quffemng and a flnal lntense agonw all of vshleh he bole mth Ch3l3C1Cl1QI1C equdnlmlty he dled on Aplll 4th 1719 All Rouen rcglets hlm one of h1s Blothels wxotc a meek later and looks on hlm as fx stunt declined. In the winter of 1719 at Rouen he entered 1 .3 X 1 . . - ,X ' 1. - y - , ' , , . , H . ' V f ., ' YV , . . , all I 1 E ' ' r' 'l i 7 Q? 7 'T Af uf 1 ,J sl 'N 1 -, 3 D .Il , xy f, : ' J H Vx. P X- X D , . fiif, . ' 1 'W.A.y:' . - L 5 C - - A fl I - . ' , 7 wav ,,,f2,,. 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A . , - I . 1 , Umt Vl Humble Blrth In An Adobe H Elated ox er the splendld educatlon the gllls wele gettlng the Venerable Blshops zeal clt but Ildlllillk satls fled so long as the boys wele wlth out an equal oppoltunlty Whlle ln EJUIUQQ work of the Brothers of thc Chlls tlan Schools Glatlflcd wllh thelr accompllshments he thought that thc ldcal would bc to get the same hc had wltnesscd thc gleat rellglous to opell a boys school ln Ncw BICYILU He sent hls Vlcal Gen elal Rcxelcnd Petel Bgulllon to france to take up the matter wlth thc Quperlor Genclal of the Brothels of the Chrlstlan Schools The Vlcar s f1ISI receptlon was not xcly encoulaglng but nothlng daunt ed nol dlsmaycd the f1lC trled mls slonary Learnlng that ln the clty of Clermont was statloned hls old rlend Brother Alteme and that now the fllendly Brother was Plrxlnclal hops cmlssary lost no tlme ln get tlng away fl om Parls to sce hlm We haxe no 111111911 account of Lhls ln ILIXIQXK but Judglrlg by what followed we cannot but conclude that Blothel Artc me s 1llflLlCl'lL9 and cnc lulage lnent gave the Vlcar General renewed hope and confldence Golng back to Parls he once more pleaded h c use befole the Superlor General Brother Ph llppe who gaxe hls consent Nleanwhlle the account of the mls slonary relatlxc to the mlsslons of New NIGXICJ had spread throclghout the PIOYIHCC of Clermont among the Chrlstlan Brothels The preparatory and theologlcal semlnallcs of 'XIont 1-erl and had also been lmplessed by the need fol prlests ln the DIOCQQQ of Santa Pe Among the Blothels many wele the xolunteers OI the new mls slon but the wlshes of all could not be granted The ones asslgned by Prother Arteme to accompany Father hgulllon to Santa Fe were Brothers Hllarlen Dlrector of the schools at Blllon Gondulph Dlrector of Ram agnat Germanlus and Galmler Jo seph teachers ln the schools of Clermont Among the eccleslastlcs who xol unteered and accompanled the Brothels to New Nlexlco were two prlests Revs J B Salpolnte and FFHHCIS Jouvenceau two subdeacons Revs Benedlct Bernard and John B l 7:1 f X X fog 1 2, 7K1 fm Ay! 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Y . . . . , On August 17, 1859, the New Mexico Missionary and his recruits bade farewell to their native land from the deck of the Ariel at Le Harve. After an uneventful voyage of fourteen days they reached New York where the little band was joined by a New Yorker, Brother Optacian also known as Brother Augustin. The voyage to St, Louis was made by train. Here the travelers were kindly received by Brother Patrick, Di- rector, and they rested a few days preparing at the same time for the most perilous part of their journey, Rev. John Baptist Salpointe who later on became the second Archbishop of Santa Fe describes the journey thus, From St. Louis we went by boat up the Missouri River as far as Kansas City which was then only a small village. Here we encamped on a hill covered with forest timber. 1 It is on this very hill that the stately Cathedral of the Diocese of Kansas City stands today. Up to here, the uneventful journey had at least been safe. Here and there along the route pioneering progress was buzzing with activity, and the countiy side, once the home of savages, was now dotted with homesteads pleasing to behold. Now commenced the extensive plains, wherein roamed the hostile Indians, Europeans had read and knew about the savages of the New World. Many of the settlers had experienced the attacks of the Indians, in fact many had lost their lives fighting them. Cognizance of these facts did not dishearten nor discourage our Javelcrs, .,-1t it did lead them to exercise greater prudence. Through these plains, they were obliged to travel in caravans and they underwent all sorts of suffering, being exposed daily to the murderous attacks of the yet savage warriors. At last they reached La Junta, the first settlement in New Mexico, situated where Watrous stands today. Here a priest of the neighborhood offered them fresh teams to speed them on to Santa Fe, still more than four days journey distant. At Las Vegas, San Miguel del Vado, and Pajarito, the French Priests, pastors of these localities re- ceived their compatriots most cordially and affably. Santa Fe was finally reached on October 27, 1859 at two o'clock in the afternoon, seventy-one days after embarking at Le Harve and more than six weeks after leaving Kansas City. The welcome accorded the missionaries in Santa Fe is related by Archbishop Salpointe in his book, Soldiers of the Cross. The good Bishop, Right Reverend Lamy, who had been notified of our coming was waiting for us. His Lordship received us with an affable simplicity, which surprised us at first, but which, as we saw later was an habitual quality of the missionary Prelate, A frugal but substantial supper was soon served for us. Sitting at the table, and feeling like at home, we commenced to speak like Frenchmen, as we were all, but one, of this nationality. Gentlemen, said the Bishop sternly, You do not know, it seems, that two languages only are of necessity here, Spanish, which is spoken generally by the people of this Territory, and English, which is the language of the Gov- ernment. Make your choice between the two for the pres- ent, but leave your French parley for the country you have come from. Among the Brothers there was one that spoke nothing but English, which was his mother tongue and another who mastered some Spanish, but neither the one nor the other tried to keep up the conversation, and so a per- fect silence ensued. We then proceeded eating with as little noise as possible, and wit.h a kind of lost appetite. This uneasy situation, however, did not last long, The Bishop himself put an end to it by bursting into laughter and by reopening the conversation in French. Still, he explained 'to us the necessity of applying ourselves, at once, to the 1 Soldiers of the Cross p. 212 over, Priests and Brothers re- V' gl tired to the large room which was assigned them as a common dormitory. Here on mattresses ,- spread on the floor and with ff ,f ffl s study of thelanguages. 2 Supper gg-E t.heir traveling blankets for covers our weary missionaries enjoyed their first night's much needed repose, in Santa Fe. The day after their arrival, October 28, the Br0th6I'S took possesion of the adobe house near the old San Miguel Church. This had been procured for them by the Bishop. The house was spacious, but little fitted IOI' school purposes, As Brother Hilarien afterwards remarked. It was an ADOBE HUT with four walls. Repairs were begun at once and in the meantime they took their meals at the Bishop's house. For four days the only belongings of the newly arrived community were five mattresses thrown on the bare ground since the house had no wooden floor. On the fifth day the apartment was furnished with five chairs, five blankets, two tables, and few benches and some old carpets. This reflects, not the want of generosity of the great Bishop, for his was a magnanimous heart, but rather the penury that existed throughout the Territory as well as in the nascent diocese. Besides the Brothers arrived before Lamy had time to make the necessary rtpaiis or purchase the needed equipment. The historic site and buildings purchased by Bishop Lamy for El Colegio de San Miguel, while Father Eguil- lon's mission was being successfully accomplished in France, is an event that involved the history of the two most renowned Churches in Santa Fe, the Church of the Castrense and the San Miguel. Authorized by the Bishop of Durango the Parish Priest of Santa Fe had sold to Mr. Juan Rafael Ortiz the land ad- joining San Miguel in 1835. However, by 1859, Mr. Simon Delgado had acquired possession of this land, which ex- tended 328 feet along the present College Street and 624 feet along the Camino Real or Alto Street. The Castrense, church of the military camp, built on the south side of the plaza by Governor Francisco Antonio Marin del Valle was used as parochial church of Santa l-.4 up to 1846. Besides being built between business houses it was in bad need of repairs and too small for the growing congregation. However, this church also known as that of Our Lady of Light was reopened under the Vicariate of Bishop Lamy but only for a short time. Final- ly, authorized by the Holy See to sell Iglesia Castrense, the Bishop conveyed it in legal form to Don Simon Delgado and his mother Dona Maria de la Luz Baca de Delgado, T.his transaction took place in 1859 for the consideration of one thousand dollars and the land mentioned above. San Miguel can justly claim title to being the oldest Church in the United States where services have been held uninterruptedly, except during the Indian revolt which lasted from 1680 to 1693. We read in the Story of the San Miguel that it was probably built in 1610. The strongest argument, writes Brother B. Lewis, author of t.he book, fixing the erection of the San Miguel to 1610, or about the time when Santa Fe was officially founded as the Spanish capital of New Mexico, is Father Benavides' report. The report states: The new founders consisted of per- haps two hundred and fifty Spaniards, only fifty of whom can bear arms and about seven hundred souls as servants, so that altogether there may be a thousand counting Spani- ards, Mestizos, and Indians. The new locale lacked the principal thing which was the churchg that which they had, being a poor 'jacal' Cshackj, because the Friars attended first to the building of churches for the Indians 2 Soldiers of the Cross D. 219 Rear View-San Migue whom they converted and wlth whom they lrved So as soon as I became custodran I began to construct the church and convent to the honor and glory of God Clearly therefore rn 1625 when Fray Alonso de Ben avrdes began hrs admrnrstratron rn Santa Fe there alrcady exrsted a small church that had been burlt for the con ycrtcd Inclrans The lrcal was thc parrsh church whlch urgcntly nreded reparrs The Inclrans church berng too small for the general publrc Fray Alonso hastened to demand thc erectlon of the parrsh church and convent The church whrch the Ifather Custodian called or was latcr erected wherc thc Cathedral of St Francrs now stands The fact that rn the meantrme Alonso de Benavrdes and hrs collaborators preferred to make use of thc San 'Nlrgucl Church tbctwecn 1627 and 16393 proves that at thrs dat: thc San Nlrguel was 1n good reparr berng pcrhaps only seventeen years old Be ll as lt may thrs hrstorrcal Church became the oratory of the Brothers and of the boardrng studcnts The Brothers howcycr herrs to the great tradrtron establrshed by thenr Founder rn regard to the crrgnrty and splendor to be mam tarnccl rn what pertarns to the Drxrne Seryrce drd not deem rt proper to kecp the Blessed Sacrament rn the Church untrl rt had been adequately reparrcd and parnted Holy Mass was sard here darly but rt IS only on Aprnl 4 mancntlv The Xerv Reyerend Vrcar General Egurllon of frcrated that day and the Brothers and therr puprls rn a body went to Holv Qommunlon As soon as thrngs wc re somewhat ready the good Bxshop vantecl thc Brothcrs to rcccrve bofrrdcrs Brother Ilrlarrcn who saw thc rmprwcrrshed condrtrons of the countrv and the rncommodrousness of the burldrngs objectcd to the opcnlng of a boardrng school The reat rnsrstancc of thc Brshop howcyer prevarled oyer Brothers oblectr ns who frnally acceeded to hrs wrshes but onlv after the orrgrnal contract had been revrsed to the satrsfactron of both Dartres Thrs contract was srgned November 5 1859 and four days later the frrst boardrng students numbermg srx were receryed These were Juan Perea of Bernalrllo Plorencro Dolores Baca Benrto Baca and Eleuterro Baca all from Las Vegas Amado Montoya de Baca and Lurs Montoya de Baca both from Santa Fe November 15 classes started for the resrdent students and on the twenty second day students were admrtted The enrollment or the frrst year was yerv encouragrng srnce there were some thrrty boardrng students and about frfty day scholars These numbers yarred wrthrn the frrst ten ycars from c ne hundrcd and frfty to tw o hundred and and frftv day stu dents and from thrrtv to frfty boardrng students The begmnrng was 1ndeed yery far from berng preten trous An ADOBE HLT wrth four walls rncommodrous and unsurted for educatronal work plus the great poverty of the country augured lrttle for the successful dexelop ment of the new establrshment Lndaunted farth and 7cal characterrstrc of the drcrples of St John Baptrst de la Salle were the bulwark agarnst dlscouravement The hrgh rdcals whrch had brought thcse Apostles of the Late chlsm to this new mrssron freld cfrabled them to trlumph over the multlple drffrcultres that confronted them Thus they lard the foundatron for the future success of the nascent establrshmenr whose growth wrthrn a hundred years mrght well be the Lord s reward for the prrvatlons and sufferlngs of lts founders QVVVZVFQQM dbwc..!Z7SL,,. jfs IKE- L Z, a fff QZ vgivw 1'-f Zaifsccmsgiaiflzfaawmp ff 2:37321 405, WAT!! send oefnjguq 'Lf' 41256 432344 K 7x64 51,11 C ' ,,A,,L3a.a,g 2' wo-eaifg - I :rfb f' Q cs ' M9351 d ZLkv4ffw-Q41 Jcn4e9 ,Mwst 444 Twqab lhenkygjagf W fnmm 'fL?1f'1 97 Translatron Contract Wrth Hrs Excellency Lamy the Brshop o Santa Pe by Brothers Hrlarren and Gondulph lNoyember 5 18:19 Hrs Excellency takes the boardrng school at h1s ex pense for two years and wrll see to It that the fave Brothers employed w rll recerve an annual salary of S800 00 to lct them have at cost all merchandrse that comes from the Unrted States and from France to dellver 11 to therr establrshment wrthout charge erther for the delivery or transportatron or for duty these expcnses to be pard by the aboye mentroncd Brshop Laundry heat and lrght are also rncluded 3 For therr nourrshment he shall see to rt that they are grven coffee and a drsh of meat at drnner soup two kmds of vegetables and meat or two drshes of meat and from trme to trme some wrne and quite often dessert for supper two drshcs of meat or meat and vegetables and coffee I'ccs recervcd from full trme or part trme boardrng stu dents shall go to the Blshop who wrll supply all the food needed to feed the students as well as the Brothers also pay for lrght wood furnrture and reparrs ln a word the Brothcrs are only professors and admrnrstrators rn the name of Brshop Lamy Approved Brother Hrlarren 51 ' I , I r rv ..' 4 ,Q , . , ,n rr , - , , f , f Y ' ' 8.4 . V I ,- ' . , , l 'X J ,,. I ' .I fy? . ' V . , . JL . - '. Q ' 1 . . V - -3 ,,, jg I K . 'L - Q l ' ax . 1 a. ' ' ' I I. . A ,Q I. ' A A , f C4417 1 ' ' 1 .f ' 7 . ' I f - - , ,, ' . ' 1 L. - f .V V B L nffuzv . f Q N . ' 1 . . X ' 1- s- I ' -s r 1 I I ,t Q . lf, f at f , , X 41-4 4 4 I , . .. 'Qf A on , ,,,, Ia? 1 . . ' H I . - , , , . s K ,a . 21 j f 1 g - H, . e c 1 ' V 'H , K V' V ? c v 4a!- ' el 07? .- . ' 1 ' ' - ' 2 I . 1 ' I Q - Q 1, x , ' f . 1 S , 3 ,7 I .J-.!fL V .'-If J V - , rv 1 , . A 5 . . . . . f f L - Cefj' 41 - ,' 1 - ' - 4515 D -ff - If it , V.-,. -K . x ' ' I I ll' ' ' '- -- - . - - M ' ' f, ' 1 A. 1 , ca , ,- . - ' - If -f, f V . k ' - x x ' 'W ' 3 .J I J A9 . . A . J . A . , . N .. V . ' ' ' ' ' ' - s N' x ' ss . . Y , Q 1861 that the Most Blessed Sacrament was placed per- ,,q,,,,,, A , an y 1, , D V E - my NA. ' I 4 w ' K 'Q , ,ii ' 3 'r' . ' '. ' f ' C .' M . .' ' o 1 ' q V ' -v I s I K I ' k I 3 1 ' - ' - cr - ' -H x '. VXV ' V . ' ' - 'fs - . . ' Av . ' V ' V'V . ,. . v 5. Y k . K H k y . t U . . , V ' V . x V I ' , .5 f , , I - . . . l . , , , V Y 8 V ' y Y . . , . 3' , . ' ' . I 1 - ' K A V Y k V . A 3 .y . . . . a xv '. Y I ' A V V .K ,, A . L' . y S x . at - X ' 1 ' - V - ' , '. V ' . . . V ' 5 ' ' ' . . ' L' . 7 . - ' . A ' I ' -A v V- . H ' . - 1 ' .A V - l 'f l ' i K . V . . Y. K ' D AA - - V v -' 1 I Y r' . . v . I -X V V T li A , . , ' D . . I l V. . - - . . , .. , - - . - I ,, .b , . xl V H. , ' : Y . . . . ' , ' , Q ' ' . r - - . X . . . . .. .V ,, ' v 7 V ' V. ' xl ...a C I WCLVBL 7'-Q-f ,ILLI Stmlfflllll H GVUKIUI L J, Baum iff R ET Claes 1923 Standmg VargaQ John Koury Jose A Gomez Alegandlo Arona Seated Jose Tor1e1lo Brother Martlal Jose P Roybal J ' 'Q ' tr X V-1 l ,- ' n ' A ji- . ' f fx V ' I XC? NNN K 'J W fi x , , ' f ,I Q - n , 'Q ' f 1 ' 6 .Y A 'E Q. .x , X I- l r x ' , ' I 1 N . . . I 4. F 0 'S . .Bbw ' I L . ! . 4 . X A H It Av ,gn U .4 .,,,. .. ..,x.. X s ' X V 91 J ' M- . , .QQJ . ,fx Q ,h 4. 0 X ' P ' , 0 -? 71 Umt 601.2610 DE UAB UIIGUIL 1' IW IIXI hill lllhhllbn Blk Ln new n. mn nonpu- Bl urn In T-'I ua n bmw I wget. l In pn 1- lm H of-of. q su enum up- yan- un pq-on llllhpu gs nl :Alam- F umm. nm LAIIIT1 Clllll duh p ndhrqm ik uh lpn po una- P' W dw- ua-.-,ga ampa- muon: Ill Outstandmg educatlonal quallflcatxons b0S1d9S true re llgl0US Spllll seem to have b en the norm followed by the Pr1v1nc1al Brother Arteme ln selectmg the teachcls he was sending to New MEXICO Brother H1lar1en the fnst director of Salnt Nlxchaels had been an OlllSl3l1d1l'lg teacher ln the Normal School of Axurlllac and an efflclent dlrector ln Father Egulllons alma mater at Clelmont Hls wlde experlence ln the varlous types of schools ple pared h1m excellently to cope wnth whatexer s1tuat1ons mlght arlse 1n h1s new m1ss1on f1eld As a hobby and on h1s own he had acqulred a fluent use of Spamsh ncver realmng that It would be here 1n thls Southwestern ter rltory that he would have to use 1t Brother H1lar1en s stay 1n Santa Fe was short but frult ful February 7 1862 an obed1ence from the Supcuor General ln Parls arrlxed ordering the DIIPCYOI to xc port to a new asslgnment 1n Brest France Thus afttr two years and three months the great educatlonal pxoncez on February 14 bade falewell to thc C1ty of the Holy Palth and to the land he had learned to love He departed for New Orleans where he embarked for France L1ttle else IS known of th1s good Brother for ln h1s hum1l1ty he had asked the Superl r General not to publlsh the usual blography after h1s death Hls request was granted but years later Brother Gabrlel Marle Superlor General rendered hlm the following testlmomal Brother H1l'1r1en former professor o mathematlcs 1n the Supe11or School of Aurxllac and afterwards Dlrector of the boardlng school of Clermont pr1or to h1s departure to New lvlf-BXICO was a remarkable teacher and an excmplary rellglous In h1s hum1l1ty he requested the most Honarable Brother Joseph Super1or General merely to recommend hlm after h1s death to the prayers of the Brothcxs but not to pub llsh any necrologlcal notlce The desue of the humble rellglous was granted We are happy to be able now at least to render thlg late homage to the memory of our old and venerated teacher 1 Brother Gondulph successor to B other l-l1lar1en nad dlrected the school at Romagnat Wlth remarkable success for manv years When he took ovex the adm1n1strat1on and dlrectxon of the communlty and school h1s past ex perlence manlfested ltself Startlng wlth the academlc he revxsed and added to the number of subjccts taught Thus the subjects ranged from those for beglnners up to those of college level The prospectus above oubllshed after these fflOd1IlCall0f1S were made glVBS R adlng Wrltmg Grammar Geography the use of the Globe Hlstorv Arlth met1c,Bookkeep1ng Algebra Geometry, 'Vlensuratlon Sur xeylng, Drawmg Log1c Greeg Flench Latm, Nlusle, In strumental and Vocal MUSIC Engllsh was stressed and the puplls had to speak It durlng recesses 1 Necrologlcal Notices-1904 The Founders Improvements ln the physxcal plant makmg way for better teachmg and school llfe The porches that sur rounded the patio a classroom and the flrst wood floor 1n the Old San Mlguel Church were all needed 1m provements made under h1s adm1n1strat1on He was also instrumental ln Obtalfllflg SIX more Brothers from the East to help w1th the ever lnereasmg number of both boarding and day students These new members of the communlty were Brothers Jumanus Gelaslan Catullus, Flllbcrt Meldan and John Joseph Two of these men later on became Dlrectors of the school 1n Mora Brother Gon dulph was replaced by Bxothex Cetamlus September 10 1867 and the folme went back to New York Blothcl Gu xmxus was xexsatlle The transltlon from a French classroom 1n Clermont to the Santa Fean sltua tion of a hundred years ago d1d not bother the young teachmg had won for hlm many frlends among the Reverend Clergy the people of Santa Fe and his puplls On Aprll 17 1866 he was sent to Mora as Dlrector Brother Dom1t1an who had founded the school there November 1 1865 reslgned from the D1rectorsh1p The tryln 'md almr t unbearable condltlons of the place need ed a dynamlc leader to get thxnps started W1th1n a vear Brother had accompllshed h1s m1ss1on and so on September 10 1867 wc fud htm back As pr1nc1pal the sklllful admlnlstrator and educator spared nothmg to ralse the academlc standards Shortly fter h1s apoomtment the Escuela de San Mlguel St Mlchaels school became E1 Coleglo de San Mlgucl St Mleracls College To the dutles of Prmclpal and Dlrector of the Crmmumty those o V1s1tor and Master of Novlees fox the Provlnce of New MEXICO were added A talented musclan and smger all the above mentloned respf 1Sll'll1llCS tllcl not dctcv hlm from Clfd1C3llIlg h1s great gifts to the servlce of the Church He was also the dxrrctox of the Cathedral cho1r and 1ts organlst Many were the French hymns that he translated 1nto Spanish and lKl1lCh ne taught h1s cho1r whxch eventually conslsted mostly of the puplls of the school Several years after Brothers death one of h1s confreres wrote 1n the annals of Salnt Mlchaels The few SUTVIWOFS left now old men take a laudable pr1de 1n hav1ng been members of that chcw rd ttll tcllght 1n smgmv the hymns and Masses taught them by Brother Jaramlllo or Jeramlus as they called h1m June 1 1869 Brother Geramlus ten years of frultful apostolate 1n Santa Fe ended Ordered to report to New York Brother obed1ently began the long and perllous Joulney back to the East Coast where Brother Faelle Assltant to the Superxor General welcomed hlm and handed hlm hns new asslgnment The orders deslgnated QUIIO Ecuador as his new mlsslon fleld Venturing and HFLXIOUS to get to Ecuador rather than tr X1 WLILLH ua Parls and around Tlerra del Fuego he asked and obtamed permlssuon to go by land Hawlng purchased a good r1d1ng horse he started on h1S long wld tuesome Joulney reachlng QUIIO two months after h1s departure from New York but four month sooner than by boat In Ecuador Brother Geramlus became a very close frnend and educatxonal collaborator wxth the martyred PIINIUCIII Gaxcla Moten Hls Nllssxonary zeal, xn thls h1s newly adopted country, knew no bounds By 1875 Wlth the 1d KT the P1es1dent, he had opened s1x promxslng schools He hved long enough 1n thls South Amerlcan Re public to see all these schools flournshmg He returned to Clemont, France, at the entreaty of the SUPEFIOFS Y ' SAN A lf. N ' . C0 nn ann.-m 1- L.. mum vsm.-M.. .1.f-,M -1. ..-1. .., , ' ' ' v 1- ,enum in . . J B mn sq. 11.-tin., .N - -u-mum slqnmn un:-pu un -du'-fm m.m4..,f1...... . - - - ewlifainl, . A lnlvilblnlbwfluunynvllliluinllol , . rn mm hump-r4g .I wa. . 7. ' ' I. . uammeum non A. um'-, an Altnhfl- ' ' ' ' . la le vu. IA Agrlmonuuu. ol , ln hgvn ul lung- 4 , mn ' ' - .I 0 ' an ra mnmnmnl y vt--.1 W- 1 1- ug umm-wt ...WM-...1 cn ., mt- ...-.- . - . - fu.. eu ann,-v q-...lrw.-.- W- .n-mu-.-tt tl., 4 L , . - .num-m-u un. nm- ... n..w.vf.aM.. . , I . , 1'l1lNI.8 . s - doll I3 Ulm! lbw blind nl ulnnlulg v' - ' ' D1 ' ,, ,, .. , v ll lnlulu I -' '., , ., lu-mam nl .n,....f,,--.tt..,.-...u..... - . . . . vs A V - - 1 v mn qw mv ' 0 um.. f..,...l.f . .. .V . ' ' s f . : - ln...-..-am, mum, vw. .sp-l1u..r,....t, .. . . . - - - - puns. uf. , ' ' - I 2 vt bl. la lluhnu pulon ull: ln ln 1: 4 ll.:-I. 4 , 1 --,ap-va.-mp.-.vim . llnbneolhsluo ln: -ual. ,fum 4. fm-..mhn. v 5--nanny. -x l V ' ' ' , 4 ' K , , -.mnjuvu Q us 'hh -can m an cot..-., nuulnwnumen ,-M - y- V . .N -I ' ' un A 0 1 m'Lrnl , X , I V - l , , V , - - - . 1 , . . . BAIVA ls - .IMIYIII ll Illll . ' . . . , A , . ' V L - . . . - . - ,- 0 teacher. W1th1n seven years hxs devotedness and successful - - v ' -- N1 -1 . . . Y 7 . n . . - . ' Y 7 - ' ' . ' . . . . - 4 ' Y ' , . N . - .1 Y Y . . . . . H ' Q' , 'A 551 1 -f ' ' - ' ,' v v L ' ' 4 ,- - . , . . . ' ' 1 ' ' ' 7 V Q . . . . ' , fs ' . ' 4 ,, ' v ' ' 7 - Q - 1 4 - e v - ' ' ' v L ' ' ! ' A 1 - 1 v - I Y ' - . . 1 . - . . 4 . X , , , ' , . , Y , , . A , ' ' ' V . . . . , , I , . . .0 . V - y 4 . . , . 1 I , ' 4 7 ' ' ' ' v a , . ' ' ' ' ' ' v u v ' Y . f, , f f . . 1 V ' I ' . H : , . . . . . . . ' 'J 7 V H ' N I 1 f r, a . L . A. , b , f v A v , . 7 l v ' ' - I ' , ' ' H F 4 - I V I V 7 . l ' - h ' . . . . w y . . V Y Y ' v 11 . ' ,, . , . . , . . v 1 . .Q . sall , .goeth I t. 1 .- . . . l . - ' l . . . U ' 1 ' ' 1 1 ' - - . ' ' . X 1 . 1 K- - ff- v . D ' ' I . 5 ' W . '- fl V . - L 1 1 . . . - v - v , - ' . , , , I I . , , ' x f 1 - - - ,. ' 4-.' ' ' ' Y V 4 - v ' 4 v . . V ' tv ' v ' ' ' ' . F . ' Y . . Y ,., A b t for a much needed rest, Though far advanced 'in age, even in the closing years of his life he worked for the missions he loved, by teaching Spanish to his younger religious confreres about to be expulsed from France in 1903. Death ended his marvelous and fruitful apostolate in 1906, Brother Galmier Joseph, the youngest of the founders of Saint Michael's, was twenty-five years old, seven of which he had spent teaching at Cler- mont February 9, 1872 a Novitiate was formally opened for the New Mexico Province under the dlrec tion of Brother Botulph However by April 29 the number of Postulants warranted the need for a Mas ter of Novices Brother Galrnier was chosen for this pos1t1on Just about this time a movement was started by M1 Juan Perea of Bernalllo to obtain Brothers for that locality It IS of interest to note that this gentleman was the first boarder registered thirteen years previously His frank appeal in favor of the uneducated people of his town moved Brother Bo tulph to open a school there Mr brothers gave one of their houses to bulldxng and assumed all financial The question of personnel to staff the Perea and his sei v e as school responsibilities new school was solved by Brother Botulph assuming the duties of P.rihe1 Galmiez who was sent to open St Nicholas School December 6 1872 In Bernalillo as well as in Mora later on people IEEE I WOM DI- FAWILLE noticed the remarkable improvement in the behavior of the students and great progress in their studies under his administration. Transferred to St. Louis, Brother continued his splendid work there until his death in 1903. Brother Optacian, also known as Augustin, taught English up to September 1, 1860. Finding it hard to master Spanish he asked to return to the East. Brother Domitian, a Canadian, come to replace him. The foregoing biogxaphncal accounts are but sket ches of the heroic lives of the five Christian Brothers who opened Salnt Michaels school From 1859 to 1872 we find the names of fifteen other members of the Institute who came to New Mexico either to re place or to add to the number of teachers in the glowing educational 1nst1tut1on All these men de serve the undying gratitude of generations for they had to sacrifice plenty to accompllsh what they did Lack of space prevents the giving of a detailed ac count of their lives but the following narrat1ve 1n which two Christian Brothers figure might be a guage of what they all expected Journeylng to Santa In 1867 Bishop Lamy brought new laborers to the Territory He had been to Rome to rcport on the Plenary Council of Baltimore Aboard the Europa accompanying the Bishop to the missions of New Mexico were the first Jesuits to come to this State, several priests and ecclesiastical students PERSONNEL DE LETABLISSEMEIT DES ratass nes :cours cnntnznuss o Mabffffiixfw' ib L LXII IH ll HUM IMILIII OBHW ATIONS Jr' ,511 -Lau, fdjd I ,Jung jfffw JUL: r KO aff, ff IM K! 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I ...g V ... ..-.. f.f,..., I - I M, ,, ,,,,,4, ,,,,,. , ' 1 lg k1 1 i l -- 4 ---- ff - ' - Death buster ' Alphonsa Thompson l In St Louls these were Jomed by three Slsters of Loretto Slster Mary Kostka Gautreaux Slster Isa bella Trealler and Slster Mary Alphonsa Thompson two SISIBFS of Charlty of Cmcmnatt S1ster Augustine and Sister LOUISE two Chrxstnan Brothers Brother August and Brother Augustlne of Mary On June 6 the party of twenty s1x persons left for Leavenworth where they enjoyed the hospztahty of Blshop Mxege bc ore contlnumg to the Jesuit College of St Mary s of the Pottowatomles Kansas and the western plams June 29 Feast of Salnt Peter and Samt Paul the m1ss1onar1es left c1v1l11at1on behlnd to face the mur derous attacks of the more than one thousand Indlans rc ported on the warpath a severe apprent1ccsh1p the Western mlsslons mdee d Provxdentlally on July 1 a Mexlcan caraxan con ducted by Don Franclsco Baca of Qanta Fe was met '1h1s cons1sted of 80 wagons whlch the better to pro tect the Blshop prlests and rellglous formed two IIUQS wlth caraxan ln the center This slowed the caravan but the repeated attacks of the Indlans made thts neccessary for the safety of the Blshop and h1S party The flercest attack took place on July 22 More than four hundred Indlans started the battle ln pur su1t of some flfteen scouts sc nt out to HQCPIIBID the whereabouts of the saxages The turnmg pomt 1n thxs battle was effected by Father Coudert who shot WN pf Charlev Bent the son of one of the prmcxpal Ch18fS, after neazlv three long hours of ceaseless flrmg We learned somet1me after w rote one of the Padres ln the caravan that three 0' the Drmcxpal chlefs had been kllled one one severely wounded As for us we were v1s1b1y protected by Provldence havlng for hours fought an enemy flve tlmes as numerous as oursclwes and more accustomed to flght we dld not hate a s1ngle member of our party wounded Our good RICXICHNS attrlbuted lh1S wonderful protectlon of God to the presence of Blsnop Lamy and the m1s1son HIIQS and showed st1ll more zealously 1f posslble thelr respect and devotxon to h1m 1 Cholera however, dld not spare the membels of the caravan Several ched but once agam Proxldence took care of the mls slonarles One Slster of Loretto Slster Alphonsa Thompson took slck and dled probably of frlght rather than of the cholera Once out of danger Blshop Lamy and h1s new co laborers left the caravan and hurrled on to Santa Fe On August 11 they reached the c1ty amld the jublla tions o thousands lncludlng the band from the school A solemn Te Deum was chanted ln thanks gnmg at the Cathedral Brothers August and Augustme of Mary were glad to be home Wlth the commumtv Nlanv were the t1mes 1n thexr long stay ln Santa Fe that thev related with v1v1d detail the story of thelr adwentures and ha1r breadth escapes 1 Defouri D 114 gun .c V , W lfxt. .M W will dx 3 Was.. u 'L M. W' ar 'nn ' ink' , c. 'P Wwe. . ,V . A fl, 37 V . ,tar K . . . , - V . V . - V V . 0 ' Q u - sv v V 9 , ,Y U . . . . Q , . V V V V Ai V . t -so V v v w ' ' , V . I . Q 1 B Q1 I D I 1. . . ' , ' ' y V '1 fm ' f, ' 2' ' V . , D ' . ,. ' . ' ' Q. . ., . ., . . . ty ' ' 1 V . . i. . . . .V . . V .1 - 1 , ' ' ' - V V V. -VV x . V . . V V V . V . . ,, 3 f V 1 1 . . , 4 il ' ' V. ' q V V - V. . V. . V . K V K V V V . . V . , . . . V V V v 5 Y 1 - . V. 7 . 1 V 5 - . t. .' r V V r V I . . A , ., , . A ' v' I1 . . . . , 1 ' .' I A 7 ' . I . . O Q ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' v ' ' ' K - . , . v V , . V , , . ' Y .. . , V v ' 1 7 7 . v ' A, 3 0 4 ' 'X V A V , ,.,'ca. X , V , ' 14' ,HQ 2 gf xl I ', 5 ,', V. Q A -, 1 . .Q , V I, .V VV. I .. . 4- , . , s .'a '-. 1 an I ' .. ' .1 in J p V . X I9 Q V VV V 'L 'ts - . sq 1. I 4' ' i - ' ,M ,u 0 - . ' . -A y. W 'it . . V ' V . an V - ,, . ' ' run' x - ' Wt ' r - ' - 5 , , V V 1. e 1 i -5 . V . ,u. ,M , ' V fi, - -.fx L V Vkiv. in 11.2. -1 4 r ' 1 ,, . ' ' I A ' I. . V K , - , ' 14, ' I' ' 'A y. A I v - n I V , ' ' ' .-M V . f ' ' mf- -If 'lp'-vu ' ' ' Fr f' L vt' .K 4 . ' ' 'Q' W 5 J. U' .rg m f 'iffy' ' 1'4 V, ' ut, f d. ,, 11: a- .tu 'r at 4.4M ' 'M' gp I - ,4iw,, V - V ' ' . ,- 'V V. . sn H .K - ' .- - '. 1 -'f , ' -M - 1, ' , ,V 'ff V ' ff J' A a , xx s , , tx .4 '- -' sz -. ff, ar rg, 0' I-1 A Brother Domitian The Director of the school and Visitor of the District at the time of the arrival of these two teachers was Brother Domitian. Lacking the enthusiasm of his predeces- sors he began to visualize certain problems as unsurmountable. The increased enroll- ment in both boarding and day students became a major problem. It was difficult to obtain not only the sufficient number of teachers, but qualified teachers able to master Spanish. The inadequacy of the buildings to properly house the growing student body added to the problem so long as the property did not belong to the Brothers, since they did not wish to build on it. Financially the conditions were satis- factory and could have solved these pro- blems, at least partially if not entirely, but Brother Domitian had decided to close the schools in New Mexico. The Bishop and Priests aware of this exerted all their influence in seeing that the Brothers would remain. Providence also intervened, Had it not been for the Franco-Prussian war that rendered all communications with the Superiors, in Paris impossible, the schools probably would have been closed. Circumstances during this period had obliged the Superior General to delegate all administrative powers in the United States to Brother Patrick, Visitor of the New York District. Since Brother Patrick was fully aware of what was happening in New Mexico, the petition for closing the schools was energetically opposed. To remedy the situation he chose Brother Botulph, inspector of the paroc.hial schools of New York. This devoted and exemplary educator augured success in difficult un- dertakings. With an obedience and a com- mand of Go to Santa Fe and make it go, the great religious started West. CEE X AHF, DIED DEC! A fo-6. 'S X 4 cfffzr' fx 3? 93 'Q Ou, 6 '5vzX39 XRHQ15 , K -XX 'Wi -...v X I A,.5 T W4 a Q 'b AMQH3 XQN x Q85 LY.. S S Q1 A f, ,if ' ' I? ' V ,fix .1 ,-, 1 X .','f.A v-.wyii , ., ... ... ., . s ' N Q , x 7 - X ,M 18.51. .ff N- 2- X . xx JZ .A I I' x V J Y 'wa- E - ,..,.. wx 2 H' , if f f X ? X , T R 3 . 1 , . iw. , Gif .. 4 ., ' 'Z f'vC '-A M f- I X ' A ' Q gal 917' gg ' ' A5 V. 4' fl x I , 'Q' f 'f 'TE Y? 1 . . '39, 'AX . Gov 0 Q9 f 9 QA W O JM ,. 1- S vi Qydw' ' N ,, f V . ,. .r ' if f W' 9 Z I gb 5 A ' ir -P-Q 5 - ' J! rl Doc .XL cb' MU 5' F.D:n.cAoo -S S ,fag GDL CLASS or V. Ii- .-: - In 1. I. . , K1 55? cm' 5 'Z 5 2 'h N . CLASS or 1935? Y ? - f!.:'.lf 5 'E P Ns. ll Unif VIII Brother Botulph Makes It Go Brother Botulph whose life was above the average and who has left a most envlable record In Santa Fe was bom In Netderzessen Germany March 2 1833 Peter Joseph Schneider was 18 years old when hls genuinely rellgxous famlly decIded to emlgrate to Amerlca In New York the pious young man with exceptional religious and scholas IIC background became acquaInted with the Christian Brothers and their mission Pleased wIth thexr way of life and vocatIon he sought admission to the Brotherhood The religious mode of hfe of the Brothers of the Chris tIan Schools and thelr pedagoglcal traditlons he learnt In Montreal where he was admttted to the NOVIIIHIP During this year of religious traimng he set hImself with a truly loyal heart to become a true dlSClpl9 of St John BaptIst de La Salle In fact ll was here that he fitted himself for the flfty four years of active servtce In the cause of Chrls tIan Education of youth The great love he atquired for the life of the ChrIstIan Brothers Influenced three of hIs brothers to 1oIn the Order The period of formation being over Peter Joseph Sch nelder Brother Botulph In the religious life began teach Ing In KIHESIOH and remained there f1V6 years SUCCESSIVE ly from 1858 to 1868 that unusual sense of responsiblllty which characterlzed hlm In hfe was exerclsed In Roches ter Detroit Baltimore and Phlladelphla BeIng appolnted Sub Director of the Second Street Commumtv n New York and Inspector of the parochial schools In the same city under his guidance these schools soon were recogrIIzed as the most eff1cIent schools In the cntv His unquestlonable Integrity and devotlon to duty ecllps ed his frail constltutlon and rendered him Invulnerable to the rigors of hIs work Dynamic energv perv aded hls heme and so we fInd the Inspector always on hand to Itplaee an ailing Brother and carrylng on untIl the latter had re covered hIs health HIs skills and knowledge were dIversI fled enablIng hIm to replace any teacher ID a creditable manner Brother Patrick certainly made no mtstake In the choice of man to solve the sltuatlon In whIch Samt Michael s llxgh found Itself at this time The salutary Influence of this drxvtng force was needed to Inspire courage and confldence anew Brother Botulph reached Santa Fe November 2 1870 Here he was destlned by Provldence to spend thirty six years of devoted service to the cause of Education Two schools beset by manv problems comprised the New Mexico ProvInce namely Saint lVlIcheals In Santa Fe and St Marys In Mora Brother was Provlnctal of the PFOVLFICE and Director of Saint Mlchaels In his first letter to Brother Patrlck he stated that there was little to IHSIDIFC confidence or enthusiasm In what he found to work 3VOldlI'lg decisions as to his future course untIl hr had vt Iy JUCIICIUUSIN studied the situation To amehoiate the teaching problem the Director took over the first class for a year untIl he was able to obtaIn more Brothers from CaIIfornIa and Samt Louls When these Brothers arrived he was able to devote hls time to the dutles In herr nt In admIn1stratIon and the Improvement of the school plant One of the Brothers who wItnessed the change for the better at thls time writes as follows Within a short time after his arrival matters seemed to Improve slowlv It ll true but the discouragement of the past was at an end His InspIrIng example put new heart Into hIs to laborers His marvelous energy and ontxmlsm brought success a little nrarer every day From unexpected sources unds be gan to trickle ID more students arrived repairs wfre made and though luxurtes were never on the program at least the situation was saved and there began a steady though slow advance towards substantial Improvement lndred ll mav be truthfullv asserted that If the sons of Samt John BBPIISI de La Salle are gatherlng SDIFIIUBI harvests In New Nlexieo today II IS due under God s Bless Ine to the indomitable falth and courage of Brother Botulph At the end of August we had a good examlnatton wrote Brother Botulph as he finished his fIrst scholastic year In Santa Fe Here we mav remark that In those rlavs the School year extended from November to the end of AUEI-lSt thus allowing the bovs to help with the harvest New teachers added to the efflciencv of the classroom and the academic problem seemed to have been almost solved Brother Botulph s next move was to Improve the bulldlngs The same one story adobe buIldIng of 1859 poor ly equipped and Inadequate In every wav stIll served a much larger enrollment From the time of Brother Gon dulphs Improvements nothing seemed to have been done to the building Hence in September the classrooms the dormltory the washrooms and wardrobes were remodeled or repalred to the extent of one thousand four hundred thlrtv eight dollars and forty cents Being Provincial Brother Botulph was also Pl'90CCUPl0d with the school of Mora Advised by the Brothers that the tuItIon from day students was not su f1cIent for survival he decided to go to Califomia to try to obtain one or two Brothers to see If with a boarding school thev would fare any better The twenty days that lt took for thts trlp were well spent for Brother Dattve accompanied Brother Bo tulph hack to Santa Fe Thus a boarding section was open ed at St Marys In Mora and the school was able to continue a few more years During this trIp no doubt Brother Botulph had ample time for reflection on the problems of his schools and possible solutions The faceliftmg Job done during hIs ah sence Improved matters but much remamed to be destred Judgtng that no amount of repairs could make the build Ing adequate for school prupose he concluded that a new building was the only proper solution AcquIstIon of the property or a mutual agreement with the BIshop had to be reached before this could be undertaken Bishop Lamy had full confIdence In Brother Botulph and an agreement guaranteeing freedom of procedure to both partles was reached wlthout trouble or delay The Brothers were authorlzed to proceed with whatever Im provements or construction they felt was needed Should the Brothers at anvtime be obliged to leave Santa Fe the Bishop would refund the amount they had Invested IH Improvements or bulldings With this safeguard the Brother Director proceeded with his plans A one story adobe building to be used as an additional dormitory for the boys and a community room for the Facultv was buIlt Immediately at the cost of one thousand and six hundred and sixty eight dollars and fifty cents This buIldIng was finally torn down ln 1926 up to whIch time lt served various purposes Just about this tIme August 27 1874 an edItorIal in the Santa Fe New MGXICHH leads us to appreciate the small hulldlg program at Its true value Shall Santa Fe have a Pubhc School House queried the edItorIal and then added It Is a dtsgrace a bumlng shame an outrage upon the progress of the age that here In Santa Fe the oldest town In the freest most progressive and enhghtened re public that ever existed since the creation o' the world there IS not a single public school house Let a school house a good modern school house not an adobe flat be built In some eligible portion of the cIty This editorial undoubtedly provoked the city fathers IIS successful efforts announced that Judge Ortiz the president of the school board has accordingly closed the purchase of a school lot containing about an acre of land near the Guadalupe Church on the Albuquerque Road with a building on ll for seven hundrrd and flflV dollars and the title has been transferred to the county for school purposes Thus lh less than two wteks rom the tlme the suggestlon was flrst made In tht New XIOXICHH has Santa Fe become the possessor of a publIc building wi h ample plav grounds and In a few weeks will have the furniture and a puhllc srhool house equipped and free to every chlld whether rich or poor high or low or what ever may be his nationality We record these evidences of progressiveness on the part of our people with pleasure as an earnest of a dawn of better days Two elementary public schools existed In Santa Fe prior to the appearance of this edItorIal Public School of pre emct 4 for boys and the Agua FrIa school Subsidwed by Countv monev both were taught and administered hy the C'hrIstIan Brothers The former consIstIng of two classes was located on Saint Nllchaels campus and had at one tIme over two hundred students It functioned rom 1868 to 1883 The later was short llved lastlng onlv two school sessions Brother Amadeo taught the first class and Brother Raphael the second To help them Brother Bo tulph hlred a lav teacher who took over after the two Brothers withdrew February 1873 An unexpected Increase of puplls at the College and a decrease to 60 at the Agua FrIa School IS the reason glV8n for the withdrawl of the Brothers The yearlv salary which the Brothers received from the public funds Including the rental of the buildings was S350 00 a piece Smce the school falled to open at the begmnmg of the school year In November 1873 and a whole year passed by without a school for the children of the locality we can understand better the force behind thls edItorIal , ' ' ' , , . . I- I I h ' ' A ' t . . I . v ' ' , .- I , . . ' Q V V D ' ' I l - . I . . . . Y. . 1 , - . . . . . . , V . ' ' ' , ' . I ' I ' ' A I - u ' . I ,, . ' . . l . I I. V . H l ' ' ' ' 1 q - I I ' 'I ' . ' . . l . I I . , ,, I . ' . ' I D l V - I I .I '. . . . ' . ,, ' However, like a good administrator, which he was, he set to HCI. fOr IWO weeks lalel' U19 New M9XlCfiY1 lUblliil'It 0V9l' . . . . . - - ' . . -I ' I ' - I - ' . . . V . M . . I . , , - VV ' , , A .' . 4 . ' I . ' I ,' ' -' V A I A. . I , Y ,', -- , I h N k I 4 A V I . . , l A . ' . ' .' ,I I V X I 4 ' - A -I I ' ,, I ' - It , . Y Y 1 I V - , , I . I I ' ' ' I . ' , - - - J Mm-twat lf MJ Zuvwquwi 47.ij,-4qufDdovlm.....' -.17tg,1Jfi,-f !fi!L4L.vm,u4, K-BD JOt'rUf Os.,!.A 0Lffff.bxJz1yu...1A,4AJQv.Df'4!-'Zbf-Jf.s:rv- LQ. 5 QLD 0t,!r4.4x1Atx,Y Lkfyv-DD CJUKAJDD 41 4vJf1.fTJ-I 17 tt, foe fits L f'UbTl.-.C sllzssxua., M dust 1,59 x fJKUshX,g '9,vfl1,f,,L 'I 4MoQ,Lx,vs..-4 1' K 5 ,L,b1ucQg- fipve to .,3fsCns.D fhl-11s9AfL Lv-11 bl ftvrfuw-N' LLLA. 11'-1 xl 21 11021, C-BL.. K tts Offtmft Translatnon fir? Let all those who shall see this know that we not only authorize the Brothers of Santa Fe to make a oollectlon to construct a new bulldmg m the Capltal which I5 serv necessarv but that we also shall be well pleased If all those who can afford lt help them ln thls great enterprlse A more convenient physlcal plant certalnly attracted more students but we must not overlook the academlc The standards set by Brother Gondulph 1n 1865 had 1m proved and the reputatlon of Salnt Mlchaels as an 1n st1tut1on of learn1ng had spread not only throughout New Mex1co but m Ar1zona Texas and Mexlco The Course of studles 1n the FIFSK Class compr1sed Chrlstlan Doctrlne Orthography Engllsh Grammar Readmg Elocutlon Com merc1al Law Engllsh Composltlon Ar1thmet1c Spanlsh graphy U S Hlstory Vocal MUSIC Bookkeeplng CS1ngle and Double Entryj Chemlstry and Assaylng and Geome try In 1874 by an Act of the Terrltorlal Legnslature Salnt Mlchael s College was lncorporated Wlth the rlght to con fer degrees and bestow all llterary honors usually con ferred by un1vers1t1es of learmng Thls act of 1ncorpora tlon was renewed 1n 1883 Th1S added recognltlon and honor together Wlth the great publlclty glven the school on the occaslon of the conferrlng of the Pallum on Archblshop Lamy June 16 1875 soon rendered the bulldmgs too small to accom modate the students By a decree of Pope Plus IX of February 12 1875 Santa Fe was erected 1nto a Metropoh tan See Smce the college could offer better accommoda tlons to handle the lmmense crowd than the Old Samt FFHHCIS Cathedral the memorable and hxstorlcal ceremony took place on the north Slde 0 the vard by the entrance to the Old San Mlguel Church The school choir sang the Mass and the band headed the solemn processlon to and from the Bishops palace before and 60 after the ceremonles The thousands from all over the dlocese that asslsted spread the good word about El COl9glO de San Mxguel Both the Archblshop and Brother Botulph reahzed the necess1ty for expanslon However the former lacked the necessary funds to f1nance a new structure and the latter hesltated to bu11d so long as the property belonged to the dlocese Fully confldent that 1f the affalr was left ent1rely 1n the hands of Brother Botulph lt would be properly taken care of the Archb1shop not only gave the go ahead slgnal but o fered to sell the whole property to the Congregatlon Plans to buxld ln large scale were lmrnedlately made by Brother Botulph The requlred author1zat1on from the Superlor General Brother Irl1de was obtalned WlthOUt delay The Superlor had the same confxdence 1n Brother Botulph that the Archlblshop had and though he knew there were no funds avallable for the project he granted the requlred perm1ss1on by cablegram W1th the perm1ss1on of h1S superlor and a letter of the Archblshop backing up h1s campalgn he began to ralse the needed funds In most sectlons throughout the Terrltory he met W1th success Here and there he met W1th rebuffs but nothmg could d1scourage the beggar of Chrlst Nleanvslule Brother Botulph was canvassmg the Terr1 tory for funds Brothers Baldwln and Mor1nus contacted donors ln Santa Fe and they met w1th quite a success the Most Reverend Archblshop headlng the l1St W1th f1V9 hundred dollars The clergy and the cltxzens of Santa Fe were lndeed X ry llberal wxthout passlng by the mlte of the poor whlch helped to ralse the entlre amount col lected to fxve thousand dollars 1 1 St Mxchaels archxves I 4 4. ' X Y A F, X, 1 -A L 1 4- 4 ' ' - M... I 7 f L91 'fax e y A 7 fn? 4 1 I 1, 1 fl 1 . ' . .., . . . . . ' 'I . .L Y . H K , K . . A . . il I , . - - uv . . . , - - ' . . . . , . , . . ' Y 1 y v v ' ' , . . . . . v 7 r v ' ' ' 1 7 Y Y , ' . Type-Wrltlng, Mensuration, Geography, Algebra, Phono- P - i Y . . - Y . l ' Y l 5 . . . . Y u . . . . l ' Y U - ' ' . H - ' 1 O . . . . . ,, . . v f 1 , . Y , - - - . I . u v . .- A I . . .- ' ' . 1 Y KA 1 Q . ' 7 P , - 4- 7 . . i . - . ye . , . . , ' ' v K - n - The buxldlng when completed and furmshed cost mneteen thousand three hundred slxty two dollars and thxrteen cents After the above letter was wrltten only elght more contrxbutors were added to the 11st ra1s1ng'the total amount collected to we thousand dollars The bulldmg remarkable for IIS beauty and IIS perfect adaptatxon to school purposes was crown ed wlth a 1718195110 power whlch rose above all the bulldmgs of tht cltv For years 1t was the largest and most stately bulldlng ln Santa Fe as well as the hlghest adobe bulldlng erected ln the Southwest The admmlstratlon class and faculty rooms oc cupx d the flrst two floors These renewed an abun dance of llght and were of easy access Two large dormltorles were on the thlrd floor The lmmedlate result of the OIQCIIOH of the mag mfxcent and stately school bulldmg was a large xn crease 1n the number of students Thls notlceable lncrease helped f1nanc1ally and the debt mcurred was rapldly pald The unprecedented accomplxshment by a school adm1n1strator whose great confldence ln God and savlorfalre had made posslble what at flrst appeared very doubtful galncd lum many more rlends and backers ln h1s educatlonal endea vors The Archb1shop offered to sell the school pro pertles of Santa Fe and Bernallllo to the Chr1st1an Brothers thus removing any further worrv concermtg expanslon Brother Superlor General hence delegated Brother Paullan VISIIOF of the Salnt Louls Provmce to make the transactlon On July 31 1881 the papers were slgned by both partles For San Mlguael Church the old school bulldmgs and the grounds surroundlng them the sum of three thousand dollars was pald and one thousand, more for the property of Bernallllo Adult edueatlon and the educatlon of the Ind1ans were two mnoxatlons successfully trled followlng the completlon of the new bulldlng Brother Osmond taught the former for a number of years achlevmg great results Brothers Jude Nllchael and Flllberto took care of and taught twenty one Indlan boys ln a separate department of the school Father J H Defourl wrote concernmg these Ind1ans I have examlned them myself and l1ke many others who VlSlI9d them was astomshed at thelr remarkable profxclency m readlng and wr1t1ng English and Spanlsh as well as ln arlthmetlc Though succes ful the venture could not contlnue for ln spxte of the prom1se of support by the Federal Government and even a tr1p to Washlngton by Brother Botulph nf f1nanc1al help ever came Thus forced the Most Reverend Archblshop and the school to absorb the debt mcurred by these Ind1ans and as nelther was ln a pos1t1on to afford th1s extra expense the venture had to be glven up Brother V1s1torD1rector Botulph left us no slde llghts on h1s tour to F3159 funds but from h1s report o e an t at w s a n w and great experlence One hundred and eight persons contr1buted to the bulldmg fund Sexen hundred and thlrty fne sheep equnalent ln those days to about an equal amount ln cash were glven by twenty one donors two young oxen worth slxteen dollars was a contrlbutfon another glft was a helfer valued at eight dollars st1ll another Gave two choice goats valued at one dollar each lumber also flgured among the contrlbutlons Resldents of Las Vegas con trlbuted three hundred and forty s1x dollars The other towns in the Terr1tory contrlbuted lesser amounts The campalgn started March 16 1877 and ended xn May 1879 However, March 15 1878 confldent that the f1nanc1al support he had thus far recelved would contmue Brother slgned a bulldlng contract wlth Messrs G Monmer and G Coulloudon Flfteen days later the contractors started to tear down the bulldlng along College Street On Aprll 11 the corner stone was blessed by Reverend Father Eguxllon and laxd wlth llttle ceremony but wlth great rejoxclng at the College The three story adobe structure one hundred and s1xty feet long and thxrty feet wlde was ready for occupancy November 1 1878 when the scholastxc year began In May that same year Brother Botulph wltnesslng hls dream come true wrote the followmg letter To the frlends and benefactors of the Chrls tlan Brothers ln New MEXICO Ladxes and Gentlemen As our new bulldlng rapldly approaches completlon I th1nk the present an opportune t1me whereln to ten der you our SIHCQFG thanks for the axd you so gen erously extended us 1n our undertakmg Though we are well aware that you do not court publlclty nev ertheless Justlce towards vou and lndeed towards ourselves calls for a proper recogmtlon of your pralseworthy efforts for the erectlon of an educa tlonal 1nst1tut1on not wholly unworthy of the present pos1t1on and future prospects of our terrxtory The followm IS a full statement of RQCQIDKS March 1877 to June 1879 tfollows ltemlzed statement four pages longb Number of contrxbutors Amount contr1buted S4056 50 Cash pald out on bu1ld1ng to date 8629 15 Cash yet to be pald for completlon of bu1Idmg excluslve of furmture etc about 650000 We confldently hope that before the close of the present year the number of contrlbutors and the amount contrlbuted w1ll have been greatly 1n excess of the above exh1b1t Names of contrxbutors and the amounts paxd w1ll be entered ln the Records of the Instltutlon D! ,Aiwa X rfffinv, Lu ' r ff J J J fn, L. few fwfr C 6,154 ,cwaffif 16711 51 1 Ilf I !Z if 1114 ff ,W f?,,. azz. fn Jill' fl 1, x ,N 66,4 W J .A 0,111 1... j fav' n-1 ff ,.ff 44...,f.f-f If .fry 724' Y' f 4 f ill If fav rf 1473 5: ra My thanks are also due to Mr Antonio Abeita of Socorro to Mrs Trlmdad Lucero y Delgado to Mrs Trlnldad Baca de Delgado and Mr Charles Conklln of Santa Fe May the God of charxty abundantly reward all those who have so nobly axded us tn the cause of true educatlon Your devoted and grateful servant Brother Botulph . . - ' 5' A v . . -. . . - ' - K ' J - 1 v ' ' A k xA V . . . . . . H . . . - , ' Y . . . . 'V ' ' 1 ' Y -, ' -L - A , ' . . . . . T , L Y L , ' V I ' ' , . . . . I .C l . ' I . I ' . ' . ' - ' , an ' ' - f . I I . . . .,, U I H ' . - B . . . . y , - - v . ' . ' ' ' ' 1 f -sv - - , u y u I x ' ' I . L1 L' ' 4 n p . 7 1 l Q A t ' - u 4 u n . A B V . i . H- - 8 - . . . . . . , U , . , K :l ' .' a . Z ' ' . , , , , , K , ,,.... .......... ,.... ..................... . , , ................ . . , , I . - , ' ' 1 -v ' n Y . l I , 1 1 - V . . . ' ' ' . li . . . l - . . I I I S 5 . e A 1 - - - ,zZ'f, , ,.,,,of . - ' u 1 Q X' W I I . ' f? . , ' . . 4,?,,,,,, ruff.. vs. X 444. , X 1 ' .5 , ' , , , . - r 4 ..4 .f...lf...,.af4r 7 - , , f 1, . f' If . , . - - - ' My , , 1 4-,fi 44 1-IFA .41-cf 1A,1Y , . ' ' I ' H - 44,4 ,4. ff ,L X nl-ill. ' E' U , ' 4 11,-AQ 1 f L-hu - Cflyuulni .. V- I, I -W' . 'F .. ll: ill ,, - V ' - 'W 3 ' . ' . , I . fi! 4 , Q-r ,7'ra-ru 1y,, - 7' . . . . ' A 'PF . nr ' ' ' ,, ffiaanafor- ' . , 24 'X , ,. r ff. . . ,, . , . . . - 7 . ' A ' ' ' ,, Jri-1,-4,-A Jr' L 41 X 1 ' , - - - - fw' ,. - - ' ,, ffagajc 1 vrvvdllcainnu. ' n fil we c see h II 'a e , Y 1 . b ' . . V , lJ,fnr5.l:1rA1AnL 4 L46 - i . . f In , . ' 2 . ' . , Q . 7 . , , . 1 , . v 1 C - Y a Y . . . , . ' , ' 1 . . . D Q5 , -1 Q Q 'f ,45 3 ,xy ,Wt g f,.if,!A' f' 2' 53 X 5 4- x ' K-,il liggglv Q L- f V-6 2 75 553521-7 if M. 5 pf nr ,5 1 N gg' . 1 zhinf wg - 75 fi W J 1878 Building of Views W' . H' 9 xi I' f f g v .Q J . 4 Y 3 . f A Fi 5 W 2? ss SHAW' V g Qgswf K :Q www h f W i nw ,f J spa 5 A 5 if w r I f P f--an f? FWF' i N 5. iwww ...Q .mm- , , ,Qtek ,Z 'E1,,, E ' ai? df 15515 mfg Li ag, vy- 1 S LJ Elini., if - , f M Ki aw- 'uv -f-nw 'i 'fi 4...i 4 'T ir:i3 ,Q +1 9' ml M 5 wi L. -Lang-1 - ii! Q, .M The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe had entered the Capital in 1880 A new day lor tourism had arrived and rt had to be exploited The business men o the town lost no time rn working up interest to hate the supposed three hundred thirty first annrycrsary of the foundation of Santa Pt celtbratcd Publicity about the City Different and the celebration to bc held In July and August of 1883 attracted wide attention The rnflux of visitors to the oldest Capital far sur passed the expectations of the organizers Hotel ac comodatrons were scarce and did not suffice to han dle the numerous visitors Brother Botulph was be sreged by requests from the city administration to turn the college into a hotel which he frnally did However he had to send the students home at the end of June and change the date for the beginning of the scholastic year from November to September and commencement from August to June Enough money was realized during this short time to furnish the College with modern beds and bedsteads wrote the treasurer On this occasion like on several others when Brother Botulph nego trated deals with mining and orl drilling companies hrs sole interest was the improvement of the school Another change brought about by the rarlroad which directly affected the school was the change of admrnrstratron for the New Mcxrco Drstrrct Train traveling rendered communications with the States easier Brother Botulph therefore lost no time rn Mexico District to that of St Louis Hrs petition was favorably received by the Superior who was well aware of the tremendous drfflcultres the Brother Visitors of New Wlex co had gore through rn trying to obtain teachers and Brother Botulph rn partrcu lar in tryrng to oper and manage a Novrtrate since February 8 1872 Brother Paulran Visitor of the Saint Louis Province became the Visitor also of New Mex1co Freed from the responsrbrlrtres of Vlsrtor Brother could direct hrs energies to other urgent business of hrs school The silxer Jubilee marking the first twenty five years of actrxe service to the cause of Cathollcrty and education rn the Southwest was planned for September 29 1884 These had been pro neerrng years but there was much to rejoice for To mark the occasion with frttrnfr pomp and eclat extensive preparations were made The Right Rev erend J NI Salpornte Coadyutor Bishop of the dro cese celebrated the Pontrfrcal Mass rn the San Nlrguel Chapel He was assisted by the Rexcr nd Fathers NI Rolly and F Gatrgnol The aged Archbishop Lamy presided from a pontrrrcal throne in the sanctuary and was asslsted by Fathers P Egurllon and J H Defourr With gratrtude and emotion the retired Archbishop recalled the quarter of a century of de voted service hrs co workers the Christian Brothers had grven him rn helping to bring Chrrstranrty back to the forsaken people of the Territory Age and rn frrmrty drd not deter but added to the inspiring and touching sermon preached by the great Archbishop The annrxersarv banquet far more sumptuous than the f1rst modest meal served the Brothers and therr traxelrng companron twenty five years prevr ously was served at four oclotk 1n the afternoon so rs to make rt coincide with the time at which the Brothers first meal in Santa Fe was served The great day came to a close that evening with a con cert by the band and a d1sp 'ry of fireworks as well as the illumination of the college building with lum rnarros An immense crowd witnessed the gala cele bratron Drought and unfavorable weather rn 1885 and 1886 brought want and suffering to the people of the Ter rrtory Thr immediate rcsult of this was a big drop rn the number of resident students Brother Botulph however never lost faith in the future of his school The water problem he solved by having a well dug rn the College yard at the cost of nine hundred dollars The pupil problem he solved partially when rn De eember 1880 through the courtesy of the Santa Fe Railroad he obtained a pass and vrsrted Nlexrco City which had been recently connected by rail to the States Besides a pleasure trip he made it a business errterorrst by rccrurtrrrf and adyertrsrng the school On his way back he went to Washington at the re- quest of Archbishop Salpornte to try to obtain help for the Catholic Indian Schools of New Mexico that wcre struggling through these vears of scarcity In spite of hrs efforts hrs mrssron was a failure and as a consequence the Archbishop had to appeal and de pend on charity for their existence By 1881 brtter trmes had returned and Brother Botulph felt that a brrghter future lay ahead Con frdent therefore that spring he undertook an exten srxe repair and improvement program of the old San Miguel For him God s house came f1rst No sooner was this frnrshed than he signed a contract with Messrs Monnrer and Donoghue for the erection of a three tory brick building costing twenty thousand dollars Hrs appeal or frnancral help was almost fruitless but he went ahead nevertheless Trustful ln the providence of God he managed loans with the dexterity of an expert financier so that the building was pard for shortly after rt was completed The cfmr nerstone of the building dedicated to the Archangel Saint Michael was lard on June 29 1887 by the Most Ruerend Archbishop John B Salpornte Present at the ceremony were the retired Archbrshop Lamy the X rcar General the Very Rex erend Peter Egurllon Rev erend Julius Deraches Chaplain of the College Rev erend James Defourr pastor of Guadalupe Church others of the local clergy the Brothers and a large concourse of people that gathered not only to wrt ness the ceremony but to attend the commencement exercises which followed immediately Two promm ent citizens IH their respectrxe communities graduated that day namely MI' Matthew 'VIcKell1gon of E1 Paso Texas and Mr James Conklin of Santa Fe . - L' ' , ' vx ' D . ' ' . ' .' . 'F . . . A f ' Y as x ' v ' ' K V v . - - S ' ,,.h. - I V I . V , a .- ' il I I ' 'D V V I ' ' ' . X . . . . . . v Q 2. r I . v ' ' V ' ' U 1 - ' . c. '- ir. ' ' ' . ' A 1 . k l. - . . . . . . - , Q 1. Y . .1 ' , ' l . , y . L. , . D . ' ' A 1 Y. . . xp I -t I A . N . -. , ll . . . ' ' xv - ' V ' ' ' ' - ! ' K , - . - . . . - . . ' ' 5 ' ' A ' ' 's ! . .L A . N I V ? .I . . X I 1 . l .. , Y . , V' 1 7 K , I ' - 1 ' 1 ,xi - N . petitioning the Superior General to annex the New . . T Q . . . 5 ' 5 . J ' 1 v - l - . . . . . . Y V ' ' 5 ' 1 v A ' 7 ' ' Y ' ' . y . . - A ' . - , S . . . . V -. ' f ' ' 1 - ' Y v -1 L . , . . A . ' Y f . .'., V ' ' A . - . -y V - .I I 3 . . . . ' I , .. ' 1' ' ' . f ' ' v ' ' Q-, v 4 f s 4. ' . . I . . Y' I ' 1 Y Y A A v ' Y. - 1 , 1 A . 'A , ,l,D ' n . . ' Q. . ' ' v . Q 1 1 3 , - x..k Y . V . l ' ' ' - -r ' - . , v , . A ' . . . ' v v . l . Lx f Q 0 1, E pg., hw? is Views of 1887 Building if if if , V ,,, f .1 .Lf f if .f W JV 'I 54.4 ' if ,' Y.. ,QQQUM ,, if ' 4 -E 5? Q gi? A izffii 1 f ' ,L 'f Q, X ,f Z 'vi Q V air' gg V' J if i ig i M Hn., xiii ' Ei ' ...li n'w,.s1,.a.,iL,M l 3 i yi, + i ' Q 1 ' 2 T ' ,M ,X QW' iv 7 if -iw M f 'if 63353 f 4 ,fxik When this building was completed Samt Michaels Collcge High Qchool possessed the hest equippfd edu cational plant 1n the vthole Qouthwest Brother Bo tulph had ctectcd Hlllllll a period of ten xeats tvso up to date school buildings at a eost of oxei forty thousand dollars This was fm unparalleled actomp lishment ln thc fir ld of education at that time espe x when xxe consldrx tlfat 1st l1tt ox 1 o eighth of the cost xx as contributed Qixteen wats had passe d sinrt the dav Bxother Botulph had tceelxed the oiders to Fo to qanta Fe and make it eo The xnotk of his tr llf tous ohfr ifntr was well mfimfestrd and spoken of throughout the Terrltorv Exetxone admired the ah ITV of this rl terprlsmg and dlgnlfled telifious As an administta tor and as an rduf ator the nime of Professor qtlllltl der as Brother Botulph was eilled was xxrll knoxxn exervwhere BV an Act o' the lefuslttule of lgfll he vtas appointed a member of the Tfrrltorial Roald of Fducatlon Ile was also elected Founty quperlntfnd ent of Qchools Vlhen the memhers of the qchool Board drtldc d to organlze the puhlic educational sxstem thev placed gt eat confidence in the yudffmtnt of Professor Qchnelder It must he said though that on sexeral occasions the hoard took advantage of his ahstnee hate 'voted no In 1903 Goxernor Miguel Oteto re appointed him a memhcr of the hoard uhlch position he held till the time of his death Mr Amado Chavez the first Qupermtendent of PlIlJllC Instruction in New Mexico vxas an alumnus of Qalnt Micharls and often consulted his former tr ichet a memher o the hoard himself on srhool administration I nder the superxision of Nlr Fhaxef grmt improvements were made schools were estah lished hllllfllllfi uere eteeted 'md ln all parts of New Nlefcieo edueition made much progress Relifuous 1TlSllllC'll0l'I ln puhlie schools has heen a suhleft of contention since the time of Horace 'Nlslnn the founder of thc sxstem In Qslnta Fe houexer ue find the prohlfm illQll1f' onlx around 1802 Th'1t xear Riether Patrick ure president of Qalnt llliehaels Colleoe nas elerted a memher of the citx school hoard The othei memhers of the hoard heme op posed to the continuance of relifious instruction ln the puhlle schools refused to emplov the qisters of I oretto as teachf rs of the Catholic children as had if iinst tif ustlt f put of the hoatd Blothu Patti resigned On 'Un 20 1809 Pope I eo Xll'l pxomoted the qo dxlltx of qaint loseph to the title rank and DIIXI le e of an Arrheonfriternity This was dono at the lf fxurst of Arehhishop Qalpomte who for sexeral vears had uitnessed the great spiritual results deriwd hv the students pertalnmff to it Chaplain Father Dera ches 'md the Brothers had directed th Qodalitv and the headquarters of the Archeonfratetnitx and the C h tpl nn of the Brothers of the Fhristlan Qthools in the CIIV of qanta Fe vxas appointed Director The uxtt Y-ll l Lp-By n 'N el 1' 4 t 11.1 m't.'1c UL-.ln Ten low Jail' ll' LLIQ Sow- nw' l.'2Tx'l. A. . J. .'.'. .t .- ,LJ , Sot:1,'et.n:7 of lov Yextce. V7 . . . - ' V ' ' ' .' . 4 ' h- L t ' 1 K ., ,. . ' x 1 ' L A 4 I K l -e . 4 VZ V ,V f- , ' V K V N., C 1.4 , I V' ' V ' V-at ' . . . V K V.. . A V V V4 - - ,' . D V- . - V W Q '1 . . Y r . . ' . Y - ' VV V V V V K VV - . . V,V, , , V . V V '. ' , 't . - - . V 'H ' . .', 2 ' f eiallj ' ' ' 1' 11 Vit: 21 ' le 'e' ne . V ' ' . V. . ' ' ' ' - . c A f . . ' .4 'IA ' x x .l'. . n I I v ' Y - V, V . V V 1: V . . .' . . h , N . K - I K f fu ' , V ',- , . . . - -V Vo , . .,'Vl' V. ,lg ,, w V V V V V K A V V ' 3 ' f ' J 2 . . ' f . ' . . . ' , - . . .V . . V .V. . . V 1 . . V V V V g V ' V v- - ln-en done for forty years. In protest Ili' . l 'Se ' ' V A V- A VVVQ-g 3 V V inVj . es on the 1 ' 1 ' ' ' 1' ' ck . ' , ' . , . ' 1 - . aj .. ,M , ' ' V , - 7 V V . V ,fs , L3 V . 5, - , -. , V V 4 . I . t,Yv 4 H I ix x-W .. p V . ' . , -1 ' ' 1 ' ' R x , VV I x ' ' V V ' rx ., .' . 'V V 1 V ' r , , ' D , I ' to pass measures on which he was certain he would henee the Holy Father made the San Miguel Church ' ' . . t ',' . I ' - x . , , ' A ' . . . - V . . H up V V . . . - -' ' ' ' ' A34 Y 1' V V , -4 - - v 01 A A a a ' .tQ' K E A Jimffl I L ' '.,.V,. . -1, fl no -lrzzefz. Li 'N. '.-'f-'f 1 ' - f v - ' ' ' T un: lit.: ,U itz t 7 l'. I '. QI . T r. i..'::9 Lest P7 ft- if f' .7 TLV? l ' v 1 ' v v- ' 1 ' W' ' A W1 'V 1 lf3'x:tt,f1 Fc, 572 2 Fe? f fn I-ev N-'Ulf 4 L lf 7 -11 in - 'nf-' 1 - U' ' le , tile ,rev V. VFVVVVI V Van.: . S wilt .H .sf NH., :Jn i 11, flu! H fputil f . V, H . t l A g--rx A l, lJ.t l it 5 fl .rt v '-I 'zL1'.'e O 1 re tt ill the LQLIQ 111' ofllu' ta,-1309 l 7 -K l l'li1,'fifi .zy lf I . Q . feel of Lzze - -1 Lot-y 0 ' ' , X Q ' A ' 2' 'Jff 'U speclal end of thxs Sodallty IS to lmplore the powerful protec tlon of St Joseph 1n behalf of the Chr1st1an Educatlon f youth hence besldes honorlng St Joseph 1n order to be par tlcularly favored by hlm durmg thelr llfe and at the hour of thelr death the members vull take hun for thelr specual advo cate to obtaln through h1S 1n tercesslon an augmentatlon f Cathollc Qchools the cessatxon of pubhc host111ty toward them an lncrease of vocatlons both to the prlesthood and the rel1g1ous state especlally for rel1g1ous teachers The Archconfrater nlty prlor to 1916 had enrolled nearly four thousand members not only from Santa Fe but from other dlOCG9CS of the Umted States and Canada not ably rom l0cal1t1es vxhere the Chr1st1an Brothers had schools The Archconfraternlty was mac tlve for some vears smce the Qodahty of the Most Blessed VIFQIH afflllated Wlth the Prlma Prlrnarva of Rome renlaced t In 1945 however Brother Benvl dus of Mary reuved lt and vs 1th the openmg of Salnt M1chael s College on the slte of Bruns Army Hospltal the headquar ters were transferred there House B111 Number 185 passed by the Leglslature and s1gned by Governor L Bradford Pr1nce February 20 1893 author1zed lffff fff 4.14. I f ffifxifbfffl fffffffffff fffffff M1 lfff4fj Q fff flffff 1 ,fff ju 0111 fnf ffffl If fl! 111111011101 f f I ff, lffillfblff jf ffffffff'4ffl 1 ffl ff!f!4lf Afffffy 1 f4f 1 f 4ff I f of ffnz fff f 4ff4l4ff ffnf fl! ffl ffffff lf? fflflf 4ffffffff 7 fffffif fflfafff 4111 fffff fffffffjfflfzfy' jfffpfffffafffbfff ffffb Z Mf ,ffffffffff f ffff lfffff 11119 nf fffff fffff iff Zfffffffjfffffdffff y 14,4 ,,f,, f4,,,,! ,yflyff f 0, f,,,,,, 1 ,ffffiffffffff x44 f fff ipfif fir! ffwffl Q lfffffff M If ffffff 140 ffffffff ffflff fffffff ffff f I flff X ,ff yjfffff jfyfffffffffffffff fff fffffffff liffffffj 6 ffff ffnff lffllffff 1 ffffi I ffff ffffffffl fAf f f4f fff ffffff lffff fffff' 14 lfff fffffffhffy yf 1441 ffff ff fff hllff f 1411 fffffffff if 1 Hffffw Q0 ffrfff fbfffffffffffffffffy ff fff4fff ff f fff 14, ffff, ff fpf ffffffgf ff ffffff ffffj fxffffffflffff 1 ff j flfyffff f ffyfffffffffflfffffffff fff 1111 ffm buf ff X51 f Inf 411 ffff! 141 fffffffff IW' 019 f ffffff f ff fff' f4 ffff f 1 ,fff fffffffffffffiff fff fffffffff fl fff f f ffn 4 fl!! ,f,ffff 4 f,!fj,,,,f,!,,f ,,j,, lf,,,f!Aff2Affy ff ff 61 f nuff fffflfl if 411 flflfflfff ff ff! fflfl Afffflfff fff 6 f ff ff jfyffffnffffffflff 1 ,f1f4f ffffbfffhfff jfffffffffffff If ff! 111417 0 fffffff Af' fifnffffqf fff fam ,fff f flfflffff ff f f 4 f ff! fifA ff' 'A' f ' , f4fffffff4f ffl 141 inf 4fffff in fffxff Wfflfffbf fffffdfff fl ffffffff ffff4 ffffffa ff!Affffffffffffffgfffffff ffff'f'f'f ffg' ff '9 ffylffflldfffff fffffff flfldlff 4fxf Xif ffA!ffff4'f' f 1' 7 ' ffffffff fffff f fl!f ffflff Wfffffd'ffff'f!ff'fffff f4' ff f f j fffffffffff fffff 1 fix ff ffl fffflff ffffff fffff fAfff'fjff 'NV' '40 the faculty of Sa1nt Mlchaels College to IQQUQ Teachers D1 plomas to ltS graduates Th1s pr1v1lege wnth certa1n mod1f1ca tlOnS was exerclsed up to the FlFSt World War Indeed many of the graduates who ga1ned prominence m the Terrltory or State started as school teachers Smce 1947 w1th the re establlshed Salnt lNl1chaels College traxnmg program has been resumed by the Chr1st1an Brothers 1n Santa Pe Brother Botulph entered the Instltute of the Broth In 1902 hxs Golden jubxlee ln rellglon was celebrated by hun dreds of hxs frlends mcludmg Archbishop Bourgarde and hls Al,1Xlll3I'y Blshop PIIHXHI The latter ponmfx cated at the Solemn H1gh Mass and the former preached the sermon That evenmg a receptlon and an entertamment 1nterspersed Wlth several congratu latory speeches were held For thlrty one years Samt NI1Cha81S had progressed under the sklllful guldance the teacher ers of the Chr1st1an Schools 1n 1852 fl ff ll f X1 ffffffffff fff 6 'NJ fe All !ffff4fff 0 f4f if iff ffffn 4 1,141 fffffff fffffl ff! nf ffffhffff If nn! If f0f ff?f ff' ffffff ff 4 14 fffff fffwffff ff fm if-ff fif fdv! I0 ffffff 0f f 'f 7 Iliff ffyfffffff fhf fffffffffffifhfffffffffl 4 vff fWf'f f ' 0' of Brother Botulph Now he was an elderly man over worked and weak In splte of th1s he contmued to labor falthfully as pr1nc1pal for four more years In January of 1906 h1s health began to fall Early ln February he was taken to St Vlncent s hospltal where he recelved every care and attent1on that med lcal Sklll and charxty could suggest At noon Febru ary 9 as the Angelus bell of the Cathedral tolled the Venerable Brother calmly breathed hlS last The Cathollc Ploneer a newspaper publlshed at that tlme by Mr George J Juxllard m Albuquerque had the followmg to say concermng the greatness of the de- ceased Brother h1s last days and fmal obsequ1es . . . - ,-...,.,, ist? 4 9-A H , :gn 'W Z. NW y .- 1 ' . O ' 4 V 1' f V V I' 3 Y 4. . f If r V A ' 4 1 . ,i - , I fl X 1 X' ff I . . , V 1, f I ff 1, l 1 f ' 1 I f 1 I . y 7. f W , ' . 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' . . ,. - 1 e- jg eee-eee or 1 e , e 'FMT g A ploneer died 1n Santa Fe New Mexlco on the 9th of Pebruarv 1906 at the age of seventv three Hls eulogy will not be passed from the rostrum of the Congress llall nor hls name mentloned ln the leadmg papers ol the country hls llfe has been anvwav above the average and hls record IS most envlable Hxs name was Schnetder to whxch was added at hns baptlsm the surname of Peter Hts blrthplaee was one of those towns of the Rhtmsh provmces where 1elxg1on IS not a mere ormalxty but a real leaven whxch pervades and actuates the whole of the human bemg soul and bodv Born tn 1833 Peter Schneider wlth hls famxlv emlgratcd to the Lmted States ln 1852 Nelther Harvard nor West Polnt had any at tractlon for the voung man but Provldence gulded h1s steps towards the Instltute of the Chrlstlan Broth els three of his brothers Jomed him ln the same Older and Peter Schnelder s now Brother Bo tulphs destlny was to wear for flftv four years from 18:12 to 1906 the well known garb of the dlsct ples of St John Baptxst de la Salle Durln those long 54 years there IS not a slngle employment to whlch a Brother can be asslgncd that Brother Botulph was not put to He was successlvelv a teacher an Inspector of schools a provmctal for the West a master 0 nov1ces a superxot a bullder a procurator whenever circumstances were calling for a substitute 1n any department he was ready and able to take the place of the absent h1s XOICE noble volce could help ln the choxr hls hand 1n the lnflrmary and lf needed even ln the kltchen h knew how to teach muslc and mathematlcs and l1t erature there IQ nothlng wtthm the sphere of a man of h1s calhng that he dld not master But the most remarkable feature of all ln hls career IS thlg h never made a fallure and whatever he dld he dtd If we l Now and thls wlll be endorsed by whoever ap proached Brother Botulph the mam sprlng 1n this uncommon llfe has been undenlablv from be Innmg to end an unusual sense of mans responstblhtxes Above all he was ln all his actlons and 1n the full sense of the words a man 0' consclence It IS that PFPCIOUS quallty that won for htm the respect of hxs companlons the boundless confldence of his superlors the regard of the people and the htgh esteem ln whtch he was held by the varlous prelatts under whose yurlsdxctlon he worked the Salntlv Archbxshop Lamv the Apostolic Salpoxnte he learned Chapelle and on the day of Brother Botuloh s golden tubllee the present incumbent of the See of ganta Fe the most Rev Archbishop Bourgade paid to the Venerable Jubllarlan the hlghest compllments that a man can recelve by suggestmg ln a gracxous homlly whlch thrllled the hearts of the audlence a resemblance between htm and the faxthful Servant of the Gospel Agam on account of h1s unquestlonable mtegrtty Brother Botulph was called to hold several pubhc positions of trust One of the Governors of New Mexico appointed hlm a member of the Capltol Bulldlng Commlttee people elected hlm several ttmes to the offtce of Superlntendent of Schools for the Countv of Santa Fe and at the tame of h1s demxse he was stlll a member of the Terrltorxal Board of Educa tlon Be ll sald however for truth s sake that seve ral tlmes this Board took advantage of hls absence to pass measures on whxch ll was certain that Pro fessor Schnexder as they called htm had squarely voted No Ven of that mark must have thelr struggles Strug gles never daunted Brother Botulph when his con sclenee was at stake How dtd he succeed ln buxld mg St Nltchael s College of Santa Fe The emlnent orgamzers of the Church EXICDSIOH work are aware of the fact that 1f there are Chapels and Churches m New Nlexleo tt ts next to lmposstble for the Catholics to have thelr own schools wlthout help from th outslde Thxrtv vears ago Brother Botulph started to fxght he fought with the mdomltable energy of hls character he fought even a few samted men who dld not share hls views which b9C8m9 3 matter of scruples to h1m tn h1s old days but fmally he won and the plant of educatlon tht he had decided to bulld was constructed Thus does not mean that he had no heart a honey comb was even found ln the mouth of the hon Iftrmsess was tempered ln htm bv a real though vxrlle tenderness At the tlme of the Franco German war f1870 18713 some of the French mlsslonarxes who attended the Church 1n New WIPXICO wttnessmg hls unconquerable ftrmness started to call hmm Brother Blsmark He took lt good humoredly and now that he IS gone there as only one volce among the clergy to say that the prxests of the dlocese never had a better frlend more courteous more kmd more dlsmterested more Judxclous than Brother Botulph However age was commg On the second day of March 1906 the good old man was to have celebrated hns 74th btrthdav He had been In Santa Fe slnce 1870 tha 1S for thlrtv five years For the past fxftecn years he had been sufferlng more or less but never wlth danger Hts prlvate ll e smce he was known was given to all as a modelof Chrlstlan and rehgxous regularltv He had never been found sparmg of exther h1s mner strength or hls bodlly vlgor The com munltv of whlch he had been so long the dlrector was clted as a model one as regular as any house f probation Parents from all over New Mexlco and Arizona were sendmg thexr chlldren to St Ntchaels College as to a home safe and secure Never had the Brothers enrolled as many scholars at Santa Fe as thev have th1s vear On February 7th however the good Brother was solemnly told that the tlme had come for hm to recetve the last Rltes of the Church Strange to say thlg news was unexpected although he had been feeble to the extreme for a few weeks the Bro ther had stxll made has appearance ln the Chapel a few davs be ore on the thlrd He answered thus to the PFIESI Extreme unctlon alreadv' Am I as suck as that Pvldently to him who had been act mg so long under the sense of h's responslblhttes 1t seemed at that moment that ltfes tr1al was not an account of hvs stewardshxp to the Lord made upon htm a wetghtv tmpresston On the evenmg of the same day the Rlght Rever end BlSh0p Pltaval auxlllarv of Santa Fe admlms tered to the venerable I'9llglOllS at the reouest of the Chaplam the Sacrament o Extreme unctton and the Holy Vlattcum He was fully consclous and re slgned Two davs afterwards on February 9th the good and falth ul servant calmly returned hls soul to his Cteator Between Wednesdav and Frlday hardly had he saxd a word hls conversatxon was GXCIUSIXQIV wtth God no more with the surroundmg world The agony lasted a few hours at fvfteen minutes before noon the Chaplam of the Brothers began to reclte the last prayers exactly at twelve the Brother qulet ly breathed his last the bells of all the churches were rmgmg the Angelus The funeral of that samtlv man took place at the Cathedral of Santa Fe The Governor of New 'vlexlco and his predecessor the Attorney General the Presl dent of the Fxrst National Bank also the Terrltorlal Supermtendent of Pubhc Instructlon and his assls tant asked or the prxvllege of bemg pall bearers Arfhblqhop B0UF2ade was present ln the Sanctuary as was hls auxlllarv Blshoo Pttaval H15 gy-age pm nounced the eulogy of the departed Brother and gave the absolutlon In conclusion to the above the Cathollc Ploneer added There IS questlon of erectlng a monument to Brother Botulph Whether the pro1ect wlll be reahzed or not one cannot say But even If the grave of the great Brother has to remam forever sur mounted only bv the humble wooden cross whlch marks the sepulchre of any rehgmus to anybody lnqulrtng about the monument of Brother Botulph tt can and wlll be answered truthfully Look at hw holy and energetlc life look at the thousands of y0Ung men who have been educated by h1m look at St 'khchaels College w'th 1ts fine bulldmgs and vast grounds That IS hls monument ' o ' I ' A - ' I 1 . H . . V ' ' . .W - I - , 'I ' ' .I .I In K ' I - - A ,I nl - In 0 V- B I . ' ' ' -' ' ' , ' . . . lv . ' P' h ' ' ' 7 I ' I ' , , h ,. '.. . 'V 1 . ' ,v Q V . V ' V- L s ,' K' ' ', . ' ' . ', I D- .V 1 . ' ., . . I I . ' I ' Y I I . ' . . , 0 U - t' C ' ' 1 ' . 'I . : ' ' . ' 'D - 1 I . V. Ia I I IV I I ' ' .' V ' ' : e ' I ' - . , L ' . . V r L I' S 'l- T ' ' ' ' ' .V ' HI -I 'I ' V , I . , s . A -V 1 v . - ' I ' ' - I ' I - ,,- - so long. after all: but. the fact that he had to give so , . ., . ' I I I ' ' ' V '- 4 ' . f . . .AV l . . - I I I . .I . . I I Ip. I' I . 'I II I. ' ' II t I Ii- , I , I 1 ' ' ' I 'Q ' ' - . l - - , f' . .V V n 0 , , I H ' V V, ' . I I I , I I I. I . ' I I A ' 6 ' ' 5 1. k- , ' I - . - - I II I. I ' I I s . A ' V. ' ,B . . . I ' , . ' U ' t' V . . . . V V ' V' , I II ' . 3 ' ' , . ' I I . . If Rf 'a fd 1, gl' 'SW gf.: ,: f Zz f '. f1?Nf ff,w W 1342. Day A Salam His, M.: Jaxx Denpms PPA: A Ai elim L C Tx smlcnms :fumes ag X,-K mm :Rana AJ 111 ,gr Q. in-.aa QT 5 I I xi' 46,2 'V 'W vz 9 A fr 1,9 A , vi ' Brother Eustachius Lewis, F.S.C. In Santa Fe from 1905 to 1908 :QV K Director 1906-1908 fw Brother Hermes Joseph, F.S.C. ln Santa Fe from 1907 to 1910 Director 1908-1910 E Brother Botulph Director from 1870-1906 Brother James Walter, F.S.C. In Santa Fe from 1904 to 1910 Director January to August 1910 Brother Honorius Edward, F.S.C. Director 1910-1916 Unit IX Brother Botulph s Successors The successors to Brother Botulph Brother Eusta chus Lewls Brother Hermes Joseph Brother James Walter and Brother Honoruous Edward added another score of years to the great hlstory of Samt Mlchael s Wlth them the Salnt Louls Prov1nce ceased 1tS admlnlstratlon ln New Mexico and as we shall See later on with the arrlval of the exlled Brothers from Mex1co the Santa Fe New Orleans Provmce was created Before we pass on to th1s next chapter let us revlew the lmportant events un our school h1story under the admlmstratlon of the above mentloned Brothers In 1907 there vsere one hundred and flfty s1x boar ders and the followmg year the number soared to one hundred and nlnety two the largest number of resldent students Salnt Mxchaels Hugh School has ever had In order to accommodate the boarders a nelghbol mg house xx as r nted and used as a dormltory An epldemlc of measles and scarlet fever however broke out among the students and many of them wlthdrew before the year was over June 19 20 and 21 1909 were three glorxous days xn the annals of Samt Mlchaels Hlgh School Durlng these three days over one thousand former students gathered 1n Santa Fe to celebrate the golden Jubllee of the1r Alma Mater Mr Benjamm M Reed New MGXICHD Hlstorlan called them days of the most grateful remembrance 1n hlS l1fe as durmg those three days ln company of hundreds of h1s school mates all of them already advanced 1n years he was able to contrlbute h1s mlte 1n g1v1ng splendor to the grand celebratxons Then he contlnues A great number of Span1shAmer1can and Anglo Amerlcan edltors of New Mex1co educated ln sa1d college and who vled w1th each other 1n dedlcatlng phrases preg wrote VlWld descrlptlons of the celebratlon ln both Engllsh and Spanlsh perlodlcals of the Terr1t The followlng comments by Mr Camllo Padllla edltor of La Revlsta Ilustrada represent the sp1r1t of the other edltors ex alumm ln the press Salnt Mlchaels College was founded flfty years ago by the Brother of the Chrlstlan Schools and from that remote epoch the lnstxtutlon has progresssed ln an astoundlng manner several generatlons not only of New Mex1co but of many po1nts m other states of the Umon havmg passed through 1ts halls The most exalted personages m the pol1t1cs sc1 erces arts and lndustlles of the Terxltory spent the years of the1r chlldhood 1n that establlshment of mstructlon where they drank from the wellsprmg of the wlsdom of the1r teachers the gallant sclence whlch ralsed them to the hlghest pos1t1ons 1n New Mex1co Today there IS not a slngle 1nd1v1dual of our most conspicuous polltlclans of our m st able ba k f n els o our ablest men who has not been an alumnus of that center of lnstructlon where they learned how to make the struggles for ex1stence where all ob stacles are overcome where they fltted themselves to trlumph ln every lme Important amon celebratlon was the organ1zat1on of an Alumm As isclatlon Frank A Hubbell was elected presldent Oman L Baca vlce presldent George W Arm1Jo g the results of thls reumon and secretary and Salomon Luna treasurer Besldes these the followlng were elected members of the Board of Dxrettors FIFSI d1str1ct Frank Delgado of Santa Fe Second d1str1ct Bonlfaclo Montoya of Bernallllo Thxrd d1str1ct Amceto Abeyta of Socorro Fourth d1str1ct O A Larrazolo of Las Vegas Flfth d1str1ct W D Murray of Sxlver C1ty The celebratlon of the flftleth annlversary closed vuth the approval of a resolutlon authorlzmg a commlttee of former students headed by Mr Flavlo Sllwa to seek ways and means for the erect1on of a Carrara marble statue to perpetuate the memory of the great rellglous educator Brother Botulph The San Mlguel News the school paper made 1ts 1r11t1al appearance February 1910 Its flrst edltor Mr J Felipe Hubbell Jr wrote Durlng the past few months the students of St Mlchaels College have been makmg strenuous efforts to have a COLLEGE PAPER For some reason or other we have heretofore met w1th very llttle success never theless we have never been dlscouraged and after many d1ff1cult1es we are about to launch our long looked for project I say we have succeeded and so we have but we have trlumphed only 1n one polnt namely 1n gett1ng a start There are however other th1ngs before us In the flrst place we do not W1Sh to con flne ourselves to so small an ed1t1on as th1s It IS our ambltlon to grow Then we are not cap1tal1sts on a very large scale and we must rely on the loyal support of the students the Alumnl and the Patrons of St Mlchaels to make th1s dlfflculty dlsappear If there IS a proper sp1r1t among our fellow students and we do not for a moment doubt that there IS by us through th1ck and th1n We begln as do all thmgs dest1ned to grow on a small scale We begln to cllmb the ladder from the lowest step that we may be able to reach the top and then look down w1th pleasure on the dlffl cultles N9 have surmounted Though the dream of the edltor whlch was no doubt that of the staff composed of names promlnent 1n our days namely Messrs Francls B Savage Asslstant Edltor Edwln Schutz Nestor Montoya Jr Edward Laughlln Manuel Lujan Augustm S1s neros Apollnar Urrutla Gus Momsen Walter Hub bell and Anthony OBoyle Assoclate Edxtors was not fully realxzed then we can say that today It IS Defunct for twelxe years lt was revlved 1n 1924 and It has been a most lnterestlng and worthwhlle extra cu rlcular actluty at Saint Mlchaels When avsards began to be made 1n the state for the best nevsspapers at a h1gh school level the San Mlguel News lmmedlately took IIS place as one of the con slstently hlghest rated Thursday November 17 1910 was a Gala day for St Mlchaels That evenmg forty delegates of the const1tut1onal conventlon were guests of honor at an entertamment and banquet glven by the College Twenty two of the delegates were alumm of the school The welcomlng address by Brother Edward Pr1nc1pal sa1d 1n part L1ke a fond mother whose sons return from afar we extend our hand to you as the loyal sons of thls tlme honored Inst1tut1on proud 1 v - ' . v l I 1 ' , 1 1 1 1 , - ' . . . I .v . r . . . , ' a Y . y 1 1 1 v A I . , l 1 ' ' ' , . . - Y 1 1 1 1 V, . ' . . . D 1 1 Y V ' s ' ' b V 7 . - Y . . . . . , . . . , . , ,, - 1 ' Y 'Y ' Y 1 Y ' ' . f . Q . ' . ' ' ' ' 14 !! Y Y 1 I K . . 3 - 1 . , Y y . . . . . . , . . U l 1X W 7 . . . ' I I 9 Y ' . . . . ' H . , 1 y ! 1 . ' ' - 1 . Y y 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 ' Y! ' !Y Y Y . , . , . . . . . . . . , Y Y ' . . . . . - , Y . . . . . . . he nant with gratxtude, 1n pl'HlS9 of the1r Alma Mater, t y Wm feel prqud of our, efforts and W111 Stand .M . . . x . 'TTV.vv ' Y . . y . u . . , , ' tt ' H f - , 1 . 1 1 . - . . ,, . , - V 7 ' ' X A vr . , . - , . . , ' N 1 1 7 7 ' 1 1 , , . . . - 1 . v y , , , . . . . . . , -, , , - tc . ' . . . Y 1 1 , 0 9 ' 1 . ' x. ,I ' 1 y A Y ' I 1 . 1 V , ' 1 . . . , v I I u , . . . ' I . , . t U F . . y. R L. . 7 , ll . 1 , . . ' Y l Y I f 1 Y Y . , , 3 - . . , 5 ' 1 1 ' ' ' yy J - ' 1 . . ' i' , - ' ' .-as - . . . , , . I. . 3 . , - Q I Y 4 . . - , . I of you and of your past cateex and especllly of the wotk at whleh you have been engaged these past two months We have followed you tn your work day by day wa1t1ng the oppoxtuntty to have you sldettaeked fot one hout only to say to you how much we appreciate the part you have taken IU the Conwentzon md to renew old memories w1th friends and teaclsets The next day the Santa Fe New Mexl can publlshed the followmg ed1tor1al For more than half a centuxy Salnt Nltchaels College has stood as a oeacon llght on these western plateaux shedd1ng 1ts lays 1nto every communlty IH a I3dlUS of fxve hundred 'rules The celebratlon last fwnmg, attcndftnt upon '1 IOLIIIIUH of studcnts of the school who are members of the Constltutlonal f0YlXCl lI10l1 tfxcaled the fact that twenty two dele gates lomlf back upon Salnt Nlleh el s as the1r Alma Mater Thls IS more than twenty per cent of the enttre conxentlon and the New Mt vclcan bLl16N9S that not a slngle other 1nst1tut1on of learnmg has been or IS as well represented 1n any s1m1lat body of con stltutlon or law makers Yale Harxard and Prlnce ton mav be more famous but nexthel ln Congress of the Unlted States nor 1n the leglslatures of 1n wh1ch they are located are to be found so large a proport1on of graduates from these un1vers1t1es The reun1on last evenxng IS an tncldent that ought to demonstrate to Santa Fe not only the value of thlg lnstttutlon of learnlng but 1ts poss1b1l1t1es It ought to be more to the Capxtal than any State Unlverslty It ought to command part of the large wealth that IS 1n the process of accumulatlon 1n the Southwest and the future ought to see xt rlghtly endowed so that lt may ratse 1ts standards and lncrease Its attendance as the countty grows 1n populatlon and advances 1n culture On commencement day June 22 1911 there was anotlser large vatherlng of former students 1n Santa Fe for the unve1l1ng of a statue of Brother Botulph The unve1l1ng ceremony took place rlght ln front of the college where the statue reposes calllng the attentlor' of passersby to the work of the great man who gave h1s l1fe for the educatxon of the youth of New Wlexlco Colonel Jose D Sena the master of ceremomes d1d not neglect a slngle detail and the entlre ceremony was carrled out 1n a pleasmg man ner Frank Hubbell O A Larrazolo and Father Deraches eulogxzed the great educator recalling those quahtles m hls l1fe that made htm so successful In all hls undertaklngs Broth r Botulph IS the only Brother ln the Unlted States to have a statue erected to hlm For over thlrty years now the Chr1st1an Brothers Schools 1n lNew NIGXICO had belonged to the St Louis Prounce The New Orleans prounce had been com pelled to dlscontlnue ITS work due to the fact that a large number of the Brothers succumbed to the deadly yellow fewer at the turn of the century In 1916 New Mexlco and LOUISIHHH were erected mto a new provmce wlth Santa Fe as headquarters . 1 . 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Lx N ,X X - 1 A 5 U mt The New Orleans Santa Fe Provmce The fabulous Clty of New Orleans and Santa F 8 the capital c1ty of the fabulous frontler felt the lnfluence of the teachlng of the Brothers of the Chr1st1an Schools at the m1ddle of the last century At the tlme Father Lamy was takmg over as V1car Apostollc of New lxl9XlC0 ln 1850 B1sh0P Blanc was petltlonm Brother Faclle V1s1tor of St LOUIS provmce for C rlstxan Brothers In December of that year four Brothers were cordlally recelved by the Blshop of New Orleans who lodged them 1n h1s ovxn resldence untll the school bulldlng was readv From 1ts 1n1t1al opemng the school dld much good and by 1853 ltS enrollment had reached nearly four hundred puplls St Mary s Academy later on 1ncor porated as St Marys C llege vtas opened 1n 1856 Soon aftemards the exlstence of both foundatlons vs as serlously threatened by the devastatmg mdeed ex termmatlng yellow fever epxdemlc Brother Andronls vxas the only survlvor among the Broth rs and hap plly more Brothers from the North tame to f1ll the vacancles left by the v1ct1ms of the plague By 1863 when tne New Orleans Provmce vxas formed the number of schools ln the South was nlne as follows SIX 1n New Orleans one each IH Baton Rouge Bay St LOUIS lVllSS1SSlppl and Galveston Texas In 1866 Brother Is'11ah Provmclal of the newly formed DlSlFlCt opened a school at Pass Chr1st1an MISSISSIPPI Thls one llke all the promzslng estabhsh ments fnunded ln the South was repeatcdlv thzeaten ed by the scourge of yellow fevu untll they fmally succumbed for want of personnel or lnsufflclcncy of funds The last school to close was that on Tulane Avenue by St Joseph s Church Thls happened July 1 1900 Th1s brought to a close the flfty years of fru1tful apostolate of the Chrlstxan Brothers 1n the South However the seed planted durmg these years really never dled and 1n 1950 xt sprouted agaln and De La Salle Hlgh School 1n New Orleans has brought mto full bloom the educatlonal ldeals of the Sons of St John Baptlst de la Salle By the law of secular1zat1on of 1904 the French Repubhc decreed the closmg and conflscatlon of all relxglous establlshments especlally schools The tyranmcal decree affected the Brothers of the Chrls tlan School probably more than any other I'8llg1OUS QTOUP Perferrmg exlle to treachery thousands of Brothers left thelr natlve land for foreign m1ss1ons The provmce of Parls and Le Puy sent an lmportant group of thelr exlled rehglous to open schools 1n the Republlc of Mexlco By 1914 these devoted Chrlstlan Brothers had opened seventeen flourlsh mg schools where thousands of young boys and young men recelved an unparalleled education Never theless by 1914 the Mexlcan revolution that had been fomentlng smce 1911 was actxvated by rlval leaders whose only common cause was hatred of rellgxon Two Brothers havmg been executed the Superxors urged by prudence ordered the rest of the naembers of the Order to wxthdraw from the fleld t ey had so sedulously cultlvated and whlch pro mxsed such a rxch harvest The Brothers from northern Mexlco came to the Umted States by way of El Paso and Laredo those from the south left for Vera Cruz Wh1Ch WHS then occup1ed by the Umted States Navy The Pr1v1nc1al Brother NICGHS Bertm ordered a rendevous for all these exlles ln Cuba from where some chose to reen ter France but the majorlty preferred to come back to the Umted States hoplng that order would soon be restored m Mexlco By 1916 nelther c1v1l nor rel1g1ous peace had retunncd to 'llexlco Brother Superlor General Imler de Jesus however d1d not lose hope 1n the future of the Inst1tute xn thls revolutlon torn country Deslrous of seemg the exlled Brothers return to thexr own Dlstrlct he 9dVlSPd Brother ASSlSlaHt to the Umted States Benezet Thomas and Brother Baldwln V1s1 tor of St LOUIS to help h1m solve the problem by maklng the three schools 1n New MEXICO a part Of the MQXICEH provmce Those schools were Santa Fe Las Vagas and Bernallllo No better men could have been chosen than Bro ther Charlemagne and Brother August to complete thls transfer August 1 1916 Brother Nlceas Bertm assumed h1s dutles as V1s1tor and also became Dlrec tor of Samt M1chael s Hlgh School replacmg Brother Honorlus Edward Brother Lawrence and Brother Cels1en Abel replaced Brothers Indron1s Edwln and Iscarmn of Mary at Las Vegas and Bernahllo The scattered throughout the Arnerlcan Provmces soon began to arrlve and the members of the St Louls Provmce who had left such an lmpresslve and out standmg record of SCFVICG 1n the Southwest returned home as It were never to be forgotten It has been sa1d that Shadows measure the stature of men and events agalnst the llght of God s eternal provldence Th1s llght sparked by a pet1t1on of Archbishop Blenck of New Orleans for Brothers to staff the hwh school departments of the Crescent Cltys paroch al schools was momentar1lly klndled bv Brother NICQHS Bertm s offer to send the needed Brothers and Monsxgnor Raclnes reply askmg 1n the name of the Archb1shop that a Brother be sent to conslder plans for a Protectory and other projects The untimely death of the Archbishop Apr1l 20 1917 cast a shadow for sometlme How ever a letter from the Very Reverend Jules B Jean mard prxvate secretary to the late prelate and ad m1n1strator of the Archdlocese at the tlme promlslng to contmue wlth plans as scheduled once more ht the way Brother Alton consequently was sent to New Orleans to 1flVOSllgaf6 and examme the offer regardmg the proposed Protectory After several 1nterv1ews vuth the dlrector and supervlsor of the d1ocesan board of Cathollc Charltles Reverend Father Carra Brother concluded that the plans not bexng practlcal could not prove satlsfactory Hence the project was rejected Brother Alton however was advlsed to see Father Langlols of New Iberxa who was anxious to open a school for boys Brothers V1Slt was the provxdentlal answer to the prayers of the prlest and the resplendent hght of Gods provldence guxdmg the nascent provmce I O . , ' u I . ' ' l A . , . 1 . , . . 1 . . - . , . . , W . . s . V - ' .F . ' . . . ' ' ' ' s 51 , - . . I , I I , . . . I '. ' ' , ' 2 LQ .. . ' s 7 . ' ' . ,s . . Y Y l o s . - , v ' ' K v ' All . . .- v A , ' -. v ' V 1 Y . ' ' v 4 . ' v ' L . . - - . . , . . . . - - . - , , . - 1 I A ' Q - ' ' ' ' 1 I- r ' . ' '- hh I K 1 , n I . . . p , Y 5 , . . . . . 3 0 V ' V Y A' . I ' . -fl v V ' I 7 5 , V 5 in . . . . . .' . . . ' . 1 rest of the Brothers belonging to the Province and , r ' , ,, S ' 3 . 1 ' .- ' , ' , ' xi! . ' 4' . . . l li. s L x K I , - . . ,, . - . . . , A , . ,, . . . . ' s , . ' . . . . , , . . . . g R , . , , . . . . , . , . Y D . . , . . ' ' v y ' - . . , 1 . , , , y ' . . ' V - I a - n Y a I - . . , , , . L , - . I . as . ' ' I , u 4 .A . ' ' , , I u a . , - ,' - . . 1 , . - . . A ' ' . , ' 1 , V . . ' . , Y ' 5 l I , . . , 1 ' ' a 1 ' I I 1 Q ggi i, Flrst Nouces-Brother Rosendo and Brother Manuel with Brother A Anatolem Director The opemng of St Peters College Hlgh School at New Iber1a was followed by the purchase from the Benedxctme Fathers of St Pauls Colleve Hlgh School 1n Covmgton Louslana Th1s school opencd under the Chr1st1an Brothers ln September 1918 A year later Cathedral High School opened 1n Lafayette LOUISIHDH The transactions for those schools were made under the admlnlstratxon of Brother Nlceas Bertln who dved September 21 1918 The vacancy l ft bv the death of thls outstanding rellgxous was fllled by Brother Aenel Isldore The new Provmclal lmmedl atelv reahzed the pressmg need of a House of For matlon where natlve vocatlons could be recelved and tralned lf new schools were to be opered Pro vldentlally Sacred Heart College ln Las Vegas New MEXICO formally owned bv the Jesult Fathers and the Revlsta Catollca became avallable W1thout de lay It was purchased by the Brothers and a novltmate and a Junlorate were opened ln the f ll of 1919 Two graduates of Salnt MlChaB1S Hmh School that vear Manuel Castlllo of Belen and Rosendo D leado of Santa Fe vs ere admltted to the novltlate and Brother Anatollen Alfred vsas named Master of Novlces A pupll of La Salle Instltute IH Las Vegas New Mex co FFHUCISCO Baca asked to be admltted as a 1un1or novlce and Brother Agllbert Benedlct was named dlrector of that department Subsequently scores of boys and young men throughout New MEXICO Colorado Texas and Lou1s1ana were helped by the JOV13l Brother Abedlr Joseph to fmd the1r Vocat1on 1n 11 e as Chr1st1an Brothers The future of the Pro vmce was assured The x1s1t o Brother Adrlan ASSISIHHL to the Super lor General durlng the month of August 1920 had many favorable results the most lmportant bemg the creatlon of the New Orleans Santa Fe Provmce and that of Ant1lles'Nlex1co Both provmces or dlS trlcts were formally lnaugurated on Aprll 24 1921 The former was to comprlse all the schools exlstmg 1n New Mex1co and Loulslana as well as all future estabhshments In Texas and Colorado the later Mex1 co and Cuba Today the tvuce exiled founders of the New Orleans Santa Fe Dlstrlct stlll ahve about flfteen of them can look back and Justly take prlde 1n the rapld growth and accompllshments of one of the youngest d1str1cts 1n the Umted States At the present tlme th1s young D1str1ct numbers 240 Bro thers '39 Scholastlcs 24 Novlces and 52 Junlor Nouces There are 14 schools d1str1buted as follows 1 college 7 Hlgh Schools 6 Grade and Hlgh Schools The total number of puplls taught 1n these establlsh ments IS 6037 Sacred Heart College Entrance VIBW of Novltlate and Jumorate Bunldmg 1 fwf- Kirwin High School School Faculty, Galveston, Texas Seated:--Brothers C. Ignatius, Bamaby, Director, A. Robert, A, Leo Standing:-Brothers B. David, A. Miguel, C. Eugene, A. Benjamin, Benjamin A., C. Law- rence, Berchmans Bernardo, B, Abel, Joseph, Holy Family Community, Lafayette, La. Seated:-Brothers Rosendo, Gauthier, John, Standing:-Irenevvs, Prosner, Eugene, Ste- phen, Theonhile, Fdrrar, Benito bb, if ,, ,mia 'fdwc-w Y ...lst . ,.!,, De La Normal School Lafayette, La. X- 'lb ,-g 1' if nrmq Cathedral High School Facultv Seated Brothers A Anthonv Raphael Director NRIHITC A Fmlle Standing Brothers B luke A Eduard B Amedv A Ralph Simon A Joaeph aw Seated on the left side of the table max been seen Bishop Sid nev M Metzger The Host Hon Brother Athanase Archbishop Fdwm Bs me Missionaries from Santa Fe-New Orleans Province Seated:-Brothers Martin Adol- phe, Yictor l.Assistantl Edw'n tProvincialJ Joseph O. Paul Standin : - Brothers Ame'lv Ldnard Amado Ifellx A Gab nel A limlle Richard wlqlt of the Most Honorable Brother Athanase Superior I eneral on the occasion of the American Centennial of the Brother of the Christian Schools 1948 The Most Hon Brother At- hanase Brother Eliphus Victor Xsslstant and Brother Bemldus are at the head ot the procession going to the Cathedral i I De La Salle Juniorate Faculty Back row: Brothers A. Virgil, B. John, B. Albert, Front row: Brothers A. Ignatius, A. Francis, 0. Paul. From left to right fseatedl: Brother Anselm Alban lrecruiterj, Brother Christian George tSub-Directory, Brother Andrew Celestine tDi- rectory, Brother Claudius George. Second row: Brother Brendan Damian, Bro- ther Cyprian Mark, Brother Amedy Leopold fPrel'ec-tj, Brother Anthony Joseph, Brother Cecilian Dominic. De La Salle High Faculty, New Orleans Ia Seated Brothers Harold Charles Amedy, Francis 1Directorj, Arsenlus August B Barnaby F Standing Brothers:-Virgil, Dennis, C. Ifldelis A Benjamin I uke Claudius I Ambrose Alfred, Stephen, Martin, Jose, Anthony G Camlllus Joseph, Adrian Thomas Anthony A., Edwin. l 1 Brother Cassian Q Director I 3 .1 -I 1- 3, I IL! I' 'Q . ..,'z- ,du , . .L ,,,:1,, . .57 V .iA4':t -' -44 t. 1 'J - 'bca' v. 3 1 1 1- . ,, , fi Z si ' 1 1,- 1 1' X Jft. i -, 1 1 fx .af 9 rt? li' f? 1 HISTORY St. Paul's College was founded by the Benedetine Fathers in 1911. They bought the 26- aere property and buildings, formerly known as Dixon Academy, and quickly made of it one of the most renowned institutions of learning in Louisiana. Chartered by the State in 1916, it retains to this day its name College The Benedictine Fathers sold the College and its facilities to the Christian Brothers in June. 1921, and from that day to this. St. Paul's has continued to grow and expand under the direction of the Brothers, Thousands of young men have attended classes at St, Paul's, not only from Covington and New Orleans, but many from far away States, hundreds from Mexico, Cuba and almost every country in Central and South America. Nearly all have given a good account of themselves in later life, Their success, and the gratitude they tender t.heir alma mater, is the highest tribute that could be paid to the men who taught them, and to the system of education which continues in force at St. Paul's. .yd W: Scholastics or Students Brothers at St. Micha,el's College 1958-1959 St. Paul's College Faculty Left to right standing: Brothers: Raymond Gregory, Raphael, Ephrem, Adrian Seated: Brothers: Austin, Felix, Basil, Alfred, Christopher, Mark, Justin, Cassian, Bonaventure, M. Joseph. QF? 'Qui-4 Director I 'lllllft WIPIYIOFIRI Illgh School Faeultw I ilu fharles Ia Brother 'Hired Back rovl Brothers Herman Brendan Jerome Paul Jasper heated Brothers Allf.,llStlll6, John Xllred Daniel Joseph Q1-at d left to Flght Brothers Bartholomew Ylneent Con Brother Frederick Bfrnaffl ljlredm- Standlng left to right Brothers Bernard -Xdrlan Chrlstlan Charles Andrew NlCh0l3S Aloxslus Hllarx, Benjamin Alexis, Casslan Egbert '? Hanson Hugh Sehool I-aeults B,-other Bernard Back row Brothers Andrew Brendan Perdmand Ieo Du-ectvr lfront row Brothers B Lexus Bc rn 1rd Daniel W alter , P1- i 'f fi . . . , V ' 1 . .. ,- , ' , ' . ' , , . ,. . . , . , , . f- H .' I .Q 1 if 3 B ' I - B ' 3 .e,, 'fx , ',,,,- stantine James, Alfred Frederick, Barnaby Ambrose, Augustine .', . ' Lv f, A lvf. , t' I . v,' J ' x ,- . ' i , ': J: , Q, - 2 , , . Immaculate Conception Community, JW!! Kxrwm High School Galveston Texas Cathedral High School, Faculty Catholic High New Iberia La. Seated Brothers A Joseph Benedict C Director, Isidore, Standing Brothers A Bertrand B Plus B Howard, Clau- Seated: Brothers: Richard, Godwin, Alfred. Standing: Brothers: Anthony and Bertrand. ' 4, H k fi Q , PM -'aE f'4 ' Q eig- v. . ' . ggi: 3 3 I IV. 5, Sas si w . 'i , at-'me ' aff-H fer I El Paso, Texas St. Nicholas School To-Day 1Bernalillo, N. MJ Cathedral High School, Lafayette, La, Building of 1878-Remodeled in 1950 The growth of the City of Santa Fe since the war has caused the erection of several public and parochial grade schools. The high school age popu1at1Or1 has not fared as well and so the demand for admission, here at Saint 1V1lCl'l3E1'S, has been great since 1950. Obliged by this existing condition. Brother Camillus saw fit to drop the first and second grades during .his two years as DlI'6Ct0I'- Brother Abel Francis, his successor, gradually dropped the third and fourth grades. By doing this all the classes from the eighth grade on up to the twelfth were doubled. In 1956, Brother Robert was obliged to discontinue the fifth grade to make room for the sevent.h graders whose numbers required two Classes. Traditions of long standing are hard to break and the discontinuance of these grades irked those whose ancestors had called Saint lNIichael's HMY SCHOOL from the first day school experience in their life until graduation from High School. However, the three Principals mentioned above did what no doubt .has resulted as most advantageous to the individual, the family, and the good of Santa Fe itself, The remodeling of the 1887 building to make it uniform with the Terri- torial style of the dormitory building was begun by Brother Camillus. However. it was during the administration of Brother Abel Francis that the exterior work on this structure was finished as well as the complete remodeling of the infirmary and the kitchen carried out. During the administration of Brother Francis two distinguished Scientists, Messrs. Stanley Stubbs and Bruce Ellis. of the New Mexico Museum of Anthropology, undertook the ex- cavations or probings necessary to ascertain the approximate age of the Old San Miguel Church. The reredo in back of the altar was restored to its former beauty by Miss E. Boyd of the New Mexico Museum's Spanish Colonial Arts Section. and the old Victorian altar was replaced bv one more in con- formity with the Spanish Colonial period. Messrs. Bob Blattenberg and Ken Clark at the time planned the new Spanish Colonial bell tower replacing d b 'l ' roo ui t in 1887. These same two architects drew the plans for the new lobby and additional dressing room facilities at the gymnasium Whe B th . , . n ro er Francis was transferred to De La Salle High School in New Orleans the work on the new addition to the gym had begun and his successor Brrth V . . , J er Robert, had it finished and blessed by His Excellency Archbishop Edwin V B . - . yrne in October 1950. The following summer an expansion campaign to raise the funds to put up the needed buildings was conducted under the auspices of Brother Robert. Unfortunately it was not very successful. At the present time Brother Norbert is carrying on the direction of Saint Michael's High School. hopeful that in this centennial year the fond desires of the past may e concietely realized. Throughout the years covered by this unit we find that Saint Michael's High School, faithful to its traditions. has continued to supply the state with educated and useful citizens. Thus in 1927, to take only one instance at random, twenty-one St, Michaels graduates were present in the legislature. The school records continue the story of a broad educational effort. Thus in this period there have been as usual reports of activities in debating. elocution, sports, dramatics. etc. In addition. the school paper started in 1910. probably the oldest in the State, for awhile ran some of its pages in Spanish and some in Engllfih. When awards began to be made in the State and in the nation for the best n0WSPfip0rs at a high school level, the San li liguel News immediately Lobby and Lounge added Brother Camillus is ,fig -P Brother Francis 3 4 . 71 1 I1 nf D I Brother Robert took 1ts place as one of the cons1stently h1ghest rated In sports durxng th1s per1od there IS evldence that the school took readlly to the newer mterests By 1926 basketball had taken hold on the campus and m 1927 the c1ty champ1onsh1p was vson In 1928 and 1929 began the oft to be repeated story of pre tourney favorltes losmg a cruclal one or two poxnt early game However 1n that per1od many a cru clal one has been won and the Horsemen as they come to be called have xx on sexeral d1str1ct and state champ1onsh1ps ln the var1ous mter scholastlc sports If Sa1nt M1chaels H1gh School has glven lNew MEXICO 1ts statesmen lt has also glven soclety leaders ln the var1ous walks of llfe PFIQSYS Governors Doctors Judges M1l1tary Men Teachers Professors Bankers Executlves 1n the var1ous branches of busl ness and promment Athletes have all passed through the halls of learnlng superv1sed ln Santa Fe by the Brothers of the Chrlstlan Schools W1th1n the century over twenty flVG thousand or an average of about tvso hundred and f1fty students each year have been taught by three hundred and f1ve ded1cated men who have been 1n Santa Fe for longer or shorter perlods The last per1od of nearly a quarter of a century Expansxon 1n the number of students has kept pace Glionstitutional Qloxwention TIIIITOIY OF IIW IIXICG November 18 1910 Rev Brother Edward Pres St Michael s College Sante Fe N Deer Brother: Enclosed please find convention resolution No 28 which was adopted by eoclametion by the constitutional convention today Yours very respectfully BOYS Dry O 8 on fl FI has been one of consolldatlon rather than expanslon Wllh the growmg school populatlon of Santa Fe and 1ts envlrons Undoubtedly the natlon wlde reputatlon that the school has acquired accounts for the many students commg to school from other States :MEXICO and Canada But m the ma1n the effort has been one of con sohdatlon The Brothers are now g1ven longer per1od of preparat1on and there are more teachers w1th spec1al1zed tra1n1ng The course of studles has been tr1mmed down to allow for more concentratlon Wlth out Jeopard1z1ng the extra currlcular speech pro gram the cu1 rlcular speech program has been broad ened and extended The sclence courses are much r1cher and among the best 1n the states secondary system The college program whlch has been gradually separated from the hlgh school program Wlth the formauon of a state Wlde hlgh school system has been glven new l1fe 1n the formatlon of St Mlchael s College as d1st1nct from St Mlchael s High School ln 1947 The college now functlons as an entlrely separ to St Mxchael s ln the 1874 corporation act and the hlstory of the separate growth of Sa1nt Mlchael s College IS a verv real chapter of the over all history of Sa1nt Mlchael s Hlgh School ST MICHAEL COLLEGE PAA ln OLUTIO HO 52 By Mr Venoeslao Ja mills QESOIVED het thetrsnks of tr1s Co vent1on are her by extended to the Pres1dent Faculy and tudents of t Michaels College of ante Fe for the entertainment and hospitallty extended to tre delegates on the venlng of November 17th 1910 Ve congratulate this Ancient Irst tltion for its noble vork in the educat1on and uplmfting of tre youth of the Territory and esire to express ozr hope for its continu ed ouocess R SOIVVD That u copy hereof be d11 signed by the President and Secretary cf this Convention and transmitted to the President of St Michaels College AQ S cqnvb AMF K A ff f K have been educated at St. Michael's, These students ate foundation. but its charter is still that granted , . M. 'I - - A C - I 0,1 J. I O - Q , . Umt Xl The Good Work Conhnues Nineteen Hundred Elghteen To The Present September 22 1918 the Santa Fe New Mex1can made known that a noted Chrlsttan Brother had dled 1n Santa Fe a former Mexlcan Educator I the death of the Venerable Brother lN Bertm aged 59 years formetly dlrector of Saint 'Nhchael s colltge and for many years prov1nc1al or head of the Chrls tlan Brothers 1n the republlc of Old NIQXICO Santa Fe lost a noted educator and the Chrlstlan Brothers one of tht 1r most talented workers Brother Charlemagne who had succeeded the de ceased as prmc1pal of Salnt M1chaels left l1ttle to be des1rcd as an admlnlstrator New laurels were added to the educatxonal and athletlc ach1evements a sudden and traglc end June 15 1922 On that day fifteen Brothers and SIX boardlng students started ln the merrlest humor at 5 o clock 1n the mornmg for a p1cn1c 1n the dellghtful shade along the Pecos trout stream As they approached the Slte of the Oldest Well a landmark on the Old Pecos road the drlver lost control of h1s truck ln so t sand The yehlcle sl1d gaxe a wh1rl to the left and turned turtle as lt rolled down the embankment a d1stance of 15 feet Brothers Charlemagne and Andrew wete ln the back seats and were p1nned under the wheel whtch mjured their heads The former d1ed on the le ember m qour p aqera BW Charlnmngnr ot 'aus who cited the wth of June N22 Il the 56th qelr of hu nga nc the 40th of hu YOIIQIOIII h I i Remember m uour praqeu lm. Agalhon Anon rw Uho dned tho 13th of June 1922 ln the 305103 of hu aqe and the mth of hu rohqxom his spot of the acc1dent the latter suffered agomzmg torture for about ten hours and dled 1n Santa Fe Others 1n the truck were dazed by the fall but the majorlty recexved mmor cuts and brulses They escaped cxushmg because the body of the truck scarcely touched them The news of the death of these two outstand1ng 1nternat1onal rellglous educators plunged the c1tv 1n grlef Besldes the detalled account of the tragedy the New NIex1can stated Santa Fe last nlght was plunged ln grtef over the travedy whlch sacrlflced two IIVQS of prom1nent educators of the capltal yester dav The news of the death of Brother Charlemagne came as a shock to members of all churches and people xn every walk of llfe for he had become known and esteemed by h1s years of labor tralnln youth from all over the Souhtwest and Old Mexlco The second death brought another shock last nlght to Santa Fe and there was great sorrow over the death of Brother Andrew the young educator who was well known by Santa Feans He was frequently seen down town on buslness for the college The Most Reverend Archblshop Albert Daeger pont1f1cated at the double funeral whlch was held from the Cathedral of St Francls I 1 i Y . . 1 - s u rl B ' , y . . . ' ' ' 1 7 H' - Y 1 Q- ' I . . . A, . ' Vx . , of the school during his principalship which came to spread throughout the city yesterday afternoon, and l !. y l . m ' r 1 . ' .. ' fr, Brother Arsenius, coming from New Iberia, Louisi- ana, where he had founded and directed St. Peter's College, was appointed Principal of Saint Michael's August 3, 1922. His affability and engaging manners immediately won the hearts of the teachers and pupils. He deemed it wise and necessary to modify the curriculum to conform closer with the one sug- gested by the State Department of Education. T.his modification did not affect so much the subjects taught and required heretofore, but rather the time schedule for the length of class and study- hall periods, His predecessors trained under the old European system of education, and having been, moreover, under rigid French military training, be- lieved in strict physical and mental discipline brought about, or at least helped, by long school hours and study. We are told by members of the faculty that witnessed this modification that it was most wel- comed by all, To render the teaching of sciences more efficient the scientific laboratiories were remodeled and equip- ped better than ever. Longer recesses made the improvement of recreational facilities a must. Hence a new grandstand was erected, baseball diamonds planned and laid out. and the gymnasium improved. After three years of successful administration Brother Arsenius was appointed Provincial of the New Orleans-Santa Fe District, which position he held for twelve years. During that time he was in- strumental in opening Cathedral High School in El Paso, Texas: Hanson Memorial School, Franklin, Louisiana: Landry Memorial High School. Lake Charles, Louisiana. He was also extremely active in promoting the higher studies of the Brothers of the District. As a result of a serious operation, Brother Arsenius had to curtail his activities, but he still renders notable service to De La Salle High School, in New Orleans, where he supervises the Freshmen Classes. Brother August who had been in Santa Fe since 1916 and who during this epoch had held the res- ponsible positions of Prefect of Discipline, Inspector of the School, and Assistant Principal, succeeded Brother Arsenius. His administration was a marked success, For six years he wisely directed the destinies of Saint Michae1's College, gaining the esteem of all those with whom he came in contact. The great work whic.h he accomplished ranks him next to Brother Botulph and Brother Fabian in the grateful memory of the patrons of the school. Early in the morning of No'vember 30, 1926, a fire broke out in a classroom in the main building. The students who were asleep in the dormitories above the classrooms were awakened by Brothers Nazaire and Andrew C. and led to safety before the fire gained much headway. Before the blaze could be controlled all the upper story of the main building had been destroyed and the majestic tower had fallen, nu: Lo lie erected again. The firemen had practical- ly given up hope of saving the building and had be- gun to turn their attention to the surrounding build- ings to keep them from burning, A group of the larger boys who ,had been helping to remove from the classes whatever could be saved, could not bear to see their school totally destroyed, so taking the hose from the frozen hands of the firemen they rushed up the main stairs in the very face of danger YN Scenes of 1926 Fire and succeeded in stopping the fire. Had it not been for the .heroism of these boys the whole building would very likely have been destroyed. The loss was great and things looked exceedingly gloomy for a while, but the school was in the hands of a capable administrator, Before the smoke had drifted away from the charred ruins a drive had been started to raise funds for the necessary repairs. Due to the .help of the many friends of the school classes were interrupted for only a day. Mr. F. J. Gormley, chairman of the city school board, placed at the Brothers, disposal a new school building which had just been completed. Mr, J. R. Martinez, manager of the Coronado Hotel, opened its facilities to the boarders, In a word everyone did all that was in his power to keep Saint Michaels going, The necessary repairs on the burning building were immediately begun and after the holidays it was ready for occupation. The third story, however, was gone forever. Consequently, the limited accommoda- tions were insufficient for the number of boys en- rolled. A new building was an absolute necessity, but Brother August hesitated to plunge the establish- ment in debt by making a loan. Trusting in Provi- dence a series of novenas to St. Joseph were begun, which were to end on the feast of .his patronage. On this very day Brother August met Mr. Miguel Chavez while walking down town, Mr, Chavez in- quired as to the prospects of putting up the needed school building. Brother August told him that so far he saw no possibility of doing anything, but that the Brothers and the students were praying to St. Joseph to come to the rescue. Mr. Chavez smiling- ly replied: Your prayers are answered, I will build your school. Fifty-five years before, in 1872, this Miguel Chavez, a poor orphan boy, had attended Saint Michael's grade school through the charity of Archbishop Lamy. At the age of fourteen he was obliged to leave school and look for work to help support his needy mother. He soon found employment in a local restaurant as a dish washer at two dollars a week. From Santa Fe he went to Park View, New Mexico where he worked in the store of T, D. Burns. After a few years he had saved up enough money to open a store of his own, in the same town. Clncidentally, Mr. J. R, Martinez who came to the assistance of his Alma Mater after the fire, as well as the writer of this centennial history, also an alumnus, came from Park View.J Little by little through dint of hard work he succeeded in amassing a considerable fortune, All through his life he recognized the in- fluence that his short stay under the guidance of the Christian Brothers had exercised on the formation of his character and in the attainment of his success. Gratitude was always one of this dominant traits. In remembrance of the charity of Archbishop Lamy, Mr. Chavez, had erected the beautiful statue which stands in front of the Cathedral. and now was his opportunity to show his gratitude for what Saint Michael's College had done for him. aft' TY :L ' w 1- , H- ini CCTV!!-Y am 4l! f'a Chavez Memorial ,avi , . ,ass-re, Horsemen Gym ,gboioininxneooioini 1 10301 3, -. I J QW 1 v 4 I0 76 Orfejd A ff M ,- 762 51 1 A' 4,s y A if i Wg 4 MV 7 fm g y f Mug-,fvfzwy in wwf W'?? YQWTEL J fw' fmzg A ...g... i2M 4 44. nuioif 101 ,, s.o -Q , W , 3 i V x , V 1 4 , H Q ' 1 H is - ' W 'VI ' 5 II H 1- H ' W 'za WH 1: : gf , I II . gfuzf, in : . , 57, U , ' i 5 H 1 2 II : . ' Y 'gif , ' V V f ' H wa, ,K, ,,, , ,Lx ,, H ,,' c'fJ1.f,l, yi ,gnoxgf ' , A ,.,f,,s ., 1, : 554, f ,5 A ,L X z.f,f5y4g:3W,, 5' ,A 53-Q, 5 , J II ff. ff V ,m rga V A 1, 2 ff, ' N71 'mf . ' ' H 4, Y W , fi' W 'Af W aw' W II ll , 2 1 2 7 ff f- if f' 4 1 ' ' f I R ....,4. ...W-4-9. ,,L.vqg1.f.i, 'f vf'1.,. .zgA4hh ' ',., A lf 1' ' f ' 'ffxffv -.,....Q-- ' 'W ' ., ., ' so WfMW'3!U'?'fm, 'Q EDGAR HEPP RALPH J. BIIRCH BERNIE CHAPMAN PETE SAHD, JR, RICARDO ARCHULETA EDXVARD LINGO FRANK L. BAC.-X JOE LUCERO ROBERT FOUDY REYNALDO ROMERO A ffl: WY ERfA 57 R 'Y ff' . 5' 5 ai S- 13 fg! P ful ?'F - -s 7 ,,f .v iq! I , , - L+ FRANCIS J. BRUNEL HARRY JEAGER JOHN 'MCNULTY ARCHIE REA JOE CLINTON J, FRANK TRU-HLLO LEOPOLDO DICLGADO JOE G. 'CHAYEZ JOHN ARDANS IGNACIO BACA Al' ' FH - V1 11111 on the Fhawz 111011101131 was 110111111 111 11111 fall of 11127 and the structure was readv for me ln the S1111115 of the followmg v1a1 Ar1o11111 11111110 IIQLPSNIIN was 1h11 of C1 Qxm11aS111n1 1311111111 1111511111 T10g01l310C1 11 loan and 1hL 1.151111118111111 xxax 11111s1111111 11 14 111 m1 fs 1 1 1 T1 111111-,K 11111 1 1 1 N 1' 1'11u11111r1111111 fax111111111x 1x11h '111x 111u1 111111111 l11N111L1 Il S 11111 111 1111 5flU111XX1N fl 1111 x a1s 11 11Y1l111S11l1lfl11 71111111 X111 N s 911111111111111 X11111111 of 11'l 11111111111 111111 semus returned to Santa Fe as dlrector of the school f1f111 112111 1 a111 A NP 110 for Ga11oQ11111 Toxaw 111 fo111111 1x111x111 111 11 51111141 ,1111111 111 I3 1T111r1l s 111 I0 11 111111111Q 9I11Cf 1918 1op1'11o1 11111 11 A111 111119 111 -1111 11 10 11?1f11U11'l111l1lSh 1111 111111111 1 111 1111 X111 T111Q h'111111o11 11121 '11 11111 1112111111111 fl 11 S11111 1 '7 1 N41 1 WX , 1111 ug ll1 1 1 W1 N1 11 s 1 1X IXIIIQ 10 1111111111 f 11121 1111111 x 11s 1111 1 1110 1o1 Q 11 11 3111111 N Ll 1111111 of thowo 111111 11111 111111 1o pax 11111 11111 111111on of Q9 00 '1 month Dullllg 111090 1111110 1111101 11111 al11111111 13111011 1191111111 1110 r1oo11Q of 1111 21h11111 and 4 1l,., ilddli 3 Q1 Xf 117111 111 111111111 f111 111Cl'111'1l 11 KfXl1i1 XOI11 Zlflfl K1II11PQK11111 111111111 tho 1111111 0811111 H 1111K 1111 1 1 11 1 11111 11' 11 1 1111111s Thus 111 f11111 111-11 11111111 11 11 1211111111 1211111111111 Y11111 1211111111 X 1111011 11111111 11111 11111 the f11Q1 1111110 xPa1Q 111111111 B1111h111 Ro111l11uN 1 o 11111111111 S111111111 11311 1111 foxx 91111191118 111111 1111 I11 10191111 S111111111 112111 '111 11111111r111111 of f11111 1111111111111 :111 foltx Soxon sturlonts r1f1111l111 fl 1111 111111 111111 1 111 11 1 1111111111111 11111 111 1 1 I 11 If '7 11 11 0 111111 1111 Qlllf 1111111 Sf 11o111 2111111 111211 ox1s1111 111 s 11 1 11 1 C11 1 1 11 1 11 1v11111,q1 111 Golden J.lb11fO 1111111111111 111111 11 111 1111 11V 21 1024 NI1 Romeo FL1'1I1lI1U11dI'11 20 1111111131 1111 1 1' 1 11 11111111 AQQ11111111111 v 1111 111 R111- 111.112 111311111110 11111 111111111111 111 111' 1 11 1 111111 A 11 1 X1 11111111 11111 ploffram f111 11 H 1 1 111111 A Po1111f1ca1 Haw at the F1I1'1ff1131 T'11c uw fol11111111 111 a 11311101110 1L111f11 1111111 '111 X111T11111 1111111111111 P1'Pf00f1l11f' the Qolomn RM1111111111111 '11 11111 G1o11r1 of I11111111Q a 11211111 confort and gvmnawur ex111I11t N 1 S 111k 11 f111111111 111 11 11111111111 1111 Qlllm Thx uae Q11o11Q1111111 111 111 1 11111 X11x111'1rv A 11111111 1111111111 hx R1011111 129111111119 ff11 11111 11111121111 X119 xmv 111111 1111111111111 rm amount of 112 111Qto1'1Cal waluo B1f1111PI' 1'3Q11111uQ Q1x'11 war ai 1111111111111 11111111111 ' 11 U 1 H 1111111 rho a11111 A111111 11 00 801111 l11s0 11 '111 11111 11111 11 11 , s1 XX ll Q f I k 11 y1'2l1'Q 11111 f11111111'1111, 111111 3 1' 1 f 1 1 . roms 1-11111111111111oi11111'1'1wg1 15, -.111-,1 111- 1 l f 1111'3f1. 2111111-QS111' 111 B111111111' f:f1111'101 111 11111 summor o 946. 11511152 o aftraof moro 11Qi11111' f41Llf11'111Q v ' 1 L i11Q 1 -w, , - 1- 1 1-. m111o1i11Q of 11111 1-111111 111111 1111'mi1111'i1-Q ' 1 Q1- '- PT'fWiTP VUOYTIF Tf'0k Dlaoo 111 1050. 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ROMERVO, E. DELGADO, J. SILVA, C. ROMERO, E. BACA, T. ROMERO, F. MAIIBOUB. SEATED H YAY HECKE. J QUINTANTA, J ORTIZ, F. GONZALES, U. LUCERO E DOUGHPRTY C ASS OF 32 David McNeil STANDING F KASTL F LFGER J CAIIFGOS F BALLING J SLATED C SAVDOWAL E BARNCASTLE T NIl'Il'NDI'Z E C-XSADOS I URTIZ C bANCHl'l L B-XCA C 9 QUIGLEY, D. TCIMBFOCGH. J. WOOTJRUAFF, C. HAGEST. Y I ' A . , w --1' - , . . 1 - ,, .:' I V A 1 I ua ' fr 1' ' 4 VE: ' A if ,lf ' 1 21,3 Aj la x ,Xa xg 4 ! Q A ' P-A I Af J' Q ' 1 n , , V , , p ' fb , 1 S'fj 3 P 'Qi' I WW ,, 1 f 'Q U1 lj ! 1 , ,fn-4.-1 . 5 .,.., f7,,,d..wa QM7 fM4,,,.,-15612243 T . T ' Saint ,i'Hirlgzwl's Qullvgv 2. V 1 51 Z.. a 'kg Q. r Q' V x, L 1 . g 'f ff ff 0:12155 uf 15133 , ll, , 1,4-. 9 f jp .. 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' h 1- i 'f f1F-:-in , L CJ F '54 i ' 1 gg 4.154 I f , fl K, 2 f ' M W far ffqgf f, ' ' . . f . : X f 8 ff:-LS A ', W ,N ' 1 - 1-L A-15 A Mx X ' 1 Qi 7 - - -' i-kgsff' 5 ' 3 W -'E 3 ---f if f KX A - '33 bf X Q 'E+:1 4 gi5'Zl'n ?5Z2g i wp : - - f 1 QZN -, 14 Hes- - . , 'M' f-Q fl - 'Lf 1 i--ff: 2 Rf 4 X- - F ' A xe l -- X fix X W... J 'Q X' Jig- B A ft? -37 W I ,V V 9 'f -X-W X I,-,W iii V -xittk fl R K 3? '-' ' - h ' V 'Vx ff ? K ii 4, if J?- 5' Brother Benildus St. Miohael's College Faculty, Santa Fe, N. M. Seated-Brothers: Regis, Anect, Ernest, Stephen, Luke tPresi- dentb, ljlmile, Alfred, Edward. Standing-Brothers: Gregory, A. Regis, Michael, Cyril, Andrew, Brendan, Peter, Roland, Amedy, C. Malachy. Administration Building -J ' Unit Xll A living monument to a great Christian Brother Brother Benildus of Mary in concluding his book. Seventy-five Years of Service. edited at the Golden .lubilee of St. llichat-l's lligh School. in 1934. wrote si prophetic paragraph. which prophecy he probably never dreamt at the time. he would gear to its realization. At that time he wrote: The Brothers of the Christian Schools look back on their Seventy-five Years of Service with that feeling of satisfaction which is the reward of a task well done, It is their hope that they may continue to serve the Church and the people of New Mexico for many years to come, lt is also their hope that before many more years have passed they may be in a position to offt-r the young mm of The State the advantages of a four-year Catholic College. ln our historical sketch of Saint Michael's High School we have brought out the fact that in 1874, the school had been chartered by the State of New Mexico to grant collegiate degrees. This it did for a time, but in the course of years it had became strictly a grammar and a secondary school. ln the State of New Mexico there was not a single Catholic College for men. the nearest one being Regis College in Denver, Colorado. Nevertheless, the need for such an institution became more and more pressing. The poverty of the state and its small population was explanation enough for this lack of a Catholic College offering higher education. Brother Benildus now set out on the extremely difficult task of interesting people and finding means of starting a new college in Santa Fe, The following editorial An lnvestmentn taken from the San Fe New Mexican. April 20. l945 gives an idea of the great enthusiam with which the project was welcomed in Santa Fe, lt is an unseemly figure of speech. but it seems appropriate to observe at this time that the Christian Brothers. black robes, white dickies and all. have grabbed the ball and are running for Santa Fe's first postwar touchdown. And they are doing it without federal matching funds. The Brothers and their friends have organized a campaign to establish on the 86-year-old framework r of St. Michaels school a standard four-year ac- credited college. Brother Benildus. leader of the campaign. has announced that work will start as soon as labor and materials are available. With the unfathomable faith of his kind. he did not dwell on the fact the 79,500,000 must also be available. Maybe he is right in not attaching too much importance to that item because the proposed ex- pansion. logical and worthy. has appeared assured of success since the date of its conception. ,- - -.- -... Little Theater Gymnasium Home of the Knights Airview of College i- A 5 ,V Ol'-, I ,Mmm ,. 'AQ -g,,,,,,, i f , ',, If 'I X: , , 4 .. M Lim, H- W Former W 1 , W. r WE 1. ew Q f ,ie 4 Bruns General Hospital ,...-.,,.,..w- will A -N,:k,g5efq N, Q 1, ,, I W 'A ,, 1 -31 1 QNX vf 'mll,.,.yg,,4,,,,'..fif '4r - ,,k,,1E-x'fK,f v s aww.-ww M . 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'Vi f Q S B... CHAPEL LIBRARY BLDG. f'vv E Q BROTHER CYRIL M. HUNDREDS of New Mexico specimens are on display in the mineralogical display set by Brother Emil, head of the chemistry department. A colleg1ate 1nst1tut1on of the tvpe operated bv the ChIlSllZ:1I1 B1others Mlanhattan of New York De la Salle of Ph1ladelph1'1 St 7ll8lVS of Callfornlay would shed 1ts benef1ts oxer a rad1us of hundreds of m1lfs around Santa Fe ln enhghtened Clll7CIlSh1p and 1mp1owed rel1g1ous economlc and cultural standalds But some are not lnterested ln that k1nd of nebulous progress so for the llC'lflCf1T of the Santa Fe res1dent w1th h1s own bank account 1t IS well to 11st some of the con Crete results that mav be expected to follow establ1shment of a college lll Santa Fe The Brothers propose to spend half a m1l11on dollars 1n Santa Fe or fac1l1t1es that w1ll serve at the start some 350 college students 1n add1t1on to the grade and h1gh school departments The new bu1ld1ngs have been handsomely des1gned 1n Span1sh Colon1al archltecture and ex1st1ng structures w1ll be ha1mon1zed by A1ch1tect John G1 aw Mcem After the S500 000 bu1ld1ng cost flows back 1nto Santa Fe channels the school w1ll b1 1ng to Santa Fe a m1n1mum of some S250 000 each year The amount IS equnalent to a new 1ndust1y employ1ng 150 pelsons but the school much mole des1rable than 1ndustry The establ1shment here of the college w1th 1ts attrac t1ve 15 ac1e campus new bu1ld1ng and cultural and econo m1c assets w1ll enhance the value of exery plece of pro perty 1n Santa Fe Cash reg1ster bells that w1ll r1ng w1th men step 1nto the buslness f1eld w1th the 1ncreased earn 1ng power of college t1a1n1ng The protected college w1ll round out the cultural assets of Santa Fe maklng the commun1ty more attract1ve for des11able new 1es1dents And 1mpo1tant to more than you lhlllk the new school w1l1 br1ng colleglate athletlcs to Santa Fe Unllke publlc supported 1nst1tut1ons St 1VIlChaP1S w1ll haue but one cost The1e w1ll be no annual dl1VQS for unds nol app op11at1ons of pubhc money The school gnen IIS plant w1ll carry on spreadmg 1ts wealth o beneftts on Santa Fe and all the su11ound1ng area You dont haxe to be a human1tar1an or ph1lanthrop1s+ to support th1s ente1p11se A COlltI'1bUI1UI'l to the St lNI1c hael s fund IS a good ha1d cash 1ns estment Bxother Bemldus threw hlmself IHKO the campa1gn to ralse money w1th h1s usual enthus1asm and zest P1 om1nent c1t1zens backed the pro1ect and the Ialllx and flle of the Cathol1cs of the stale formed the backbone of the dl1XG w1th a laxge number of fo1mc1 students taklng a very promlnent part Some S108 000 were collected as the dF1Ve falled to reach 1ts goal Thls sum was by no means adequate to even conslder begmnmg the project However some thlng had to be done and the D1StY1Ct d1cl not have the resources to erect the bu1ld1ngs needed The unfathorrable fa1th of Brother Ben1ldus alluded to 1n the ed1tor1al clted above never d1m1n1shed or wavered 98 ln sp1te of part1al fa1lure and at tunes cr1t1cal opposltlfm lnder the Surplus Propertv Act a de1n1te pr1or1ty for the d1sposal of surplus property after the war had been set up SINCE pr1vate non prof1t educat1onal corporat1ons were at the very bottom of the 11st of ellglble gr0upS Brother Bemldus had to make sure that none of the agen C195 wlth hlgher pr1or1t1es requested the property of Bruns General Hosp1tal wh1ch h d some one hundred and f1fty bu1ld1ngs on two hundred and f1fty acres of land and was located here ln Santa Fe Through an endless SSTIQS of meetmgs and Wlth the help of U S Senator Dennls Chavez and US Representatwe Anton1o Fernandez the Federal agenc1es that were lnterested 1n the property one by one rel1nqu1shed the1r demands and the success of the venture seemed assured when at the last moment the Governor o the State of New NIQXICO announced h1S deslre to have the property for state use On March 17 1947 two davs befale the feast of the great St Joseph whose help Brother Ben1ldus never falled to 1nxoke the Governor w1thdrew h1s request for the propertv The Federal Goxemment declded to g1V6 the major part of the property to the Chr1st1an Brothers for use as a College On May 7 1947 some th1rty seven bulld 1ngs and one hundred and twentv three acres were turned ox er to the representat1ves of the Chr1st1an Brothers The bu1ld1ngs and the property had cost the Unlted States government S1 355 821 00 and constxtute one of the largest g1fts ever made by the Lnlted States Government to a Uslng the money collected 1n the dr1ve Brother Benlldus completely furmshed and mod1f1ed the bu1ld1ngs wh1ch were completely dCVOld of fuxn ture Eventually the class rooms and re 1dence halls b gan to take shape and by Stptember 15 1947 they VKPIC leady for occupancy 1f1om 1947 to 1951 B1other Ben1ldus was both Dlrector of the Communlty and Pres1dent of the College The College has grown slowly and gxadually S1nce graduatlng ltS flrst class 1n 1951 St M1chael s has sent forth more than 250 young men armed not only w1th a Bachelors degree but also w1th knowledge and a sound grasp of ethlcs These men are already en11ch1ng New Mexlco w1th the1r talents and sk1ll The college at present has over 300 full t1me students and nearly 200 men and women 1n 11S co educatlonal com mun1ty or evenlng college classes The Pres1dent Brother Cyprlan Luke w ho knows that the college has no mun1f1 cent leglslature to wh1ch he can turn as do the state 1n st1tut1ons has deustd ways and mea 1 wh1ch he hopes w1l1 ex entually matc11al1ze 1nto new 1p to date permanent bu1ld1ngs And so the States oldest Cor newestj College whose deg1ees were by an act of the Terr1tor1al Leglslature on February 20 1893 to be regarded as flrst class teachers cert1f1cates now funct10ns as an ent1rely separate founda t1on but 1tS charter 1S st1ll that granted St M1chael s and the h1story of the separate grow th of St M1chael s College IS a xery real chapter of the overall h1story of St Mlchaels H1gh School . ' . ' . 1 1 ' . . ' A e , V A I , lc . M . A my ' f ' . ' . . . -. -1 v v . V . . X - -, - - ' ' ' . . . . 4 r . v . 1 v . - , , - ' ' ' K ' I V. L . - a ' t A 1 , , . . . . . . I Q - . K L A v , 1 Y , . . . . C . . . - . I ' ' ' 1 1 . , v , , ' N 1 R - . . Y . r. . s v Y , I V. Y Q . P- x . . Q V . Y N 1 ' ' ' ' ,, is , , . ' . . v - V , Y 1 ' y ' ' Y - . . L r l . the money of students will ring more frequently when local Catholic institution. . . . V. . f - . 7 A . . K . . . g S. C -V 1 ' ' 1 -, ' - . . . ' R 1 X ' wi ' 4 A 1 ' . . - . . . . , 7. , A . . ' ' ' ' ' 1 -' C . l A . q , ' r ' . . ' ' ' . Y. . . V 1. . K y' y 5 ' ' R x L Q 1 . . 1. . . . . y V v I . u ' Q - 4 . v H ' ' - ' - 1 . . . . ' . I ' I v - . L. L . . ' V L - . f ' ' ' Q' ' fn ' . as - ' ' . r .' V ' 1 ' ' V 1 - - 1 I . ' 1 , , , ,, .. . v , , . . . . - , ' 7 . , . . . . . . . . , , . . . , l 7 I Y X - I , ! , Y - . 1 we ' l I .' . -1 ' I i -' .7 .Wfzcf ! 264 fj'0f.! , . 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' f I , 1 I ' f 7 f f , A - N I 'I , ..1t .'f'K.lzf1 Q1 f . fx X . I -'.Y'1' ' I ' 'v -- f -f-rw - .'l'r-0'z'.. I ' I V! fy, if V Jflk fx I ff f 4 ff f - J XA 111' '- ' uv- - ,flush Gxf 'ff,f kk ' n ',, - ' ---. 'I ' ,Z V, i M X 'ff 'ff f - f fp I' I I ' A, , -, - .- c .l '. Q ,, f . 4 , I , o fp P Q, VH4. J, '1, -,k-V ,. Z! ' 6 ff- ff ,. f,,,f v'x, I ' I L.. , f , f4'Tr.' ' 7 'Q ,. W - ' , f ' ---'74 . f 4 ff ? fflifiw-, ig' ' - f 7 L-if ff , , ' 1 1 11,1 -'ut ,'.x' 51' , 1, ' V - .44 ' ' 1 . ' A -f ' i Q if . ' J' ' VJ' H , l - . 5... A H ' - I A 'Z V in ' .al I h . - C Wifi, 'fi'- 141 I I EEE tg, 'f,. f ,sf 'll ha.. Gfq- -. 1-4 ' mv W' ,-'5'1i9' I ET!!!-1' ,X fy, h 7 dy '-1 'f' ' 1--'ln Magi!! 21' Q if '- jagtzii 4 ' 2.141 F' I , In P4 in , 7, 9- . f - N ' F1 53 ' . Fatwa .Hrs km fw- JNQVX if ' V A, . Wir ,L- .SAINT MICHAELS COLLE' P PROPOSED EXPANSION SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO JOHN GAW .b1f',f.M, HUGO ZZNNEP, AND ASSOCIATLS ARCHITECTS if ' 1 xx f fr l X X s. R, ng .17 f 'Fr- XXL ,X X, r-, xi ...avi 'JI 119-1 R. ,fn -eq f,..f-f -'W LICLL I -4.-4 Yo- N uwrg I Y If L -1 is fam XX' 'J 5 ,f ,- L mei pe O4-H L,-I CD NN V , was R -...Z cl b 07 4 gov oV UN if mg 133 wh-aaa 51 in. wiv.- x lx 'V ' Q J Day A Satan 5 qu axe. ,- - P DRUHA 119 w, I ' G A3 'ebc L 'iff' 'Sc' wo' Elma xA Cnxma Jr 36 if '36- fvxcirforx 14--4, Q sa W ,Q 'G 5 , il' U f,' ' www for 4' K- ava-ao in Irina ......al afqffln Qui uc Rik' vm, K as 5 V? il- Xfh f -'LL QU 0 nk n iff 45 gc' Us J-HI 'IU' 1' A 'fl' ,4--M 1 H -M Jn. WWW- rg Minn I 'I st xgcnmzx, s COLLhGL Pl I G H SCH O 0 L X1 warg CLQAQSJ5 19:3 4' V 9 ,.,-0 Q? l A' unit Ixm The New Mexrcan Hrstorran hrmself a graduate of Sarnt Mrchaels Benjamrn M Read wrote rn hrs Illustrated Hrstory of New Mexrco 1n 1895 Sarnt Mrchael s College located at Qanta Fe has for a long perrod taken hrgh rank as an educatronal rnstrtutron of great merrt and rt has played an rmportant part rn the hrstory of the Terrr tory for many of the promrnent natrve sons of New Mexrco as well as others have been educated wrthrn 1tS walls The Qanta Fe New Mexrcan of June 19 1914 quotes the late Governor L Bradford Prrnce as statrng that he once started to make a 11st of the promrnent men who had at tended Sarnt Mrchael s College especrally of the law makers rn constrtutronal conventrons and legrslaturcs f the men who had carrred the Sarnt 'tlrchaels sprrrt rnto the statute bools But he rdded I soon found that such a lrst ttould be lrke a drrectory of terrrtorral and state offrcrals begrnnrng wrth the Abeytas and Abreus and Alarrds the Arm1Jos Anayas Anchetas wrth the Bacas and Barelas and so on down the alphabetrcal lrne to the Valdeses and Valencras and Vargas On Notember 17 1910 twenty ttto drstrngurshed men of New ltlexreo honored therr Alma Nlater The t0I1SlllUlltJIldl eontentlon had me' rr Qanta Ife to draw up 1 constrtutron rn pre paratron for statehood and Brother Edward Presr dent of the Colle ge at the trme rrtrted these men and others attendtnv the Costrtutronal Contentron to be the guests of honor at an entertarnment and a banquet grten bv the College The next dav the Santa Fe lNetv Mexrcan publrshed the followrng edrtorral For more than half a centurv Sarnt Nlrchaels Lollege has stood as a beacon lrght on these western plateaux sheddrng 1ts rats rnto every communltt ln a raelrus of frve hundred mrles The celebratron last etcnrng attendant upon a reunron of students of the school ttho are members of the Constrtutronal Contentron retealed the fact that tttentv two delegates look back upon Sarnt Nlrchaels as therr Alma Nlater Thrs rs more than twenty per cent of the entrre contentron and the New 'tletercan belreves that not a srngfle other rnstrtutron of learnrng has been or rs 'rs ttell represented rn any srmrlar bodv of constrtutron or law makers Yale llart rrd and Prrneeton may be more frmous but nerther rn Congress of the Lnrted qtates nor rn the lefrslattrres of Connectlcut 'tlassachusetts or New Jerset the states rn whrch thev are located are to be fmund so laree a proportron of graduates from these um tersrtres The reunron last et nrng rs an rncrdent that ought to demonstrate tl Santa Fe not only the value of thrs tnstrtutron of learning but rts possrblrtres It ought to be more to the Caprtal than anv qtate Inrtersrtt II ought to command part of the large wealth that rs rn the process of aeeumulatron rn the Qouthwest and the future oufht to see rt rrehtlt endowed so that rt mav rarse rts standards and Increase Its attendance as the countrt grows rn populatron and adtances tn culture Among the rnvrted guests to the above mentroned ban quet was Judge C J Roberts of the supreme court and Delegate from Raton Called upon to address the gatherrnv he sard rn part Thrs school rs a revelatron to me I knew we had some exceedrngly brrght men rn the Conventron and I wondered where they had been trarned but now I see that the educatron whrch they have recerved was such as to make them able to measure up wrth any man from any rnstrtutron t1J Honorable Saloman Luna one of the legrslators honored at thrs reunron expressed hrmself thus It rs tvrth great pleasure that I am wrth you tonrght and specrally on an occasron of thrs klnd for well may we gather at St Mrchael s College and offer our congratulatrons to the good Brothers Thrs rnstrtutron has done more for the Spanrsh speaklng people of New 'tlexrco than any other rnstrtutron rn the Terrttory It rs wrth earnestness and 1n the greatest slncerrty that I express the wrsh that every one of you wrll do all rn vour power to assrst rt rn rts good work 123 Referrrng agarn to the columns of the Santa Fe New ltlexrean tte frnd the follottrng comment on June 14 1912 The lNett Nlexrcan has o ten wondered at the large number of the graduates of St Nlrchael s w ho are promlnent rn pub lrc lrfe rn New Nlexrco Verv often rn legrslature when peo ple hate prarsed an especrallt forcrble address they have ascrrbed rt to natrte eloquence when as a matter of fact rt was due to the careful trarnrner recerted from the Chrrs tarn Brothers at Sarnt Nlrchael s College It rs a matter of record that practtcally every publrc of rce rn New Nleterco has been held at some trme or other by a former student of Sarnt Nlrchaels A lrst of these former students who through therr capable fulfrllment of publrc trust hate oecome promrnent would rndeed reflect credrt on therr Alma Mater but such a lrst would neces sarrlv omrt those thousands who rn the humbler vet no less merrtorrous callrngs have exemplrfred those prrncrples and practrces of Chrrstranrtv learned from the Brothers and tt ho hate rn therr srmple way led lrves of usefulness brrnglng up famrlres ef God fearrnv chrldren ttho hate be come ttorth tthrle ctrzens What rs true of her men rn publrc lrfe rs also true of her graduates rn the Armed Forces of our country rn the tw o Vt orld Wars If Sarnt Nlrchaels College Hrgh School has grven New Mexrco rts statesmen rt has also grten socrety leaders rn the tarrous walks of lrfe Prrests Goternors Doctors Judees Nlrlrtarv 'tlen Teachers Professors Bankers Exe cutrves rn the tarrous branches of busrness and promrnent Athletes hate all passed through the halls of learnrnv supertrsed rn Qanta Fe by the Brothers of the Chrtstran Schools srnce 1809 Vt hrle rt rs rmpossrble to etaluate the servrces whrch the school has rendered to New 'tlexrco and the tast and raprd growrng Southwest a glance rnto atarlable statrstrcs tvrll show the enormrtt of rts aecorrplrshrnents The total en rollmcnt has been oter tttentt frte thousand or an average of about two hundred and frftv students each vear srnce 18:19 These students hate been taught bv three hundred and flte Brothers ttho hate been rn Qanta Fe for longer or shorter perrods For the frrst thrrtt vears of rts exrs tence Qarnt Nlrchaels Hrgh ttas the onlv school for boys rn the Terrrtort of New 'tlexrco tthrch offered rts students more than mere elementary educatlon C11 St Q25 San Nlrguel News Dec 1910 . . . . - , . 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'+ ,, -6- xff iam Ari! 1 MQ iq! ,Bm Bf'.'iVfcfu.5 fff -510 1.011 .5 fa f 51 Michaela College mari fmooz ff f' I Ja?-4 ls. in CLB55 5 z9'F 'fl- 1940 xv . 6,4 11' yr Q' C 1 Q f. fx r nf 1 F5- sx. fi J 2 1 11 4 if 1' 'v I Q E'n X98 Q s A Ulf' 1' 4: pX J, Ax, A 'QR 54 if QQ? 51 ' gg: hx E- 1 ,Af 41 :qu IX. E- X ,ae , O I 1- 2 , 5 as-... Q'- Av aw- , '1- 'tm A ,?'r wand 1 L C' I0 y as me I fs l. alll 3 Q-'T' 7 Ma J milf! E' 6 ka r--' 'Q-'J 'S Md H0 '14- K V. It Q .V L ' 'wk lf f l 5- ., ' TM ' nj g , lv Q ., Q ' A ,- 'f ,-mmf, ,Q -A.. g ,g,,,,A, I H Q' 0 ' 'C' X , 1 1, , N g ' aj' 1 AA w .. ff , i I -. ' I , 5 'W H I W J ' Q 1? sw G ' -+- Gy -ff 5' 5 A ' f- -f Q ' 1 M- B! M gn -, 3 0- QW M Ei ' 5' , 5- r V V VJER9 4 A 6 If V s 4 R A J 5, 'fl Yliiffis vn'l,l'qf H jimi Qt-1' ki .2 M. fa? Zia M i J :T X1 1? QQ:-. f x 4 N a F' S- Q - ' 3 M vs. F5 ,. A A- 2 , L- Q- - - X ,D f .... W E air- 5 . b I ns- , s X j f WJ' xs- 7 .Z .ww J L K j, Q. A ' . xf??'3'5 ' i 7 . W , 1 In EN A- 1 I V , fix. I s e J 1 ' . 5 - . ' Q- . fi 5 I gg ' 7' 1' Q 75 1 L-' 'A mf V w V . 5 9, . t :,SiNN if R, ff Q W Q I W A as . ,2- . H ,lit 'W I-st , , it 'h-T 3, E 1 X ff' - A J , 2 ' ff ' - , 'x fs 'Q 41 5' -H - l NW A +f,,-.11 Q.,-M K Xmg Axlukliikdv X N Umt XIV APPENDEX I riznm, of Samf Wwraefj czfrge ,amz 11,1 tsfroof 1R70 1860 1867 1060 1840 1006 1008 1010 1010 1016 1018 1000 1004 1020 or 1039 1028 1038 1044 1016 1990 1032 1033 1008 1960 1004 1060 1?m0 100f' 1018 1010 Brother Br other Br other Br other Brother Hrlarren Fondulph Per amrue Domrtran Botulph Prothfr FLlSY'if11lL1i leurs Brother Hermec Joeeph K1 rnuarx Auffustr Brothtr Jerrnee VS alter 101F' 1018 1072 1001 1010 1031 5 1023 N 1 1014 1016 1030 103 7 1033 1938 Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Pr other Pr other IIonor1uQ Ifdxxartl Nreeae Bertrn Cherrlemafne of Jews Antfl Arsrnrus Arrnare Auvust Antel Xrsenruq Clement NI'1rt1a1 Achcul Fugene f 91 r lh Brother Brother Br othf r Brother Brother Brothf r Andrew Benrldue of Vary Bdsrl Gahrrel August Conrad Camrllus Anthony Abel Prancrs Augustrn Pobert 'Norbcrt I'2Ct0l'5 0 Samf LC ae 55 ll! 0 alle Brother 'Nrceas Bertrn 1916 1017 Brother Anttl Arxenrus 10,1 1030 rothtr f1f11dIL u ust 105010.54 Brother Abust Lonrdd 1000 Benedrct 2601712 ,7I'0UUlCla 5 ld 1034 1040 I 7 J l 1 H- l 'V' 1 1 I H ' 1 - . 1 1 R . . .- - U 1' , . '-.1 , 1' r 1 . .1 Q- ,, 5 ' 1' . , ' . - . 1, ' ' ' . I ' . - .L , ' ' Q g , , .- - .T , t ' ' U 5 .1 ' , 1 z .' I . 1.31-1052, 1' r 1 ' .:..' . 1 1' , ' I 1 L 1035-10750, Brother Benjamin Xavier .T -LI: wh-Au,ft1,' J Brother Agi ert ' .A '- .7 , ' 3 Y 5 ' ' TT- f,, ' ' . 2 f , ' t 7 0 f - vm f r r - Q ' 1 1 it ' J .1.-- T' ar . - B' 1' X' ' '- A Lf 5 .Z - ' 1 cr 5' ' 'F- BDGILEX S vw- CIPRILNO SANDOVLA. Sc nnchael s gi! 4- ,ul D 4' nf QQQA ax vpn IARTXL A BCKERI' 1 -M Ricf 943 QMJJN Yl- Q..-... fr. V sf' S , , O ' ghd ' ' W , 'ii ' .A - Y Zi yy' I 2 . I Q M 119' 9 X A A.. ' ' RITHARDS. GQ. ,jg?0', '2 12g Q' ' ga ' LQ 'J 9 ' H- 15V 4252 .nsebhgmm WWW Nm fb-W St. Mxchael s College Illl H Nl Hue ri he tyorvnf 4 A fd-A! 'bps ,spzuyr-wr APPENDIX ll EOEAQI' 5e6J ,QI Sanfa Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother Brother luperlus lsfrld Gelaslan John Fldentuus Cytll Edelwald James Anthlmus Greqory Gratuan of Jesus Marcelllan Justm Malachy Botulph Matthew Hermes Joseph Dastal Andrew Reneus Bernard llgourl Edward Nlceas Bertln Charlemagne de Jesus Aqathon Andrew Emmanuel Amateur Vlctor Adnan Benedlct Agbert Angel Luclen Clement Baslle Amovln Marne lMarhn1 Abadlr Joseph Adolphe Baslle Benlldus of Mary Dlego Tomas dasmter from Las Vegas Raphael dlslnter from Las Vegas j gl J .Qi mjaflll Qnlefltefg October 27 November 4 September 11 March 8 June 21 July 8 September 27 June 4 December 9 February 9 May 16 January 11 Aprll 26 February 1 December 4 September 21 June June June November June September February 4 February 4 June February Aprll August January 5 1874 1874 1882 1887 1890 1891 1891 1891 1902 1906 1909 1910 1911 1912 1919 1918 1922 1922 1936 1938 1943 1943 1945 1950 1955 1956 1957 1957 1927 1907 e N22 ' 15, 15, 10, Brother Gerfroy Arsene May 25, 1938 ' 22, ' ' lo, 18, . . . H, ' 25, ' ' 15, ' 28, Some Former Teachers Deceased 4, They who instruct many unto justice, Shall shine as stars for all eternity. as if if -Y 1 , ,w 'l ff' A ,W F. ' L,- L -f Q.-sf 4 Brother Diego 3 W Brother N. Benoit ' it Brothers Lucian and Basil Brothers Agbert and Benedict Brother ll Lewis A Q 1' Wm Brother Bernard R ou, 17' of ,Q 3 Brother ,F JI Q Joseph Brother Llerr-cnt - 'X -Q? , K-1 . 'W rg 1 ' 'H' - 'N . 8' l - X F . ., ' 7,4 I Cross-Down:-Brothers: Gabriel of Mary '70, Fabian '77, Arthemian 90, David '95 Cross-Horizontal:-Brothers: Luperius '74. Jude Michael '77, Hilarius James '83, Liberian Joseph '85 Pc-dt-stal:fe Brothers: Harold Andrew '90. Marcellian '93, Junian '96, 2nd Row: Isidore Peter '97, Ambrose Odoric '97, Alfred of Mary '99, Luke Maximus 1900, Liborius Stephen '01, 3rd Row: Elzear Stephen '02, Lewis Ambrose '03, Jarlath John '03, Charles of Jesus '05, Jarlath Peter '06, Jeremiah Richard '08, Contran Francis '10, Liguori William '10, Arcadius Joseph '11, Last Row: Jarlath de la Salle '12, Iscarion of Mary '13, Liguori Edward '13, Athanasius of Sebaste '13, Kevin Malachy '14, Indronis Edwin '14, Hermes Michael '14, Justin Declan '15. 115 X Will!! 5 dl 'H'- h'l6l7' J'CH00l. Pb- fl'- Y I if Q LQIADI- ii - .1'ff.122z?fE Q f E U ' 252531 ' L4 C 5 W E Z, G i Q ... gg W 'Q ,R , 1 ' Q , 55:31 ' v 1 1 I E A 'F m 5 A E 'fi H f 3 .- H 4 1 , , 1. 1 , ,,.,WM,, 1. QQ. 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' A ,, Hx.. . ,- 5125 ' A f ' 77 'W ' 'M T 8 l f-551: TNE Cl-IAVEZ I5 Aix Us 'Q' 'So G1 SER LARRAGDITE TOHVH HEDRANO 7 4 fl' SANDGvAl Q r EDvJf'-ky BKCA GEOPQE deb VALLE ALBCPT HERERRA ARTHUR LUJKN 9 1 l FELIX NTZBA DMA PETER DURAN Ng. Jfrthv RCJURY we -'E 'WQD' RAY FUENYES JOHN LANDWEHR HYWEL MINT!! camiia musvwi ANTONIO RLBRIGUEZ FRANN R in .DON JUAN VALUES ELOY VALDEZ Jo N wx xs X- , Y af 6 A -I ' .L ' -2 ti ,D 1 N - ? ' .f Tv . 4' . 3, E . A 1 X K Q ' ' ' K X , 53' , - ., , new -F a,Uu,.5 , Zig 4 Y-5721 x 'Q x 'f 7 -: , Q 4, p i ' ' L - f ,-S4 , 5' Q' V , x 'fm' 121: , Q 9 z ' 2 A, , ' Qs ff I'-v. 0 ffw f J 7 v ' , ga If A ME.: W? ' R 1. QSM, . fi? i-4.'.. VD ': - ' ' 3 ' . , ji? 'Q 1 sh I 4 in K .1 A I' ' V ' -7. 'F Af uv i ' ji sg milf' P QE J - , A MA V A . ,M 4 . in ,E Xb k K R ' f Q' .. 7 'E f, -0 ,A , 12 .' , . , 52 3 if q . 9 4 f ' 1 1 , f 1 f ff' , ' ,, 4 , 5 W 5.3 ' , ' . :E A i , . . 4 , 'Q 5 vu A . '1 . 3, 'S 3 VI' 3 ' :I-EF! , . .f I :.': Z A f Aff ' ' ' Y--L2 g 5 ' ' ? ffi 3 ' nf ik? ,,,, -il, 5 f ' 13 ' , , I , N .Q if ' ' ' -7. Ama' '. x E? ff 7' Q ,M j X 3 2 -f ' N- '. 'Z A Y W' x A . .fri V .W AA , V - U i? Nj' X 4 ' ' f , M 'vf . Lrv fi-A N :mn I-'Ibn L i 1 Saint Michael s Men At War St Mlchaels Men At War NAVY N Lml bu In U HAI :- .nn uk n ISA f -m la :qu Pddu- Cheexer lfrl ldlflnl Rnbvxt lil neo f v-x 1 4 i- s I-furxfmmlm Iv mn 4 nl Ifanwk tul a ry muh 4 onza es nm 1 nnmlvs Hn k HA fn '11 1. Q m u-ri If I u-mm ln 9 4 rnrgw Norman r- X Nh n ru xnsrd 112 mm arcm Iiulnf-P1 Hindi llhlldfle Hou? I' 11 Rnnnn nl 0 Hlns-1 lvmmz Xlfnn fy Inppz I-lhnld v Hull ou! X 1 x rn ml 111 1 llbexl Ortiz Lnuxn Or NOTICE This Ill! of former student: of St. MnchaeI's College who are In !he'armed forces ls ln' compleie, In order thai any omitted names may be added K0 the Inst It would be ippre- cnated if the necessary informa- hon would be sent to the Col- lege. In sending the informa- tion please gnve the complete addreu so that the induvudual concerned may b placed the mailing lust ol the Alumni Association w :ch plans o send out I monthly new: letter all former students in the armed forces. Sf-rm-anl Charles Honzal-s 4 ' x YanHr-f- . .1 nv- 'mn lim- 9 sf, K.-dm Jw, mm Jayne- Huh f-I 1 . : ff .Ir Q- 'x k+-nm ls.kw Xlaxrm L Ing Mzuhrmz ' - 1 1. : x1n.w.,2 ' .4 r F nv. ny: I an -Inn var 'U Mazrlm-A 5' s.f1w..m r'..nvndf, A11.nu,,,, .luxm IL Mm-ninja Svlllv-ull Frank MA!.!l'r'lh Vmpmal tnmlidu ml 1 f'ful fr.4l Lux, Hruf Sur Jun- l'aI.:i.4 Tnrnns Hmkal Sc-rgs-An! Elias Ro41rx:uf'z Vorpflal I-Irnr-sl Ronwxo .Inhn Rael Sf-rzs-am .K':.nur-in Romer, Sn-ritz-anl .Xmnnxn Hrnm-10 l'lprianu Saminml .Xndx Sanchez lirnnsl Sanrlwz Pe-to-r Samnza us Ur -1- U in N llnbfrl lisp, Xnmnm Uma: u I U1 . xr. 1 xdn Ilxdx 1 nlx N nr Nl If hn s mdox nl xmdo lm ul nal x 1 N Klhfxl Nthf u 1 In umlv 1 f u I lu M SEABEES 4 I 1 Hum u In ll Nh-'X N Ill Xlrltllux HCI!! N 4 x RMY AIR CORPS MA LPI!! H fn 4gun un Xdoln 4 1+-1 n-n K d Ne-xziwxxlt F1 mk N xmmxxl on xmn mul nml Ibm r- I us A mpuml Isdmt fha nu nr 4 I dr rgf 1 umluln I Ku Au :Lf mt Ifmlxnu C nur-1 Impnrnl hmm har a fnrpnml Fnnx fullflxflz Noe Terrazas .Inhn 'lapia Jac-k Thompson t'nrporal Leonard Valdal Sn-rgvanl Jo? Vincent in-sl 'ilu Ric-hard Torres RINES c, Yiceme .xpodaca Ser. Abie Briles Kzumuud Chan ez Pen- Cordova Ir, R115 Ilzwl-n I SK . Joe- Y. Gonza s-s 'hillip Gunza . Mike Gonzulr-s ' '. ' Hari: , Sat. .Xlfrf-do Garcia SHI. Albert Imus David Jones Fred .Innes ' r. Rubs-rr Johnson .. Pia!! Knch '. Jos- In Riva Roses I.u'nn ' :arf-s Mar 'n Sz, Donald Mvyf-r 2 '. lpn Mnnlaho ' Ihhnnie Padilla ' .Thomas Quirvaxr' r ldy Rodriguez S' 'X-:xnmn lllurr-rm J Nlarlmfz -Y-SMC! Honorable Dnlcharged from Armed Forcei: .lfrhn Hnms-In Naxy, llfmuln Alnzunvz Mmxm-5 Iunnzm In-lndn .Xrnu Manu'-I Snnrimzel Xrnn Nlwlas Uluaf .Army lu-nnis Garda -Army .Inv F Carr-la-Army Jo Q- F. Martinez 'Army Knmnlo Padilla Mnisf-s Perf-a-Axmy Tm: Marllnezihlarinv, Mnrf-s Winzor-Navy Swv- Rnyhalf-Army ST MICHAEL S MEN AT VVAR 3 ? is 'Wx 3 nun vans px MEN AT .mm...... . . . . . 2 . . . . S . . . . JAP P WAR uumuwr RN' wah lonvon 'lin-nun. e v- vx un :noun -mv xz.uA?' ...Y- woauanwonwuouuuffasov ga . 1 KILLED ON DUTY hh 'W' f4gf.-'QL on Klum num nun Am caan nun mon mtv nun Nunn MISSING IN ACTION n--.Y ,Q -1 mmm... ...ul mah-4-.1 um- vnu .- Udfllvfbbtl 009090000 Lhuv' co: w w I , ,,, UFYKCIIU ay U1 Y ,m,,,,u Nklwm-nu A .......i -.2 I ning. :ruin-045-1 n.. 1 1 fu Q.. ns :ann as noun r ufwnmf :muff L mu-um con-ann c nnvonu funuunuyu WSW? -F .,l'.'7I.. '? '14.. ,.. 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Ric: ARD GUUZALEI 'ACTOR HYSCH GKRALD .'TAESYFJ3 ALFRY-D NAVARKZ 'el .pf .ff CDWARD LACASSAGHE '55 JI 55 BUNCH HILFRSB GONZALEZ LUIS MARKS JULIAN NOIHL 'ROBfRY TORRFS HIFRED SAKZHIII ,,.- 1 4- vALl.'NTmo SUAZQ IUVDO HSTMVIYI Q UML9 0 GURHL I, 5 nr owcnx Lasannrv. cvPR1Au nmrxmz PIT!! OLGUIOI EDWARD RNFRA PAL L s fha! ruwm ,. iw!!! ffilht ANTHONY LUCCIQ Y'- KGBYRT HAKYINIZ CUWARB WTI! LOU!! RWLRA 04 fitiwtw Ru' vs 18285239 fv-.DRZP latin with GIRL' PAHAE AKTRUR VALDEZ RDBFRT NUJM A f- n F f wifi 9 fi' I MHXAMA if Miz I CLASS OF I954 Q- 'S if 4 fu? AUYURO Q INTF-NA MANUEL R HERO ROBERT 'V Ton Smnova.. 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A a, ,.-QL A A APPENDIX VI Graduates Of St Mlchael s College And Hugh School Whose Class Plctures Were Not Available Fxrst Graduates 1876 Delgado Pedro Armljo Juan Pmo Facundo Qanchez 'Nxcolas Qmlth J A Hlnoyos Alfredo Romcxo Andlrs Tondte Ifxcd Ancheta J scph A Cordoxa 'Xledardo Pmo llstanxslao Hubbell Fmnk Qlmms James T Conklln Joe Mlller Fxc d llunnxng !0rtegaj Fred Conklm James McKell1gon Nlatthes Barela Anastaclo Cahlll Eduard Armuo Frfd Asfamtr Xhllll m flllllllll him Nlnchael Cresxxold P all M nruson Jose ph Qulllxan Dc n1s Holland John Cssfaneda 'kllguel Conkhn Chavlle Fhas Juan B X 1lrlc7 Fcllpf Blas Francxsro 'lla tlnez CJYIOQIYTIO McCabe Fred Valdez Jose Campaxnole N1colas Lucero Fllas Castlllo XI1l0l'll0 Dflrado Ffxninrlo Nlrna Alblno 'lllrabal Telesfolo Valdez Federico Chaxez Francisco Nllxabal JoseR Mlrahal RQIYHJIO Abbott Grox er C Dwneo Frnest Kelly Jerrx J Luna Franclsco D Nlartlnez Jose Maher John Mlrabal Gxlberto Tafoya Nlax Alderete Aleyo Armno Jac-obo Arrovo Teodosxo Cowan Fred 1878 1880 1882 1885 1886 1887 1889 1890 1891 1893 1890 1898 1899 1900 1902 1903 1906 Santa Fe La Concepclon Ch1h Gahsteo Belen Qanta Fe Qemta Peralta Isleta Plnos Ranchos ADIQUIU San Antomo Albuquerque Qanta Fe Taos Show Low Arlz Qftnta Fe El Paso Tex 'VI s lla Klngston Mesllla Mc sxlla Blsbec Ar17 81nta Fe Qantfx Alamosa Colo Las Vegas Tombstone AFIZ Wmta Fe Tucson A11 Qanta Fe Santa Fe Taos 'Santa Fe ianta Fe Santa Fe Espanola Bernalillo Qanta Fe San Rafael Qanta Qanta 'ian Rafael N San Rafael N Bland N Santa Blsbee Arlz Tlerra Amarxlla Park Vtm Albuquerque San Rafael Las Vegas Qanta Fe Albuquerque Metcalf Ariz Blsbee, Arlz Kelly Wllllam Kmdred George Rock John Daud Nl Gtllesple Ben J Kellv Charlle Klesov James V Robms Juan R Arroxo llllarxo A Delgado Antonlo dc la Ossa Frnesto de la Ossa 'tlaxtln J OBovle Qamuel J Forwood Fduard Berardmelll Jose Borrego Vhllnm Cavanuugh M nous Cvoesbeck Clarence Hampcl Juan B Lopez Gus Nlomsen J'w1er Bazet Aleyandro Fspmosa Clyde Duckworth Frank Games Jose A Armlyo Manuel Baca Carlos Bouts Fmlgdlo Rours VlClOI J Etchart Louls Luyan Jose Roybal Eduardo Trujlllo Fx erett Cox Alfredo Salazar Abreu Carlos Paca Felnando Castillo Aleyandro Comez Jose Gormley Frank 'llahboub Fred 'Nlontova lll10'L1Cl Qexffert Alberto Nllgll Benxto Gonzales Belarmlno Gonzales Fmxho Fr rran Joe Ullbarrl Vlcente 'Nlontova Jose A Borrego Jose Berchtold Henry Qumlan Joe Qumlan James Portela Nlartm Qammarselll JuI1us Txunllo Antomo Vlood Blllv Dawle Armand Abexta Jose 'tl Bustamente q tf1I13gO Luchettl Renaldo Pena Frank Roxbal Lauro qITlll'l Vhlllam Torres Por 1r1o Trullllo Luls Avant Louls 1907 1908 1909 1913 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1924 Blshee Arlz Bxsbee Arvz Bxsbee Ar1z Sprlnger N M Blshee Arlz ianta Fe Hlllsboro N M Metcalf Arlz Santa Fe Lochlel Arlz Loch1el Arlz El Paso Tex Las Cruces N M Santa Fe Chamlta N M Nogales Arlz El Pa o Tex Santa Fe Chamlta N 'NI E1 Paso Tex Chlhuahua Mex I-Iuatabampo Mex Raton N Raton N Qanta 8'mta Los Alamos Mex Los Alamos Mex Mexlco C1ty Mex Qanta Fe Pojuaque N' 'VI Taos N M Qt Louxs Mo Cedarvale NI M Santa Fe El Rvto Belen Dulce Santa Fe Santa Fe Santa Fe Ocampo Ch1h Santa Fe San Idelfonso Poyuaque Ablqulu Tlerra Amar1lla Santa Fe Chamna Santa Fe Ft Bayard Ft Bavard Rosarlo Sonora Douglas Arxz Taos Santa Fe Lafavette La Park Vxew Pecos Nlonero Alamosa Colo Qanta Fe Demer Colo Albuquerque El Rlto Lafayette La I , l C , . 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V K V yi, , ' I I 4 Q i 1 I f . f ,, - , my ' gr' f 1 v v 0 v- - , Z , :wi Q - ' M' 3 1 ' J M, V A , V LW? , 1 ' ' ye I' fr . , ' 1 f 1? b- W '- ,1 , 413 ' K Q A 0' , j If ' ff fi 2 K ' Ld A I ,A . . 395. , APPENDIX VII A, ioint memorial TWENTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE STATE OF NEW MEXICO SENATE JOINT M MORIAL NO. 10 INTRODUCED BY SENATOR FABIAN CHAVEZ, Jr. A JOINT M MORIAL M MORIALIZING THE ONE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF SAINT MICHAELS COLLEGE AND HIGH SCHOOL. WHEREAS, Saint Michaels College and High School of Santa now completing their one hundredth year of service in the cause of education in the State of New Mexico, and WHEREAS, the work of Saint Michaels College and High School is outstanding because a large number of its students have become prominent in business and professional pursuits and statesmanship, including 22 members of the New Mexico Constitutional Convention of 1910, and WHEREAS, in 1859 four Christian Brothers led by Brother Hilarien, arrived in Santa Fe to establish Saint Michaels College, the first college in New Mexico Territory, and WHEREAS in 187k an Act of the Territorial Legislature incorporated Saint Michaels with the right to 'confer degrees and bestow all literary honors usually conferred by universities of learningu, and fire and the new Saint Michaels College building was used as capitol and the place of assembly of two State Legislatures, the only college in the United States having the distinction of having been a State Capitol, and WHEREAS, Saint Michaels College and High School deserve the continued high praise and recognition from the people of the State of New Mexi o, NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Twenty Fourth Legislature of the State of New Mexico commend and express its Fe is I . I WHEREAS, in 1897-1899 the Territorial Capitol was destroyed by appreciation to Saint Michaels College and High School for their outstanding work, and for its contribution to educational de velopment in New Mexico, and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that this memorial be spread upon the minutes of this session of the New Mexico Legislature, and that duly enrolled and engrossed copies thereof be transmitted to the President of Saint Michaels College and the president of Saint Michaels High School in Santa Fe, New Mexico Ed V Mead, President Senate MW Ha Thornberry, Chie Clerk Senate Mack asley, Speaker House of Representatives A1 ert Romero, Chief Clerk House of Respresentatives Approved by me this day of 19 9 If 74-J r o Burroughs , Governor State of New Mexico I Q23 l I: , 5 CLASS LEADERS f'sf 9f'P 5f ilsliml V' f' F' I' A I QQNQVMY llunlum fm F7 1 KR' tl. 5 f F' P' P' FH f' Illia 1.6 'PN I ,, ' Q 5 Q ,M-1 .gi cf., C5 4. Nl r Q ij? t uf J M Q kg H. . ., 4 43 I 25 1 fl S51 ' J ,. 'S' 155 5 ' 1 -1 f E 5' 1 ff., gf cg ff, My A ' gf gf 'L U 4 f ' .aw ' SH 91 L :A ,AQ S M. 1 I A I I A I 1 APPENDIX VIII Speeches delivered at unveiling The contemplation of the hves of those men Who con secrated themselves to the cause of humanity who gave themselves most throughly to the world around them and who were so preoccupled by thelr own beneflcent reactlon on the world that they were practlcally unconscious of a separate exlstence has always captxvated and charmed the lmagmatxons of men Those who belxevlng m the D1v1ne promlse Whoso ever will lose h1s ltfe for my sake shall f1nd xt gave them selves for others l1ved for others sacrxflced themselves for others have bequeathed the llght of thelr llves to all men who follow To such posterlty ts a debtor We come together today to recall the memory and to crown the statue of such a man A man whose name w1ll ever stlr llke a trumpet the hearts of not only the loval sons of St Mlchael s College but the heart of every man woman and chlld wlthm the conflnes of New NIBXICO who has learned and who knows of the sacrlflces he made the hardshlps he endured the lofty achlevements he accom phshed for others What then does this statue s1gmfy'P What manner of man does lt represent' What qual1t1es does lt embody' What lesson does lt convey? Th1s statue IS not the efftgy o a so1d1er who by vallant deeds dtd great SQFVICG to the state or to the natlon lt IS not the efflgy of a statesman whose memory lt IS deslred to perpetuate because of some great prlnclple lnculcated by hlm mto our pol1t1cal system nor of a writer who has brought rrultltudes lnto klnshlp by g1v1ng expresslon to thought held ln common and che rxshed by all of them nor 15 It the efflgy of an orator who by h1s eloquence and mastery of thought and ex presslon swayed the multltudes and controlled the d1s tlnxes of eommunltles Yet never wxthxn our Terrltoty at lcast has a statue been erected whlch spoke of a vlrtue that was purer ox commemorated servlces whlch were more valuable than thxs statue we are about to unveil It IS the statue of Brother Botulph He was born ln Rhmeland or Rhemsh Prussxa 1n the year 1833 and dled at Santa Fe the 9th day of Februarv 1906 As the lnfluenee o hvs l fe had ' lllng effect ln mould 1ng and formmg character of those whom he taught and tralned so the subllme character and noble vlrtues of the parents of Brother Botulph lnfluenced h1s ltfe and moulded and formed the character of the boy and developed the vxrtues whlch destlned h1m to the career of a member of the Brothers of the Chrlstxan Schools It ts told of those parents that they were models o' ex erv Chrlstlan vlrtue Four of thelr sons became members o he Chrtstmn Bro thers As a young man Brother Botulph emlgrated to Canada and ln 1852 Jolned the Order of the Brothers of the Chrlstxan Schools at Montreal Canada He taught succesnelv at Kingston Canada Detrolt Baltlmore and Phlladelphla and at the tlme h1s Superlor ordered hlm to New NIGXICO he was Inspector of Schools 1n Net York Although St Nlxchael s was establlshed ln 1859 and from that tlme to 1870 was domg a good work It was not untxl the latter date that ll took tts olace as the leadmg edueatlonal lnstltutxon for boys ln the Terrltorv The Provlnces of the Orders of the Chrlstlan Brothers Brother Patrlck had been closely watchlng the career of our departed frlend observed h1s lndomltable energy and command1ng ablllty and when the demands of St 'Nhchafl s called for a man to dlrect lts destmles and pro vldf an lllSlllUIl0Yl to meet the growmg demands of the people of 'Vcw Mexxco he selected Brother Botulph and h1s only d1rect1on was to go to Santa Fe and make of that college a success make lt a credlt not only to our Order but a credxt also to our Church and to her people Upon h1s assumlng charge you the old boys way back ln the sexentles know and appreclate o what the College consisted one storv adobe bulldmgs poorly equlpped and madequate in every way To a man of famt heart and waxermg temperament the command of h1s Superior would have seemed lmpossxble of bemg carried out All who knew Brother Botulph howexer knew that 1n h1s lexxcon there was no such word as fall Happy was the day therefore for the then youth of New Mexlco and for the generatlons of youth that are to come that Brother Botulph of blessed memory was put lh charge of our Alma Mater Not only do we owe to has endeavors those zmpcsmg modem struc tures fully equlpped wxth every modem convenlence and apparatus housmg for years past and years to come the of Brother Botulphs Statue 1910 youth of the Terrltory wherem they FPCEIVQ and are to recelve the mstructlons lmparted by the good Chrlstlan Brothers but also what IS o far superlor worth the 1n fluences of h1s llfe and of h1s work upon countless boys who durlng h1s admlnlstratlon came Wlthln the portals of thls bu1ld1ng and were equlpped by h1m and through hlm for the warfare of hfe It lS by the example of such men as Brother Botulph that the false charges agamst the Catholic Church are the best refuted How often do we hear even 1n thls day and ln thls generatlon that the Cathollc Church IS opposed to educatlon Of all the false charges alleged agamst the Old Church the most senseless and un ounded IS that she fears science and lS the enemy of education H r opponents almost ln the same breath charge her wlth be 1ng the foe and the monopollzer of educatlon Thev behold her great rehglous orders of men and women devoted to the work of educatlon makmg more sacrlfxces for lt than any other body of men and women on earth vowlng at the altar that untll they go down to thelr graves they shall devoted themselves tn povertv chastlsv and obedlence to the great work of educatlon the human mmd and heart And the last man ln the world to fear lntellectual progress IS the Catholic And of all the Orders devoted to thls great work of education of all of the Orders whose members have elven and are glllflg themselves or others whose members have l1ved and are lxvmg for others and who have sacrlfxcefl and are sacrtflcmg themselves for others of all Orders I sav w h1ch 1s without a peer lS the Order of whlch Brother Botulph was a dlstmgulshed member the Order of the Brothers of the Chrxstlan Schools The sp1r1t of the Order lnfused by the example and teachlngs of tts founder and fostered by the exerclses of a rellfftous llfe lS a sp1r1t of falth and 7eal The Qplflt of faxth mdutes the Brother to see God ln all thlngs and thus to suf er exerythlng for God The Spirit of Yeal attracts htm toward chlldren to msfruct them ln truths and to penetrate thelr hearts and lead them to the practice of honfst constxcnttous IIVLS How subllme the mlsslon of these men How arduous the labors whlch thev perform No wonder that ln 'he con temolatlon of thelr Ines we wander far ln the fields of ad mlratvon No wonder that such Orders have among the1r numbers men of the commandmg ablllty and the con sunelng zeal of Brother Botulph Durlng tht 54 years of h1s rellglous llfe he was charged with everv duty commg to a member of the Order and performed everv employment from the most mental to the most exalted and exactlng and lt can be sald o htm and lt should be wrltten on the base of yonder statue that he newer falled ln the performance of a dutv and that evervthmg he undertook everythmg he put h1s mlnd his h nf' h1s h nd to of that he made a sucress We shall look ln vam to fmd a more falthful devoted sxncere dlSClpI9 of de la Salle Hls lnfluence upon the life of New NIQXICO w1ll be lasting lndeed Hts work whlch he accomplxshed dzd not d1e wxth h1m but has l1ved and w1ll lne to lnfluence for good generatlons yet unborn We are glad to see here to day so many bovs the boys of to dav into whose hands the to morrow o a xt ry few years wxll be placed the destlmes of the future great State of Nlew NIex1co For you the Brothers of the Chrlstlan Schools are maklng every sacrlflce of human ambltlon and human loxe These sacrxflces do you appreciate and are you puttlng orth vour best effort to tooperate wlth them? If vou are not then let me appeal to you that lt IS tlme that you should awake to the lnterest that this great Commonwealth has ln you To you does lt look ln after vears to take an lnterest xn the great questlons exen now presentmg themselves whlch affect human society To you does ll look and demands o you that you should equlp vourselwes both ln mmd and heart that when these ques tlons are presented vou wxll be able to lntelhgentlv meet them and gxve them as they arlse the serlous consxderatlon whtch they deserve and solve them m the way that w1ll best brmg happiness to the home and prosperlty to the State May you ever emulate the vlrtues and sterlmg manhood the devotion to dutv the self sacrlflce of the man whose memory we pay trlbute to thls day and lf vou but do thts you w1ll ln a far greater measure perpetuate the memory of h1S good deeds and sterlmg worth than could myrlads of marble efflgles such as we are about to dedl cate 1? 3 . V , , , , t, , . . v ' I . ' : ' , f 1 ' ' ' ' . . , ' , , ' V . . . . . . H - , . , V - . . . . . . -H . K . . V . .V V V . . , , . . . . . . . . V . . L. . v - - K . . . Q . , f - f- - Dv 9 ' A . . .. . V - . . , I . . L. . . . . ' V A 1 . , V . . . 'r' ' v V . . . V A -- . , .. N I H VV - V V . . V V. . Y ' . . . ,- V V - . . .. , . t .. , , I V t , ., ,g . . . tV as . .. . . I ' ' , . ,, .t , . V A . . . ' . . , .. .'. , . .' ' V ' ,V- s ' ', , ,t ., '. , . , tc , ,Q I A . , . V V 0 . . i - V an V , V V V . , .V . . - 1 ' . .. . . . B I ,, . , U ' . . . . f. ' ' . ' l .' . -f. - . . . . . , . . B4 . . V B V V -1 . c - V . . , pqvgf, ' 5, , . t V 5. . ,. , , . . . . . . . V . . . , , , . . V . V. .V . V . , . . . 4 . , 't . .l , , , . . . . . . . , Y , V. ,V . . . . . V. - - V . , V1 , V .V . . . . . . N , . . , . . , , . .. .. , . . V VV .. V . l - I . . .. . . . . . . , . at , . l . , , W - V . ,. . , V V . , V 1 V. n . - , . l A V . , , I V . I , , , 1 . , , , K , . . . V . . . , , . . . V . , , , ,, ' 1 ' . . . L. 1 - 4 v - - , . A , ' - , - .. . . V ., ' - - - ' ' ' ' ' V. I I . D . . . . . - - v f I . , tt - n ' . , , , V V . , . . ' - 1 V, . -. , , V V V . . V . . , - ' . . .A ' V' ' . 1 , . . - V V v ,V . . . . 1 . t. Speech b Rev Father Derache It IS Shakespeare who said of man Some are born great some achieve greatness some have greatness thrust upon them Of the Venerable Rehgxous man whose statue has Just been unveiled it can be said with truth Brother Botulph was born great through a long life of fruitful usefulness he 1ncreased da1ly his natlve greatness and today as an acknowledgment of his great life st1ll more well merited greatness 1S heaped upon him by his friends and admlrers All the eminent qualltles which make a man great were lavlshed upon him by nature a keen widely open 1ntell1gence a robust will power firm and energetic a noble character an lncorruptlble conscience and despite the somewhat severity of his appearance a motherly heart always ready to compas slonate human mlserles and besldes on the day of h1s baptism a strong faith wh1ch was to be the motor and characteristic of h1s life had been lmplanted in his soul deep and unshakable Indeed as a man and as a Chr1st1an Brother Botulph was born great Like the trees which tower above the arbor of the folest a libeial Providence had endovsed the nevxly born with all the elements of grandeur However sad as it may be not every man strives to 1n crease his native greatness Some do not make use of their facul ties they live to feed and fatten the animal lt seems according to a Slfllilllg, word of the Scriptures that if they have a soul It IS ln vain Some others abuse the gifts of God bralns will heart fortune talents education they make all subserv1ent to their temporal and egotlstical lnterests and passlons Very few develop themselves in the right d1rect1on and to the full Wlth h1S mental power he could have been a prominent lawyer and w1th h1s skill a great financier he was sharp enough to become a successful politician or his perfect tra1n1ng 1n music h1s noble bass voice would have won him a name among artists but for a man of his caliber what are money honors and fame but empty pride So that at the age of twenty he chose of his own will to be an educator of youth and unt1l he died that IS for over fifty years in Canada 1n the States of New York Maryland and Missouri then among us 1n Santa Fe for thlrty five years he was known as a rare as a great techer To realize the work of Brother Botulph 1n New Mexico It IS necessary to remember that when the Chrlstian Brothers start ed this St Michael s Institution the State was far from being what It IS today Hardly ten years had elapsed since it had been ceded to the United States Instruction ln the little schools de Cuantohay was limited to the teaching exclusively ln Spanish of the mere prlmarly elements by el Maestro Pacheco The people accustomed for years to the legislation and ruling of Spain vsere far from understanding the ways the Const1tu tion and the national genius of the United States and the religion itself on account of circumstances consisted more 1n exterior demonstrations than 1n an itelligent vxorshlp of God Great was the task of an educator he had to instruct the boy then to shape the c1t1zen and above all to form the young Christian As there vsere not at all that time in the Territory any other College or Normal School or University of any kind a ploneer vs as needed vsho knew how to build up and how to teach and how to govern and hovs to go ahead and how to stand contradiction and how never to give up After a few unsuccessful attempts Brother Botulph arrived and today we l38 celebrate ln his person that great Ploneer Mind will and heart energy and strength learning experience he had spent them all for the solid establishment of St Mlchael s College He spent them for thlrty fxve years and when the Chaplam of the community told hlm tht the end of h1s labors was approach 1ng he said only one word which w1ll never be forgotten already' which means that he was ready to go still farther in his work if lt was the will of God St Mlchaels College was founded and lt was a success It has grown to be a large tree and the birds of the air have come to dwell in the branches thereof Today hardly a hamlet can be found in New Mexico where a man does not dwell who has re ceived his education under the shadow of the Old Church they are farmers merchants lawyers clerks postmasters public servants school teachers many of them have served ln our legislatures the only place where a pupil of St Michaels 1S unknown IS not the church the clergy takes this occasion to thank the Brothers for thelr 6ff1C3ClOUS cooperation It IS the cell room of the pen1tent1ary lndeed agam during all that t1me Brother Botulph had mcreased his native Greatness As to the 1nner power which has moved his noble and con tmuous activity it has to be publlcly and solemnly proclaimed it was his faith Brother Botulph belleved 1n God and ln God s ass1stance as firmly as we believe 1n the existence and bene flcence o the sun in this Sunshine State and he had the same faith 1n the immortal destiny of the youth confided to his care That IS why at the age of twenty he had buried himself body and soul in the Institute of the Brothers of the Chrlstlan Schools l1v1ng their hard life for over half a century not ex pect1ng any other reward than the one promlsed to those who lead you 1n the path of virtue and Justice and because of that l1fe long bur1al the word of God was fully realized in his glor1ous career unless the gra1n of wheat fall1ng into the ground die itself remains alone but if it d1e lt brmgs forth much fruit Now the day has come when still more and well merited great ness is added to the name of Brother Botulph He did not need a statue to be remembered These bulldings all the grounds of the College all wlth the exception of a few mmor improve ments due to his worthy successors stand a monument of his Splflt of enterprise This block was nothing but a bare piece of ground when he took it all that IS now on lt IS his work and 1n nothing the work of the Terrltory It IS sure also that never during his long life the thought occurred to Brother Botulph s mind that he would be honored 1n this exceptional Way Had he ever been approached on that matter he had exclaimed in wonder A statue for me that IS a Joke' Never' But one for our holy founder St John Baptlst de la Salle oh yes' a hundred times yes' As lt IS we have h1s llkeness 1n marble It is the supreme honor that can be pald to a man in this world If It IS true that the Splrlt of those who are dead IS permltted to v1s1t now and then from the other world the place of their labors the soul of Brother Botulph attracted by this mark of your giatl tude will come sometimes to see again St Michael s College and to take care so to say of lt inhabltants Brothers and scholars lt might visit also one by one the homes of its old pupils to encourage each one of them to promote to extend by all means 1n his power the usefulness to Church and State of St Mlchael S College 0 I : . 4 . 7 . Q . ' . y 2 - , . ' . ' , . . . . . . , . Y . . . : . - . : . 3 . . 1 . . . . - : v . . . . Z . , . . . . . , , . . . 7 : . . . Y . . . . . . . . F Y ' 7 V , g , . - , , . , . 7 . . ' . . . . . . - . . , , , ' . . . . . - , . 5 . . l - Y . ' C ' ' H ' .19 . . I 7 ' -, . Q 9 . . A Y . g . ' . . , . . . I . I . , . y . . I . v 9 1 y - - W ' ' . . . . . , . . . . . , , ' extent of their abilities. Brother Botulph was one of those few. . . . . , ' , . - . Y . . . . . . . . , , , . y . . . . . . . I , , , , . 1 9 -' 1 ' v v 1 . . ' , 1 - v ' , ' -1 v - , ' , . , . . . , , - . . . - , I . . . . I , , ,. ,, . . . . . . . . , . 1 ' u , . . : v . . . , . . y . . - - , ' l 9 Y ' 9 ' . . ' - ' -: ' . A . . ' ' I ' v ' I Y Y . . . . . . . it l 7 ' 1 l 7 v - -V , . ' ' '- ' ' . V - . I . . . a , 1 l I G ' f A 'r - 1 1 1 . v 2 , y . . . . . , , Y L Y 1 1 Q f y y y V , ' 5 . Speech b Governor Larrazolo Dlscurso pronunclado por Don Octavlano A Larrazolo, en Santa Fe N M el dla 22 de Junlo A D 1911 en la dedlcaclon de la Estatua del Hermano Botulph Qenores En presencla de tan culto e llustrado audltorlo, en tan solemne y fausta ocaslon y a la sombra de este augusto templo edlflcado por la clvlllzaclon y dedlcado al cultlvo y ensenanza de las clenclas lnstlntlvamente la lmaglnaclon se aparta un momento de las realldades del presente para vlvlr en el mundo de los recuerdos para vagar un lnstante por aquellos tlempos leganos que se hundleron en el plelago lnmenso del pasado confundlendose para Slempfe con la lnflnldad lncomprenslble Un setlmlento mlxto de gratltud y de orgullo hace germlnar en nosotros el deseo de tras ladarnos desde nuestros tlempos hasta el prlmer terceno del S1g10 dlezlsels y acompanar a Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca en su penosa travesla por las selvas vlrgenes por las magestuosas montanas y verdes prados de Clbola el entuslasmo nos arrastra lrreslstlble a acompanar poco mas tarde a Marcos de NIZH a Juan de Padllla a Luls de Escalon a Agustln RUIZ a FFHHCISCO Lopez a Juan de 'ianta Marla y demas companeros soldados venerables todos ellos cuya sola arma era la lnslgnla sacrosanta de la redenclon del hombre cuyo UHICO escudo era el evan g9l10 clvlllzador del humllde Martlr del Colgota, en su mlslon de carldad subllme que se encamlnaba a sacar a los buenos y senclllos hljos de este suelo del tenebroso obscurantlsmo en que vlvlan a las encumbradas clnas don de brllla perene la luz refulgente del Crlstlanlsmo cuyos dorados horlzontes se plerden alla donde el Creador del unlverso ha 9St3b1ECld0 su corte Queremos segulr a Cor onado ADon Juan de Onate y a Don D16g0 de Vargas en sus suceslvas expedlclones de conqulsta y reconqulsta en esta tlerra y entuslasmados nos detenemos un momento para contemplar a los vallentes moradores de este suelo que Sl blen escuchan sumlsos y contrltos las predlcaclones del humllde mlslonero tenaces reslsten la lnvaslon armada de sus DHClflCOQ hogares e lmpavldos se lanzan al combate presentando sus desnudos pechos al acero mortlfero del guerrero Espanol defendlendo palmo a palmo el terreno donde reposaban las cenlzas de sus padres cuadro subllme y arrebatador del amor PHITIO que lnculto nace y se ro bustece en el cora7on del hombre y que cubre de laureles lnmortales a los que nacleron en humllde choza Al hacer el contraste entre el Nuevo MEXICO de hoy con el orlglnal que vleron y conqulstaron aquellos vallentes varones al medlr los adelarltos que los descendlentes de aquellos han hecho al traves de los S1g1OS el entuslasmo raya en dellrlo y en nuestros transportes de gozo osarla mos arrebatarle sus despojos a la tumba mlsma Sl por un solo lnstante pudleramos reanlmar el polvo lnerme de aquellos esclarecldos precursores de la clvlllzaclon a fm de que satlsfechos contemplaran el fruto de sus trabajos Que cuadro tan alterado que condlclones tan dlstlntas que camble tan radlcal se presentarla a su vlsta los compos IDCUIIOS donde tlanqullos p flall lnflnldad de anlmales QIIVGSITGS convertldos en verdaderos verjeles poblados con hermosos arboles cuyos suculentos frutos provocan el ape 1110 donde la mano del lndustrloso labrador hace brotar de la tlerra abundantlslmas y varladas mleses que traen conslgo el contento y la abundancla los lndlgenas de este suelo enaquel tlempo enemlgos moltales de ellos unldos a sus descendlentes en abrazo fraternal y Junto con ellos desde un mlmso templo elevando sus pleffarlas a un mlsmo Dlos el SllVld0 aterrador del guerrero salvage substltuldo p01 el sllvldo clvlllzador del vapor que anlqullando las dlstanclas ha unldo en estrecho vlnculo a los pueblos mas dlstantes que hace glrar con rapldez vertlglnlosa los talle res de la lndustrla el mensajero electrlco del flrmamento subyugado y en absoluta obedlencla a la voluntad v nece 91d8d0S del hombre los rudos pueblos y aldeas de aquellos tlempos convertldos en artlstlcas y populosas cludades y las senclllas chozas y cabanas en suntuosos 8d1flCl0S y pala CIOQ Aqul mlsmo en esta bella y slmpatlca cludad de la Santa Fe teatro que fue en aquella epoca turbulenta de ondo la lntellgencla enrlqueclendola con tesoros perenes tantas y tan brlllantes llazanas que transformaclon tan conpleta encontrarlan' Recorrerlan los ambltos casl todos de esta capltal sln encontrar V6StlglO alguno que les re cordara de aquellos otros tlempos alll se detendrlan a ad mlrar el suntuoso Cap1tO110 mas alla se maravlllarlan con nuestra moderna casa de correcclon donde el esplrltu humanltarlo y fllantroplco de nuestros tlempos busca el mejoramlento moral de los extravlados de nuestra especle moderando el rlgor y dulclflcando la amargura del castlgo por medlo de la clemenela no dlstante de ese para Je mlrarlan el soberblo plantel de educaclon donde se lm parte la luz vlvlflcante del saber y de la clencla a los lndlgenas del suelo verlan con satlsfacclon suma que aun aquellas vlctlmas lnomentes de la fatalldad a qulenes no les es dado escuchar el canto enamorado del rulsenor el murmullo arrulladordel llmpldo rlachuelo nl lmpartlr los sentlmlentos de su alma por medlo de la palabra encuen tran aqul el medlo de educarse de conversar en amena SOC19d3d con las sablos de la tlerra desarrollando de una manera sorprendente en otras facultades las que en aquel los sentldos les negara la naturaleza En fln se creerlan aquellos llustres hombres ser presa de un sueno llusorlo, pero al llegar a este venerable reelnto donde hoy nos re unlmos de pronto se sentlrlan como enclavados al suelo, fljarlan sus lncredulas mlradas en los dllapldados y rulno sos muros de este agreglo templo y al reconocer en el la obra pladosa de sus proplas manos caerlan de h1Il0JOS op rlmldos bajo el peso abrumador de los recuerdos Que haces tu aqul, le dlrlan rugosa y escarpada rulna de los slglos? Como has pOd1dO substraerte a los estragos del tlempo, y acarlclar la mano del verdugo destructor que respetuoso te ha V1St0 segulr la marcha lenta de las edades de generaclo en generaclon Y aun exlstes' Que no ves que a tu lado se elevan majestuosos e lmponentes lujosa cated ral y soberblos 6d1f1C1OS que parecen burlarse de tu vener able senectud? Pero no dlrlan ellos no te averguences ante tanto lujo nl te conturbe explendor tanto Sl burlescos te preguntan qulen tu eres dlles que eres la cuna bentlta glan republlca S1 de tus antecedentes y de tu mlslon te lnterrogan, contestales que en tu vetusto seno conservas aun fresco el recuerdo de las glorlas y desventuras de este pueblo en tresclentos anos de lucha d119S que eres la escala mlsterlosa cuyo ple se aflanza en los prlmeros al bores del S1g1O d16Z1Sl6f9 y que venls hasta estos dlas como mensajera de aquello tlempos y de aquellos pueblos, para darles a los h1JOS de hoy el parablen de los conqulsta dores y anlmarlos en su magna obra de adelanto y pro greso En efecto Senores mucho ha progresado Nuevo IVIEXICO desde aquella epoca, mas al hacer este corte de cuentas de nuestra sltuaclon moral SOCl8l y polltlca y al encontrar partldas tan grandes a nuestro credlto la Justl Cla EXIJG que nos preguntemos a qulenes debemos tanto adelanto tanta meJorla Nuevo MEXICO Senores debe su progreso como lo deben todos los pueblos de la tlerra muy prlnclpalmente a aquellos blenhecllores de la humanldad que negandose a los placeres a las COm0d1dad8S y a los honores eflmeros de este mundo dedlcan sus preclosas V1 das al megoramlento de nuestra especle dlsemlnando por todas partes la luz esplendorosa de las clenclas v de las artes y formando los corazones y las mentes de la Juven tud a manera que de ellos salgan hombres y mujeres llu strados y de recta conclencla capaees en todo sentldo de asumlr con valor desempenar con dlgnldad y cordura las responsabllldades serlas de la Vlda domestlca SOCIB1 y polltlca Me reflero Senores a los que se dedlcan a la ensenanza de la Juventud la mas excelsa la mas noble a la vez que la mas ardua y la mas responsable entre todas las profeslones La mas excelsa dlgo porque nl la frente que clne una corona nl la mano que empuna el cetro ocupa lugar tan elevado, ya que el Monarca mlsmo antes de serlo debe someterse humlldemente al goblelno y dlrecclon de aquel es la mas noble porque sln esperanza nl aun remota, de acumular fortuna el que a ella se d8d1Ca se encamlna, como dlje antes, al mejoramlento de la humlldad desarroll 1 - -1 . .1 ' - 1 . 'V ,' . . ., : - . 1 - . . . . . ' l , . ' .. 1 y . . . m .Y .Y . Y .. ,Y I 3 - 1 . . , . . . V . Y : . . . . . Y y 1 . . . I V . . . Y - L Y . . y , , - , . . 1 1 I ' 1 l 1 ' I , 'y A y , , . 1 .. 1 , . , k k k V . . y . . . - Y E - . . . 3 v . .. . . . - . .. Y ' 1 ' ! I ' I - y . - , . A. . K . . . ' Y A . V ' .. ' , . f 5 - - Q donde se mecio por vez primera el Cristianismo en esta Y Q . : . ,. I - ' , Y , . . , , ' Z ' , Y t L . . - V . y .' , . - 1 - K Y - ' Y 1 1 . , y l k - Q Y L' Y 1 ' r- ' - 1 1 . , Q A , , - f 1 I . 1 Y 1 l 1 D 1 , . .- , . 1 ,' ' . 1 1 - ' - 1 . ' 1 1 . 1 1 ' ' - ' ' ' ' . V . Y . v ' . Y ,Y D .. A - - , 1 5 . Q . : t . . . 1 I N, . Y . - 1 , ' 1 , ' ' A X 1 4 1 U . - ? y . , H , N L H . , . Y , 1 ' de sabldurla y cultlvando el corazon del hombre hasta hacer germlnar en el los sentlmlentos mas bellos de nuestro ser es tamblen la de mas grande responsabllldad y en consecuencla la mas ardua porque abrazza a la humanldad entera y de ella depende el provreso y la fellcldad de las naclones Nuevo MEXICO ha tenldo y tlene en la actualldad muchos y muy esclarecldos apostoles de la educaclon dlgnos todos ellos de nuestros mas altos homenajes de respecto y gratltud pero creo no ofender nl a la verdad nl a la Justldla al declr que el puesto de preemlnente honor entre todos lndlsputablemente corresponde al llustre h1Jo de La Salle cuya estatua dedlca hoy por un pueblo agra decldo a la memorla de su dlgno orlglnal el Rev hermano Botulph La vlda del hombre vlene a slntetlzar el anallces de la humanldad y de su orlgen comprobando con su conducta que todos somos hermanos y que nuestra verdadera patrla es el mundo el dlgIlO sujeto de qulen hoy hacemos gratos recuerdos es un ejemplo VlVlSlmO de esa verdad Nacldo el ano de 1833 allendo los mares y mas alla del cauda loso RhlnO lngreso a la socledad de los hermanos de la doctrlna Crlstlana en 1852 y despues de egercer el mlnlsterlo de su vocaclon en el Canada y en Nueva York vlno a Nuevo MEXICO como presldente del Coleglo de San Mlguel en 1870 donde permaneclo con la presldencla de este plantel hasta el dla de su muerte el 9 de Febrero de 1906 Casl la mltad de su vlda paso en de nosotros y O' cuanto amo a este pueblo dlganlo Sl no los tremta y sels anos de ab negaclon subllme en que trabajo sln descanso por la edu caclon de la Juventud dlganlo los mlles y mlles de Neo Mexlcanos que como humllde panegerlsta que lleva la palabra recuerdan al benlg,no maestro ahora con la sonrlza en los lablOS ahora severo pero slempre amable y bonda doso recorrlendo de dla en dla los dlversos departamentos del coleglo dulcemente corrlglenvlo a unos anlmando a otros y a todos lnsplrando amor y conflanza con su paternal sollcltud en una palabra el hermano Botulph fue el hlgo adoptlvo y benemerlto de Nuevo MQXICO y se puede declr con verdad que no solo perteneclo en sentldo colectlvo a la gran masa del pueblo slno que en relaclon mas lntlma se ldentlflco como mlembro de cada famllla pues dudo que haya hogar en nuestro Terrltorlo donde el nombre de Botulph no se pronuncle con el amor y famlllarldad de un hermano El hermano Botulph se ha lnmortallzado no como llegaron a hacerlo Alejandro el Grande nl Jullo Caesar nl Hanlbal nl Bonaparte y nl aun como se lnmor tallzzaron Homero x71l glllO y el Dante destruyendo a la humamdad los unos y dando Vlda flctlcla al ldeal los otros el hermano Botulph se lnmortallzo consagrando su vlda en tera al servlclo mas grande de todos los servlclos que se pueden hacer a la humanldad Esa vlda fue una bendlclon para el pueblo de Nuevo MEXICO su nombre pertenece a la hlstorla que lo conservara Slempre fresco en las mentes de un pueblo agradecldo y para mayor honra de este pue blo QUISO el destlno que el prlmero en escrlblr la hlstorla de Nuevo Mexlco fuera no solamente un h1J0 natlvo de este suelo slno un alumno dlstlnguldo del Coleglo de San Mlguel durante la presldencla del benemerlto hermano y nada menos podla esperarse de la habll pluma y alto car acter del emlnente hlstorlador el Honorable Dn Benjamln M Read que las bellas frases que en ella dedlca al lnol vldable maestro Que mas puedo hacer yo el mas humllde entre los mlles que tuvlmos la fellz suerte de escuchar sus saludables consejos y sabla ensenanm para perpetuar su nombre a fm de que entre las borrascas negras del tlempo SlI'V3 de faro llbertador tanto a profesores como a edu cados Conozco ml lnsuflclencxa y comprendo lo lnnece sarlo de la empresa pues Sl el rayo mlsmo con su luz vlb rante escrlblera ese nombre en el azul dlafano de la boveda Leleste no lo perpetuarla mas eflcazrnente de lo que lo hlZ0 el mlsmo en los corazones de todos los buenos New MSXICHUOS Esta lTl8gl llflCa estatua que hoy dedlca el amor y la gratltud de todo un pueblo a su lnslgne blenhechor tal vez manana el tlempo que nada respeta y todo lo destruye la anlqulle pero lamas podra destrulr los monumentos lm perecederos que ese mlSm0 amor ha 8l'lgld0 a su memorla en nuestros pechos El herlnano Botulph ha muerto pero su esplrltu lmpalpable se cernera constante sobre esta ln stltuclon que fue la obra predllecta de sus manos y alla, el trono del Omnlpotente donde los blenhechores de la humanldad reclben el premlo de su vlda de sacrlflclo aqui abajo lmpetrara su bendlclon sobre este templo de educa clon para que en el porvenlr asl como en lo pasado sea el foco lumlnoso de donde se desparramen portodos los ambltos de nuestro bello Nuevo MEXICO las luces del saber y de la clencla Conservad pues xosotros hlJOS de esta llermosa cludad de la Santa Fe cludad de los recuerdos cuna del crlstlanlsmo Amerlcano teatro de glorlosas y blzarras hazanas arca preclosa donde se enclerran nues tras mas bellas tradlclones conservad dlgO este monu mento en prueva de que aun no se ha acabado la edad de los he oes y en grato recuerdo de uno de los mas lnslgnes entre todos ellos Antes de despedlrme slnembargo de un sujeto que tan placenteramente me recuerda de los bellos y florldos dlas de la Juventuddeseo declr una palabra a vosotros dlgnos hljos de San Mlgllel Nuestra alma mater espera de nosotros que la hagamos honor y gloria con nuestrasvldas desem penando nuestro cometldo en este mundo de una manera dlgna de ella de nuestros llustres antepasados y de noso tros mlsmos En mucho han contrlbuldo los alumnos de este COI9glO al progreso de nuestro Terrltorlo pero el teatro de acclon se enzancha y los deberes se multlpllcan al plsar el dlntel de nuestra emanclpaclon polltlca el momento se aproxlma en que debamos poner de manlflesto ante el mundo entero nuestras aptltudes para mantener un gobler no autonomo y al hacer el aporclonamlento de los deberes que mcumben a cada uno en el desempeno de nuevas y persadas responsabllldades recordemos que a medlda que el Clelo dlspensa sus favores con mas llberalldad a unos que a otros lmpone sobre los prrneros deberes de que estan exentos los segundos En tal sentldo vosotros que habels tenldo las ventagas de superlor educaclon tenels tamblen como cludadanos la doble responsablllda de los que no la tuvleron y de ejercer a favor de aquellos la sup entos Entre los multlples deberes que como cludadanos tenemos se eleva superlor a todos el deber para con la patrla pues en su defensa se sacrlflca todo hasta la Vlda mlsma En segundo lugar VIQHB el deber que tenemos para con nosotros mlsmos slendo este el de nuestra propla conservaclon y tan lmperatlvo es este deber que se dlC9 y con Justa razon que es esa la prlmera ley de la naturale za Al trabajar pues por la conservaclon de nuestro pueblo no debemos perder de vlsta nl por un lnstante sus dere chos y prlvlleglos lnslstlendo Slempfe en que estos se res peten y se mantengan lncolumes y Sl somos dlgnos de nuestros llustres antepasados Sl queremos honrar su me morla y merecer el respeto y conslderaclon de nuestros concludadanos recordad Senores que VIVIS en la casa de vuestros padres que SOIS sus herederos y que en ella no debels desempenar el papel trlste de subalternos e lnferlo res semegante abatlmlento solo os merecera y con Justlsl ma razon el despreclo de la gente sensata Recordaos del adaglo que dlC9 El que no asplra a cosas grandes no es dlgl'l0 de consegulrlas Jamas llegala a las promlnenclas honrosas el cobarde que se slenta lnerte al ple de la esca lera e lndlferente mira a los vallentes que que la escalan hasta plsar el ultlmo peldano De mas comprendels Seno res que Sl hasta hoy no habels t6nld0 el partlclplo que de derecho os pertenece en la admlnlstraclon del g0bl8X'Yl0 de nuestro Terrltorlo debldo es en parte a nuestra falta de energla pero muy prlnclpalmente a nuestra lnsanas dlsenclones en que luchamos neclamente unos en contra de los otros en defensa de qulmeras IIUSOPIHS cuyo unlco re sultado ha SldO la ruma y desprestlglo de nuestro pueblo En la unlon esta la fuerza dlC9 el proverblo acordemonos de esa verdad lnnegable sln olvldar aquella otra lgualmente verdadera de que Enemlstados los pueblos se dlvlden dlvldldos se odlan y odlados se destruyen Nuestra alma mater ha hecho cuanto en ella estaba para salvarnos tene mos nuestra redenclon en nuestras proplas manos haga mos pues nuestro deber para merecer la aprobaclon de ella, y el respecto y la conslderaclon del mundo A. . . . ' - ' ' F . r , n ' . . . ' , 1 . ' ' ' . , ' ' V . , v I l Y, . . . . 1 o ' . . . - - , . 1 . V ' 7 . ' - ' v ' ' x i h . . . ' y. ' V G ' . l p ' H . . . - , 1 Y . . . - ' n , ' , . ' - - . 1 ' . l ' . , y 7 . , . Y ' , ' ' ' . . - I Y ' . I I I . ' ' ' D . . . . - , , . v 'Y v ' - ' v 1 ' - - ' ' I 1 I ' ' . . . . , . , W . . . , ' ' . . . . remacia que os proporciona vuestros mayores conoclml- . . . . . , . ' , I , I ' . . y . . , , - . . . . . . , T' , , . . . - I . . ' . . . . . - ' . , - - . . , ' 3 . ' . . ' l 1 1 V F ' v ' - , H s I I l . . . . . . . . . . . , , ' . . , , . . ,, . ' ' 1 1 ' Y ' . - . . . A . - . V . ' . . , . , , , , - ' ' v 1 Y . , . . . , 7 . . . ' y - . . . . . . , , - ' , ' I n - rl ' - , . . . 7 v . . ,, . . . . , , - . . . , - . ' l , ' . . ' . , Y ' ' 1 J - . . i 'TS' Brother Rosendo Brother Manuel Brother Benildus . ea- 9 A F mga! Vocations T A X ': Latin Words Are: g JW v Brothers of Egg, A the Christian ix Schools Brother Andrew C. X i Brother Andrew B. ig X ., .,,, :IVQA i zlzll lvll :uv K , .A,.. . I 5' ,I ' if-ww f -V' A FRATRES ka of SCHOLARUM Brother C. Luke Brother Joseph 1,45 p CHRISTIANORUM Brother Adrian Brother Alphonsus A Brother Gabriel Brother Alfred Brother Barnaby jx if N 1 Brother Arth'ur Brother Bartholomew f fa A A ,by ,Il ' 'V' Kb - 12 . Brother Amedy Brother Albert Brother A. Leo Q, ff JL Brother Leo Brother B. Patrick Brother Anthon .-Wqwnnd, V C. Brother Lewis Brother Brendan g Q 'vw jk 1 ' A' -, ,M ,A in I: . W I . ' o A .mek iw Brother A. Joseph MATH' gf ul 4' ' Brother Benedict Brother Adrian 'W Brother Anthony ff'-f QI. ,ff Brother George Brother Albert Brother C. Alan Brother Clinton Brother Henry Brother Steve Brother Gilbert APPENDIX ix ' F.S.C.'S Also Graduates Of St. Michael's High School Brother Stephen X Brother Dominic Brother August Brother Alfred B xl A 2 1 ' F , 4 it Y 1.1 'QQ-6 ff' Brother Diego Brother E Albert all 'lx Brother B Alexis Brother Harold '-S' 'W' AJ i Q 'E' 54 ,wana-. BrotherB Joseph Brother Benedict J-ut Brother Amedy Brother Daw ld Brother Justin Bmthel' Ambrose Vocations to the X llff f Holy Priesthood X x X ff P V h l Right Rexerend Monsignor Jose A X X Rlg t Reverend Ph' lp Cassldy .arena :car enera 5 X X eseren anne o rnguez f Y G l R d 'NI l R d Rex erend Tito Wlelendev Res erend Joseph Rnera 0 F NI Res erend Arsemo Baca OFM Semmarian Ralph Sena Semlnarlan Robert Butler bemmarian Leo Lucero JE Ja-N W- Fnar Antonio Valde Friar Marcos Padilla ---- . B vi N 'Miz X I V, ' I .I I' K ' ' v X . ,lWl 'ln it 1 . ' , 'lm iv J Z V ' . . Y A K if A 4 ,' xx Y it lilly: L ' ' -4 W ll 5 fmllm -' 1 li 'W ll , W M 1 W ,if lr ..:fe'M M , K ' , ,Ijlif 5 M v' . ' 1 I , . - . Q 4 . xg ff f- 7 ,,f,,ff' N- Q3 MI' 6 17' ' ' ' ' ' . V . .M l A , f . . . . ..,,,-.i ,,,, 1:5 X5 3 ---'- f ...,. ., , . y ,. WW A I' X 3 v A . I .- X X ' A . . ' f 335, ff Q1 x f,g' ft-, . . - . 1 - A ,f xx, ' ' ' ' Reverend Charles E ert f Reverend Edward Pettid, S.J. i g -I A-,fir 5 X i l l43 1 ' . 1, . -- ', 'f -1 W1 ,f- 5+ ' 1' ' , ' '2v31i7g,,,w.,ff,f fv, 5141-Qi , , ,. , ., . . . . gg- ,. V, L LJ, MA, gay 2 v br ,453-vg..'w1f -',,3.',1,-!- ng , -Q 243 2 .'.'1',- '- if 1' 'f K L Q, Qffffg , , , V V N 4: vu. . , , x ' ,. . 5- H ,M-' fy 'v 1- , J-,I . - ,., if -,-f--- W A . . --'.,.,,... .f Y' -.Q . mf '43 ' e , . F pp-v ..,, A ,, ' , , . W 0 K A ian M P-Va . W ,..W q Q ,, ,..,.,,,,.,,,w.HMm V , - ...4-W-1...-.., A-5:-73,-fum: gi. 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WMM aff 55 K Abi. ab -. 4- - U' APPENDIX X An Industrial School Alolrnrsnors Hoonm Jan 30 1911 SANTA Fm. N M 191 Ven Brotner Lxzery C111lS'L1rJ.11 1 rotners 1 11e ut Louis 1 o C, ' .1110 Q. nfve our v in Pwvor o 16 1U zu. M ve delqyed 1HoVGT1U lt owinf to the p essu1e of business in making out repo1tQ et1r 11e f H . dM VLE H plevveo to see tnat 'ou are 1 f1 on 1 s o U c1 1 1 1ou1es O Q00 ' 11u1 to n IQ4uQ 0' 1 o 10 G Ona 1 IC 'I' 1 I' 1 1 911111 f 1pov1 Doo is F101 lj neL1 LC16 u'1 ' e Ie T1LOTj oon 10 oecome t L Tntto en se' 0 tue 'no 1U 1 n visaons ' ' 010 1 u 1 eceived c 1e o H elp U 1 JC1 T 0 11 U1 01 lnue lengin fou u 1 1 so 1 1 0 6 e Yotr ov Opl O01 Ye 4- 011' Qi' r-., ,+.L P1 N0 'Z r1fJf111uc11w 1911 was 11 B111 IJICSCINSC1 11111111111 1110 Tc1r11f1ry v1aQ 111 51110 1110 C 11118116111 131fI111f1S 'SOO O00 anus of 141111 m BfY11d1111f1 01111111 lx 111111 xx 1X 1 C S 1 11 N 1 N1 x 11 11111 Il 1 1 lL1II1ff 11 LI 111111 111 11111 of 1111sr1.111fl Thi 1111111111141 111111 fmm A1C111J1S 111 P11dxal CfJ11fL11'1S 1111K 13111 T111 111111111111 r1f111f 111clu2111.1l 91111111 a1 Spugor 'N 'Xkx was also offered to 1110 Lhllbllafl Br11111L1s 111 1936 131.11 was 1101 accepted 115 111e iupcrloxs . ... ,, , . A 1 .M ' '. . 1 v ' 1 ' 1 Q6 U - V 1 1 1, .gy 1-L- 1 h.1r: I 'Q y ery k d -L f tl 12tL,' st 1 1 I .-a C- . P- ' ' ' 5 r ' . , M f' '- fo1 UL ,rL.r I ' ly mud' M' 1 ' 3 'u bv 'of .hi Bill N . 5 vkisk 1orLr .f SO ,' acres o, . 1 fl, . f-1.:'i2l E111 .11 ' ' iff,-1.'fl1etciP ' in C ,.11Pt:d 7f1.,' t'1 Chriv'iqn L 0136 Q. Tkviv a'n Lu io,nlsh1kc :EouL i, dr1vQ 121' O' 2A'-L.1r1 n- W311 12 few ,,1 r dgit h J' ,tf '-hed E-: by the yo'.H 01 th ' r 1 5 ' 1 ' a s atx. A-, rs Lwve be .nt t ' biQL ps 1.d .rf'-I H A O. .he P L...f1'y and 1.'12 y Q'ro'1'1Tt.e 6 1:fx.'f11': :LCTO Tmei 1' , Th y a' Q ing io h . in ,fling Qoqgruss to kavw EELS 7'11 pa:' ' ind - w u-2 vWQ-'Tf 501 ti P 21' 'N ,5 Q r 'Lid to the 10:11 1-2 11.111 rl V-311: l1z'r1yug':s 1.1111 'jiosw f th Christifn E- ,Hers t gmri its Success, L 'RJ thwf fuls Lil - 'ill 1, a vwf1iiy at wo dLSfxn. iay I an Y 1 SQWLLW in X5o,, ' . .'.1'cE' 1f:.'.0.3 of' ,..1..1 fe IH .'. ., ' 'Wj . , Hb ' ' 1.'1 1 ' ,'1l' , ' ', . '. 1 .'.'. 1. ,,. ,,,. f ' , 1' ' 1 T112 ' 1 1 3 111 1Jf1LlSf'f1. 111 111111, fr11 111 I11f1L1S1I'1?11 .1f'11ffJ1 '1 ff-1' . 11.'1c' 111 11161 c111'1-1-111111 111 1 1141 131' 1111-12Q. Ig1'f111lf'1' IC 11f'1'j'. 1'1 111'i11c-1211 111 11111 11111 '. ' - 1 111 wff-' h ' f ' 1 :': ' 5. 1 f ' D - -' 1 'J1 p 1 - 3 J . - . .' ' l'.. x'. '. 5 v ..i. xx . . .AY A , L X' ,L- I859 CEN TENNIAL CLASSES ST. MICHAEL'S HIGH SCHOCJL Sa Fe New co I959 Hzstorzc Trazls 1 sw Msxlco L Q To 6 THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT ' .Q , U K Y A Aztec Ruips cham7' . fi f ' Raton gx x , ., .T 7. I. A , rarmmgron .ASQ i ' A htxstfxtl ' J ir Fr. Loweu ' A 'IT ' ' 'A x ' I H ' ' 3. S , -...Q X O 1 Cimarmn A - clayton n ' Q H xl NTA if' T x Cuba o w X: VIL, 1 . 1 .I 'A ' agon Mound I 1 U vv, C JI X l Rl 0 -Nambe FT' BARCUY A ' 'k AI-'ort Union 1 1 ' Afnsquem ne mums Zh- - T- ' - ' FT F I 5- A L :no I ansiflggaifx Q Jem? -1 ' Las K4 Q E fgoroxi fy .L'...W..... 'a Vegas A l N' . GHUUP ' -T f , fmnta Pehpe ' Mwfl T I E5 FTA Bgscoug 0 , l - J' N C t r f' 'X' tn wmcnre 4 'wmxym .T . X X-- 0 Grants T t ucumcarl , m A mr,s I A I, an EI Morro 421' Rosa 'ICQ' ,I 'Hr n 1 ' fr., l'lllgU.Y,1lIU 'A' FT, nurmanov g ll Illilfl-Q 1.1m V Acoma . 3 ,I A A l Q 1' -A 1, if fr fx C a '.f'E.,Eig..,f '+J1o- 'A 35. ..-...M -W fr T 5 ylwz 1 - 0-,JJ-a Fort Sumner ff Q Q Bernardo , Mountamalr i, vaugm, - -f - - - - - - -. ... A -v - .., ,,,. QU - , . . ULD STONE rom 1 5 Clovis 1 'gig L lx Gran QmvxraA ,I I f ' ' A kXCg?B 1.Ns E - I I, Aj X Portales neseivf' Shfiuff-T-EE , Magdalena Socoreo ' ' E I X -Q' . 6- su -n nn il ul 1- 0 fo ll I I ' A, 'N ' if rr ruuuzosr X .U 5 i : af ,f A A J RV? J j M I ' 3 1 A Q FT. comma l 7' -so ,f A . f 'N . Q A Quo Cliff nweuings of no mc ca'2 1 :E 5.5 LQ ' 'iv ! , ' ls A J w , vy f VI, 1., ,A A Q rr. srrxrarurug-u2iI:QggL.L1f6Z9j Ris 'E j T t 'W - or . 1 , MEsC.4LE1fo ,v Lincoln Hffs., H' 3 Um' FT' wwf C' Truth or Consequences, 'f A340115 'I' BILLY ' Q 'A' Fr. ammo i H. weasfin xii COUNTRY f THE K1 U gg Lovington 1 A ' . f 7 f I 0 jf 'Sim' my 4' if :Q Tularosa COL A TR! Q A E M1 e r f a 1 ff t Fr. mums FP TNURNQRTW af I mmogmdu M . FT cuumucss Y A P em ' ' ' Lordslfg- -',,,--Qui'-,ss Fr. sement bands N '- Hobbs 'r .U oemino N -. I ' Y x O V ' is 9,3 V11 f -1 1151251 Masala.. WHORE fu' 6,15 H858-81, Carlsbad 1 N Ja' QU5 K- K 0 Columbus L E G E N D I'Yl'l.lIIHa'l!.s'IHII I'IiS UID HC HIS CABEZA DE VACAi SANTA FE CURONADU 1 BUTIERFIELD It ESPEJO COMANCNE I ll ning ' cHlsuM -u ESCALANTE 'au STINSUN-SLAUGHTERl1r GUUDNIGHT-LOVING I nn l PUEBLOS V NATIONAL PARK 'KARMY POSTS ATIDNAL MUNUMENTS ua 1 REPANED BV THE NEW AIEXICII ,STATE TUIIBIST BURE AU, SANTA FE. BROTHER NORRERT A Www RR0Tm:R TIMOTHY DIRECTOR 52553 SUR-DIRECTOR 00 'sf Inn ,Wm 1 'P BROTHER FREDERICK SENIOR CLASS BROTHER' ALFRED SENIOR PREFECT, JITNIOR CLASS ,W A 4 I ,LJ FA fmj,w Q C 2' ' IMk 'M-Iwi ,M - in 4 'fb 1 W R 1 ,-2 I IX f ' 'fx .., , r '. is I 'll I Q I 5 A fm - 4 V . K 'Y - fix' - 4 - 1g-fx gl i ',, BROTHER ALPHONSUS SENIOR CLASS - CENTENNIAL 'dn---Mun-9' BROTHER AREL JUNIOR PREFECT MECHANICAL DRAIVING if 44' Esvff ,,, G x xii , I ga-fl I, .-1' N BROTHER EDWIN BROTHER ANIDREIW BROTHER ABDONI Jumor Sponior Rngmtrar Spamsh Qnphomores Qpfmqor' wl? AWK 'S-W' 'ia G-as BROTHER PFTER Sophomores qponsor BROTHER RICHARD Freshmen Sponsor BROTHER ALEXIS Custodlan of Old Qan Miguel BROTIIFR ARTI IL R Perx ey or BROTHER DENNIS Fleshmen ip0nQor BROTHER I I FIANI Qpeual Classes X nf k A N .filgg , , ff' funn' Qu Y. H MR. JOHN HILLER '40 MR. DICK SHELLEY BROTHER EDWARD Phy. Ed., Basketball English, Football, Eighth Grade BaS9ba11 Track Band Moderator 'Du-J' 5 BROTHER JUDE BROTHER FELIX Eighth Grade Maintenance vwvv 'ldv . fit 4' Q ' V 1. K ,A - 5 Q 'Z BROTHER NICHOLAS Seventh Grade BROTHER AUGUSTIN Sixth Grade BROTHER KENNETH Seventh Grade MRS. B. F. SANDOVAL Secretary 7 -'milf Brother Vallaert Maintenance THEIR MEMORY LIVES. its nc Hair grow gray ' - eu But friendship never decay 1 it P 9 2 -w- uvx' SN 'W Ill I 5+ wg, H Q2 a tif 9- 059 '-'EN jzblilkygb k' fs, nd 'on E ' 4 t - 45 1 9 V -S Brother L. Philip Y-X E J iff Brother Regis Brother Stanislaus L. Joseph her Edward C harles it ,- rf' -L' M29 -Q' Ben 'f-'N uw' N. J Brother Prosper fx, M ro er nect P B th A E P Q M15 1 Mr Brother Peter I ' l , - dn' fain i ' Q Brother Miguel f i 'Q WN M Brother James Y E Brother imc-had other Robert - A ' other Gabriel A t 'ill tl ' other Vamillus V fi l PP -uf J I other Francis f - M! T fi her Franris 4 -A A Q ' Q W F her Ferdinand ,YM V ,f yer, ' W-it Joseph if Y 9 Q' ' 'ig ' Y x ies ,Jil 31 E iz.. . - We-E , gf- E Q S Q Q il fr r t . . ' N-' 4 her Cletus Brother Titus Brother Irineus Brother Cyril Brother Jasper E i P N, 1 '5 'I ,avg r - , 1 .gr Brother Harold Brother Ernest , E E W y - - I ' F - . 5 ui' 5 1 , - 25 'E B E 4' ' i J A ' if 1 I -other Brendan Brother Ambrose Brother Cassian Brother Alexander Brother William Brother Justin Brother Faber MEMQRH55 IN couNTLEss GENTLE KINDLY WAYS THEY LIYED A SERMON ALL THEIR DAYS Y H Faoulty 1956-Seated - Brothers - Edward, Alexis, James, Father Coggiola, Robert, CHAPLAIN FATHPIR Ferdinand, Cyril, Arthur OCTAVIO COGtiIOLA Standing - Christopher, Felix, Alfred, Abel, Timothy, Pete, Lucian, Andrew, Kenneth, Jasper, August, Norbert, Dennis, Arthur, Abdon Facility 1934--Brothers - Benildus, James, Amedy, Alfred, Faculty 1935 - Seated - Brothers: Peter, Prosper, Ben Prosper, Lawrence, lmanuel, Martin, Eugene, Aneet, An- Arsene, Anect. thony, Lewis, Camillus, Arsene, Claudius, Barnaby, Ben- Standing-Brothers: Andrew, Lewis, Benjamin, Nazaire, jamin, Xicholas, Andrew thony, Camillus, Prosper, Alfonso, Alfred, Stephen, Amedy, Jerome, Justin, Barnaby Faoult-v 1949 - Seated - Brothers - Prosper, Regis, Conrad, Facility of 1930-Brothers Seated-Claudius, Stanislas, Basil, Jasper Standing - Brothers -- Norbert, August, Nivard CAssistantJ, Arsenius, A. Lucian, Amateiu' V. 'l'imothy, Cletus, Berehmans, Andrew, Robert, Harold, Edwin, Sfflllllill!-2-Bl'0Ul0FS-fb UPOFK-20. Anfhlllly. Abel. Adrian. Tit - llee Hem- V Michael Prosper Camillus, Benjamin, XVilliam, Lewis, Alfred u5v 9 Jr , Arsene, Benignus, Gautier, Patrick, Bruno, Benlldus 'X nag? S229 v 'ii-U' DI C 11 2 3. 'Zur-Q, l ' 14-0',t-.nik 'GP-Ol. X . 5. g2,Q -3' Sig P 1 I' I olq-prga1Q'b4. Y. .04 wrt Y, A M. . .,,. U T. 5- . . i . 4g,g pw - u ' .fj,.-si , - 93353 33 is si 4'3q.s ?1 f'453wi 23 Q vraa I I I I , 02 . N' f an 3 935 3 . 9 3 I 2 Q' . wg: use --as-ay 3 3-3,3 1 25335 eaves-a'Q2, - 2333332 ..-.-.-'-' Y ' ' '- -f- -w. Ng 0 M' 'S' Q' Rudy Lujan Marvin C. Smith Jr. Band 4 yrs. San Miguel 1 yr. Honor Roll 4 yrs. Block M 2 yrs. Basketball 2 yrs. Track 3 yrs. Science Fair 1 yr. Perfect Attendance 1 yr. Ralph W. Garcia Honor Roll 3 yrs. Perfect Attendance 1 yr. 12 Year Man James K, McLaughlin San Miguel 1 yr. Honor Roll 2 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. Perfect Attendance 2 yrs. Thespians 2 yrs. .fi f'-4517 PRESIDENT Ernest A. Sanchez Glee Club 2 yrs. San Miguel 1 yr. Student Council 2 yrs. Class Officer 3 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. llonor Roll 4 yrs. Perfect Attendance 2 yrs. Jerry Ortiz Student Council 2 yrs. Football 2 yrs. Class Officer 2 yrs. Golf Team 1 yr. Track 2 yrs. 12 year Man VICE-PRESIDENT Juan Carlos Fornelli Football 2 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. Student Council 1 yr. Honor Roll 3 yrs. Class Officer 2 yrs. Perfect Attendance 4 yrs. Glee Club 4 yrs. Block M 2 yrs. Annual Staff 1 yr. Gilbert Martin Chavez Football 3 yrs. All State Football 1 yr. Basketball 3 yrs. All State Basketball 1 yr. Track 2 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. Thespians 1 yr. Class Officer 1 yr. SECRETARIES Rolando Phil lip Rinaldi Class Officer 2 yrs. Baseball 3 yrs. Basketbball 2 yrs. Honor Roll 1 yr. Perfect Attendance 2 yrs. Daniel Gonzales Football 2 yrs. All District Football 1 yr. Basketball 2 yrs. All State Basketball 1 yr. Baseball 3 yrs. Student Council 2 yrs. TREASURERS Bernard Eugene McCulloch Football 1 yr. Golf 1 yr. Sodality 1 yr. Class Officer 1 yr. Thespians 2 yrs. Gilbert Rodriquez Football 1 yr. Class Officer 1 yr. Golf 1 yr. Bob Wallace Honor Roll 1 yr. Golf Team 1 yr. Pantaleon Baca Jr. Basketball 2 yrs. Baseball 1 yr. Student Council 1 yr. Perfect Attendance 2 yrs. Band 3 yrs. 12 Year Man Waite Dean Hallock Football 1 yr. All District Football 1 yr. State Honorable Mention 1 yr. Baseball 1 yr. Honor Roll 2 yrs. Q '25 No' TIT: Q v-17 SENIORS Gilbert Romvro XVilliam IX'Sllf' Nlrllorizilfi llonor Roll 3 yrs. Sturlont ffounril 2 yrs. Block Nl 2 yrs. Sodality 2 yrs. The-spians 2 yrs Boys State 1 yr. Baseball 2 yrs. Annual Staff 2 yrs. San Miguol 1 yr. Carlos Arthur Gonzalvs Football 3 yrs. Track 3 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. Student Counril 1 yr. Class Offirz-r 1 yr. Honor Holl 2 yrs. Perfect Attonflance 2 yrs. Ronald Leo Porterfiold Football 2 yrs. Baseball 1 yr. Thespians 2 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. Science Fair 1 yr. 12 Year Man Benjamin Saiz Gloe Club 3 yrs. lil San Miguvl 1 yr. Srivncv l-'air 1 yr. llonor Roll 1 yr. l'vi'fc-rt Att:-nrlzinrc 2 yrs. Francis Sandoval Anthony Gammache Fr-rmin Alphonso Ahr-yta El San Miguel 1 yr. Honor Roll 4 yrs. Tommy Padilla Track 1 yr. San Miguel 1 yr. Stephan Nf-'field Band -1 yrs. Block Bl 1 yr. Science Fair 12 yrs. Thespians 1 yr. Perfect Attendance 2 yrs. Michael John Mt-Donald El San Miguel 1 yr. Pudulph F C de Baca Band 4 yrs. El San Miguz-l 1 yr. Pi-rfect Attendanre 3 yrs. Honor Roll 3 yrs. 1 G1-orgo Romero Anthony Trujillo Leroy Ortiz El San Miguel 1 yr. Honor Roll 2 yrs. Baseball 1 yr. Morris Adolph Apodaca Band 4 yrs. Honor Roll 3 yrs. Perfcrt Attendance 3 yrs. Science Fair 1 yr. C' 2 MY gi' 'S' fs! --:sv -516' -v '?' SENIORS Tomas Edward Holien Band 4 yrs. All State Band 2 yrs. Boys State 1 yr. Perfect Attendance 2 yrs. Science Fair 1 yr. El San Miguel 1 yr. Michael John McNamara San Miguel 1 yr. Honor Roll 1 yr. Francisco Jose Borquez Perfect Attendance 1 yr. Glee Club 1 yr. Student Council 1 yr. Sodality 2 yrs. Honor Roll 2 yrs. Annual Staff 1 yrs. Joseph S. Perea Phillip Burch Football 2 yrs. Student Council 1 yr. Sodality 1 yr. Thespians 2 yrs. Science Fair 1 yr. 12 Year Man Robert Candido Romero Honor Roll 2 yrs. Sodality 2 yrs. Glee Club 2 yrs. Class Officer 3 yrs. Student Council 3 yrs. El San Miguel 1 yr. Matthew L. Rounsville Annual Staff 2 yrs. Student Council 1 yr. Boys State 1 yr. Sodality 3 yrs. Honor Roll 2 yrs. Thespians 2 yrs. Science Fair 2 yrs. Raymond Luis Vigil Glee Club 4 yrs. Student Council 1 yr. Student Council Officer 1 yr. Sodality 1 yr. Thespians 1 yr. Basketball 1 yr. Joseph Durr Rubel B. Garcia Thespians 1 yr. Lawrence Peter Gruer Donald William Byres Science Fair 1 yr. Richard M. Padilla Student Council 1 yr. Glee Club 2 yrs. Sodality 1 yr. Thespians 1 yr. Football 2 yrs. All State Football 1 yr. All District Football 1 yr. Basketball 2 yrs. Baseball 2 yrs. Track 1 yr. Class Officer 1 yr. Francis Colegrove Arthur Montoya Af? Q52 ...AJ Qi-vii' Q lit X yt- 'QS'-7' 15 :R 'K 'Arif 'ff' Ni' -i Martin Campbbcll Archie Catanach Tobias Pacheco Sodality 1 yr. Joseph C. Ramirez T.hespians 1 yr. Science Fair 1 yr. 12 Year Man SENIORS Henry Anchondo Football 2 yrs. Student Council 1 vr Class Officer 1 yr. Michael Avenenti Sodality 1 yr. El San Miguel 1 yr. Honor Roll 1 yr. Lawrence McCormick Miguel Romero Robert Martinez Phil Baca Football 3 yrs. All State Football 1 yr. All District Football 1 yr. Student Council 2 yrs. Sodality 2 yrs. Jerry Garcia Eddie RlVf'l'3. Louis Salazar Rodolfo Manuel Football 1 yr. Golf 1 yr. Thespians 1 vr. Eugene Valdez Rodriqucfz Richard Joseph Esquibel Student Council 3 yrs. Class Officer 3 yrs. Science Fair 1 yr. i wi 1 S-on-9 'fi- 1 rm if 4 if af , , 1 4 7 ,, S Q f 1, 1,1 l ' f M- j f 5,11 1 , , 9 1 af 4 i 45 'Q is a 5 E 5 ' if, .W A-:.!: .,'-: Q W - 1 ef J BROTHPR LIGOUORI AND 2nd CLASS 1887-1888 ciety 19 Brother Patrick and Adw anced Class of 1900 Mirabal Mirahal Montoya Abbot liuune Digneo Weiler .Xlarid -XLTAR BUYS 1901 , 1 - 'v'f ':m 1, I 'Y 'xrlllllfa -. 51535 g11'f'z.fMhzg:,.5g::g.,-' , . E-if w az. IMVW7, ' .1 X .3 , It 'W as f i I ' , ,V M' . . .3-J' K ST MICHALLS AND YICINITY IY 1861 Boarders 1901 Top to bottom Juan J. Abeyta, Antonio Castello, Agustin Brito, Pablo Sal- cido, Dario Garcia, Petrolino Gonzales, Abel de la Osa, Damacio Baca, Fabian Serna, Adolfo Salazar, Pedro 0rtiz y Pino, Teles- foro Mirabal, I-'lorencio Vega, Remigion Mirabal, Francisco Luna, lipifanio Quintana, Gonzalo Valdez, Efran Smith, Cristo- bal Gomez, Frank 0'Connor, William McClain, Canuto Gonzales, Firmin Miera, Robert Morrison, George Seholozer, Belarmino Abeyta, Felipe Martinez, Robert Lunn, Brother Julian, 1PrefectJ, Pedro Martinez, Vicente Alari-d, Jesus Marquez, J. R, Martinez, lipifanio Miera, Leon Casados, Manuel A. Esquibel, Cirilio Ful- ler, Larenzo Baroldy, Sidney Hubbell, Antonio Nardelli, Manuel Norte, Charles Rosencranz, Frank Casados, Albert Stephen, Ben- ny Coeciaveleni, Tim Nardelli, Max Spears, Albino Mejia, Mascot usportrs Nlxllllll, ll 4 I FIRST CONIMUNIUN 1903 MEMORIE - THE JuNuoR CLASSES QS , WJ mf 1 CU, ?i4, Luk CAMPUS 1890 fwwwmevmas., Z. 5 43 QPR' SIL b0ARllluRb 1901 Left-Ijnveiling of Brother Botulph's Statue 1910 1913 Grandstand and Baseball Field 1890 Below-Corpus Cristi Procession in the '80's Leroy Garcia Eugene Lopez Joe Rivera Don Baca Richard Rivera Abel Santiesteban Gene Baca Gilbert Silva Robert Romero Bob Catanach Sam Perea David Ortiz Ferdy Monteros Jim Silva Phillip Curtis Fred Diehl Exley Hoynes Charlie Hurtado Dick Dobson John Kenworthy Louis Fresques Enrique Chavez W, . V .f' 1 6 Joe Phillips Richard Anaya Mike Neeb Mike Baca Ray Becker Chester Rael Robert Chavez Alfredo Romero Reynie Ulibarri Gilbert Valdez K' - w ifi! ., g f 'S 5 1 1' 1' YU! .V L. ee' as xv i v i' .ff 'TF J . Z, fa :gi V 4 L ei . 5 .1 sl' R 3 fi Q I S j M f f . ,h,?. Y J .1 JUNIORS S e i -eh. 6 . in 7' L f if SG? sz. 1, 51 i 4' 2 '. rf if 'S f sr: Q f ,, ' W .'f3.' J ,, .I . x 'fx , 5: lwgf , ,if H Q-. f x 5 QQ if ' ' , K :.,2.,.. - I z 1 GP, me XE 2 4 fv- me ll , psf 25' f .aw .g sz 3 ., gg, U, 4 Q f'! j 4 s 17' ' 5- v fl ky, 'fR'lfi:'--1 .IU ORS 'ZA VO' 155 Larry Quintana Millard Stephans Joe Montoya Carlos Tapia Daysert Holcomb F, , 4 S . 1 k , f 1 Q , I' 6 J f H. 'Q ' 2 G i 'Q ll I' Z1 if Q to ff. M .. 'F - sw I g ' A W ii, v If f 12250 5 1 gr f Sd 1 .l 4g U, ?', ki? 'Tv 'I 53 4. Munn' rpg, . . . , 52 as if Q, 1 1 M 7 ' fl 24 f n ' 1 1 1 f If 'z it A I v-.1 L-H 4 , N ,pus 66 .mg . I i if '99 .A Q rv-Q ... Q ff fi ffl lu if 5 42,3 Q f' fl 5, , p fy I 'Q A f Y mg 4 Mike Gray Bill Lentz Pat Casey Nestor Padilla Eloy Lucero Larry Sweeney Robert McQuarie Bill Abbey Dick McGuane Pete Cabaldon Walter Boyle Archie Velarde Ross Salazar Bill Sullivan Benny Rael Nelson Silver Doug MacLean Fred Miera Jerry Medina David Dulle Santiago Lopez Mike Gonzalez ' ' 5 1 Orlando Escudero Joe Archuleta Joe Gonzalez Bob Gutierrez Larry Turner MEMORIES X Six X 4 Q Ml 5 nv- , ... J 4 ' fx :s Z., V oo., 3 H241 pf. 51 Sgr v 'U , fl I ,mga -5 Las nicer: 'I V if ,,, ft-Y XX hw 1 wi ,i Mm J. 'MWQ1 rf fr , 1 'Q - iv H sei.: M 2 A 1, , My -. . e. ' - 7 I - ' - ' 1 rl ' U: s W q gg!-r 1 rr 7: e ,,, -4 . P ,fl YE? 1 5 'Q .IL , it Z 'P' 1- ' -Q ' 1 -5, Y P , ,..e , .. use ,, 5. ,,,,,,e pa,-g,...,ei',,.g. Tm,,Tr,,,,,,,.iw A A iii .sv 4 1' ul in M 4 X, The Old Cathedral before 1888 Donkey Baseball Game 1924 ST. MIKE'S Campus L . i . e i ,-.5 BEF? , - In the Ancient City of the Holy Faith, as old Santa Fe is known, the natives tell at Christmas time a wondrous legend of the miracle of the old bell in the ancient Church of San Mieuel. In the year 1356. they say. the Christians in the province of Andalusia, in southern Spain, were locked in mortal combat with the implacable Moors. After losing several battles. the darkness of fear and despair blacked out the little village of San Jose. And it came to pass in those dark days that a. bearer of Christ's banner was compelled by his faith to light a candle, From this tiny flame. others lighted their candles, so that a great light was made. Assembling themselves by this light. they vowed to St. Joseph that if he would aid them in battle. they would cast a bell in his honor. That summer. the Christian knights challenged the besieging Moors from Cordova and, as if by a miracle, drove back the Crescent's hordes. Without delay, the vow to St. Joseph was fulfilled. The fathers of the tiny village of San Jose sent for a copnersmith to cast the bell. and when he arrived they held a fiesta. There was street dancing and flower tossing, Women dressed in the finest silks. wearing heavy gold jewelry. And the men wore satins and laces with silver buckles and buttons. At the height of the merriment. a beautiful maiden rushed to the vat of molten copper and iron. and. taking the gold jewelry from her arms. cast it into the melting pot, shouting We shall make a bell. The Moors cannot come. Others took up the challenge. and into the melting Dot went ear rings, bracelets, buckles. bu tons. silver studings from bridles and saddles and silver plates from the dinner tables And so. by each one con tributing his bit. the bell that symbo'izes the victory of Chris tianity was cast. With the dis covery of the new World, it found its way to Mexico and after the reconouest of Santa Fe. it came at length to ring out and then to rest in what is believed to be the oldest church in the United States - in the Mission of San Miguel. Such is the romance and the legend of The Bell of San Miguel. Courtesy of: Mr. E. Horace AKIN 4 ly 4 v ui. MEMORIES St. Michael's Campus in the '80's l Ill ' CZHIIPUS SCBHC in 1904 THI-I m.m-:s'r mwsrf: IN THE V. s, A . sAN'rA H., N1-,xx Mx-:xl fefffrrf r' Q5 his U'x ,t1 ,, A., Pho! hv Parkh :Q Brother Botulph's Statue Campus scene in 1936-Grotto of Lourdes being blessed , as - ll . fiiii in an - 1 .f' 2'fff,.ie-- -f' he. 'f A A ,Y ., , -,HX . Q. so A Q'-,EJ 1 .ft fi ' ..N f - 'E-. 1 -if-.'uh.I4L...... South view of Old San Miguel Convalescents' Room-1935 'a Common sight by Oldest House 50 years ago Epitacio Vigil Eddie Anderson Alec Lopez Gerald Romero David Pino Gilbert Montoya Ray Valdez Steve Romero George Garcia Adolfo Narvaiz Jude Valdez Bill Morey Pat Montoya Douglas Shuih Tony Martinez Kenneth Kennedy Billy Wheeler Bennie Bleu David Chavez Robert Sisneros Danny Ortiz Donnie Dinkle Paul Moore Robert Fisher Harry Connelly Robert Gonzales Herman Pino Eddie Ortiz Robert Renwick Barney Caranta Gilbert Vigil Antonio Garcia Ted Lopez James Farley Ronnie Miera Harold Banks 162 at lv ls,-1 SOPHOMORES Victor Blea Jack Quintana Pat Sheehan Newt McCain Julio Bojarano G: ,:... fy., 1 ' X 5 up N W yi u I aw ft ti Qs' ' Q. ' FW ' M 5 ia f iii: ff? -K1 .- M sr C.. aa 'K -' W in ' 'iw gl, 4 s N .. ' ' ' ' 1-J A 1 fk, V i 1 fl fbi' QQQ if-' ' . if A7 , Jiivzts' I Q 'iii f JF' x - as KM i 5' ff- , K ' v i ' 1 , 1 A ' A i ,I I .- , . K - we gs. Y Q A sv- i ' Q B, ' ' Q , 'WS' 2 ' ' i T2 R af A 5 ',-Q: i ' ,-vw. V , ',1,.,l..l 'M 1 hum vp. . W. . I in 'A V 'fr vi, 'K 4 W i nf 1 1? I Y f , fi? , - I 44 , is my ,Q 'U' fm-Q . ,, 'V fe' QW- C 'fm . ' 1 ul ' , may ? if WT., 4 Z' fi ! Il QA 1 T iff j, SA Qjz- I iv i, iii! f J' SOPHOMORES , . P s , vv' . 'P' 7' Q, 4 'E L I 5' Fe' 4 fini V 2.1 ' P is jf ' ggi l A .mei ac, , fl 1 3... , 4 Q f 'Z 5 , 24 'sa 6- , a., 1 ff ' way- : ' ,Q Il, , ...-3 If , f 1' f M' 1 ! git av '57 X. K' . th 'ir mg! 2 ff nv' 2 v gf? ffff 4.4: ,,,, Q .rn . .rl Leo Smith Bill Kamherg Ovaido Rael Jerry Martinez Louis Chavez yu fi , u 19 ,P I' PY' s nr E ff, .X vii 'f ff-W Aa- 1 ' nf 3 t gm- . 4'5 4, E 9 l f 1' . av- . Sv r if f 1- ' n 11 n 4 C ef , f ,pf Jerry Meloche Lorenzo Salazar Jerry Stehenne Gus Baros VValter Vieira Bill Dotson Eddie Jiron Mike Manning Robert Padilla Peter Baca Sam Griego Mike Biddle Paul Hanley John Brechon Ricky Griffith Jerry Lujan Eddie Pollard Gerald Rimhert Armando Carrillo Robert Sena Bill Sandoval Chuck Bunch John Dubiel Donnie Ortiz George De la Cruz Benny Malta Donald Meek Michael Vigil Charles Lopez Diego Barela Fay Mott Frank Nicholson Anthony Espinosa Bradley Longacre Jerry Ortiz .M-qnnlhlliii METAMORPHOSIS OF BUILDING F-5 x, XA' X sg rx'-3 'Q X 4 X ps Orlgmal 1878 Bldg.-Rlght after flre 1926 Vx QM' Y Q ' v i ?r,, fn f 3 A Jw Y K Below-Yard view 1926 and Former entrance Q E A!! H i E 1 Below Showers in remodeled building 1951 efgxigiff-f fn 2 1 VE? ,z -0.1.4 Ont Enfnnlzl Rear view 1959 ,..-' TL: METAMORPHOSIS F BUILDINGS iv . . f v lllglwk Left-1887 Bldg.-1Vell dug in 1885-3900.00 Below-Territorial Archltecture 1902 and 1909 K I Q' QT, A W 5 ,,,, I I .gg 4 Y i ' ? V 4' IA E iq L, Q Q -Q W 1 my 5 ,SV a W ah gf M I 2 ,f 'Z . 4,4115 Q 4 '12 M n 1 .4099 Left:-Trees add beauty to 1887 Bldg. Right:--Scene in 1923. Adobe Bldg. of 1872 demolished in 1927 M25 2 TT ,,n. T13 'Q K? ll' ZIJQ., . 4 U P1-. . 'f Right:-Knew from South 1923-Notice greenhouse, garden, rx. Above:-Grotto of Lourdes replacing part of garden, 1930 FRESHMEN , f we , ' f :PIA l Jose Fornelll 35? Ramon Sanchez Bill HlndS Tito Roybal Connie Trujillo Rudy Martinez Gilbert Gutierrez Edwardo Romero Ignacio Garcia Rudy Armi jo Pat Montoya Baltazar Rodriguez Kenny Archuleta William Herrera Sammy McCullough Dennis Trujillo Eddie Garcia John Malloy David Ridings Felix Lujan Carl Rogers Frank De Torres David Fresquez lf- 7-' u wa' .J '7' ff fu .ff Q44 tr- Joe Garcia Eugene Arrey Johnny Gonzalez B111 Bartlett Lal ry IVIHIIIIICZ ff Ill N at lie -gk W0 g-qv' fv- +-f- ,. 511' 7' 'f 1.4 In vv- 3 'V C' H' Ronnle Pleper Danny Roybal Robert Thompson John Dalz Tommy I eu ter Phil Romc IO Rmhaxd Galua Hugo Hamllton Lal ry Blea Brlan Plog Benny Gonzales Mlehael Beltran Jlm WVIQQIUQ Arthur Frant Larry Lentz Ferol Smxth Steve He rera Jlmmy Varela Harold Young Jlmmy BILGIFK FRESHME BIHUFIG Rxngler Jerome Carrlllo Mlchael Grlego Davxd Fernandez Anthoy Trujlllo ff 'G-.0 any -4.44 ,7 , A' . D I VI Q .4 2 x if f f jj I I I, Q xg G' V , '+ ' Q . , 'N . f- C' ' 4 , -f s 1 ' '. f 1' '- p I x - ' - 1 X Y -' ,-- ff: ' A A M, In I ' i4!,if:,ftV'xxV 1 5 E -, 3 l l, ' X f ' . . N12 f' , I .xl I: . ' X . , if E A 1 . - . I I' ,w. ,QQ v- ,1 lla., -r f' , lm A X M mv -g if A L 1, Y nf M fn , 3 f WT' - ff' 1 QW' X0 Q a t 'J' N 'VI my ' G - it ,Q 4 if A' I , an 'Q iv, -if I, 4 ' ' I Q, . ,.,,, aff , gl, . , , at y 5 ' 1 A 1 J o,', if f I ff f V f l-MPM y -1' it , l,ll Zh v . 7-L ., sv It J , . . 'U r -P. f ' , Q , -ew.: A f . - I ' Qi, Lf ', , 1 ,V pi , A X! Y Z., 55 F ' 'V 4 n . n 4 .' 2 ',' ' ' 63 X ' Q' n 1 f ' ' ' - ',,. 3 Lp , . 1 N ,,...,, 2 I , I ,f , sr' X , fn , f ., N ' f V g ff . , -4 'c I ' 5' , g .4 if ' I ' - an 5 5 1. A- 5,1 f. i- r .. iq, 6 rv I I . - --k g :an ' - , t V fg N ff. ' Jn I , , 1 ll . , - jjj , I ' ' '4' , T67 f 4 ' t f ef lyl' ' 'V LORETTO GRADUATES' '59 Loretto the word is synonymous for all that stands for God religion loyalty to one's country, charity to one's fellowman Conchita Quintana, President Teresa Bonal, Vice President Irene Lopez, Treasurer Mary Ethel Jiron Angie Carrillo Rosie Griego Cecilia Montoya Gloria Gallegos Edwina Roybal Earleen Gomez Josie Lopez Rosemarie Schmitt Martha Rodriguez Cecilia Luja Sylvia Abeyta Patsy Riddell Dolores Espinosa Jo Ann Rotunno Angie Rodriguez Carolyn Velasquez Christine Roybal Catherine Carantg, Christine Marque Camilla Armijo Margaret Catanch Eloisa Madrid Barbara Valdez Agatha Armijo Mary Lou Barela Juanita Bransford Susie Vigil Marnie Lucero Dolores Martinez Melba Vigil Dorothy Tenorlo Patsy Brady Dorothy Perez Rita Baca Dorothy Sacoman Mela Maes Olivia Herrera Conchita Brito Lucy Gonzales Arlene Shoemaker Mary Frances Quintana Rebecca Escudero Irene Sanchez Frances Anaya Tessie Gallegos I68 Margaret Roybal Dorothy Valdez Betty Jean Sevier Mary Frances Montoya Dolores Tru11llo Dolores Rael Helen Montano BROTHERS GCDOD WORK SPREADS TAOS: In 1864 Father Gabriel Ussel of Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish in Taos. New Mexico, ap- pealed to the Brothers for a school in that town. Brother Osmund opened it in November, 1865, but due to the small attendance and lack of suitable accommodations the school was closed in 1867. The picture is from the Collection of Carlos Benavides and was taken probably around 1870. The sclhool no longer exists. The tiny church to the right is now used as a priv- ate chapel. The picture was obtain- ed, almost providentially it seems, through the courtesy and persever- ance of Mr. and Mrs. John McCar- thy, Mr. Cisneros of El Mercado Store on the Plaza, and Mr. Don Blair of the Album Shop, all of Taos, New Mexico. The first school of the Brothers in New Mexico, Lo Salle institute, IBB! l926. Li i if GRAY HORSE school, St. John's, as it looked in 1942. This building was erected in 1892. Originally, there were steps leading to the second floor with a covered porch extending beyond the windows on each side of the main entrance. This photo was taken by Rev. Wil- liam Huffcr, for many years chap- lain in various institutions in Okla- homa. The building was erected by Monsignor Stephan with the assistance of funds provided by Reverend Mother Katherine Drexel. Following the transfer of the Scholasticate to St. Michael's College, housed a public school under the direction of the Christian Brothers ,,,,...- ,E K ---I -'Z ' . 52 um 1951 at which time ll I N fs I it became State operat- I ' E -- ' ,Y N ed. '- 1 4-1. :. 1f ,: Mora: 1865 - 1884 During its existence St. Mary's did much good. lt educated a generation of the leading men of Mora County. Old timers still recall the names of County leaders taught by the Brothers at Saint Mary's. BERNALILLO Ranch as it looks today. BROWNS- YILLE: Old building in which the Chris- tian Bro. taught in the late 18- 60's, is still in 'use after nearly 100 years and two tropical hurricanes that destroyed many newer struc- tures around it. if EIGHTH GRADE cz . fe ,' Leonard Hurtado Q 'Hilo !'- 01-1- . . -,Q .4sn. Sushi ,xi if 43' ,,.!,.,,, -, Ft is 'WMM v i ff X ' Q 'ar-Q t'4'f2 Q ,M iv: 161' 1 i, M In F' ,pa 'F' ? 3, Pai' fbi I TESUQUE INDIAN Andy Rodriguez Anthony Mayrant John Bronnenkant Lorenzo Holguin Mike Cunningham Ernest Padilla Robert Smith Ralph Gates Max Saiz Ronnie Swartz Paul Vigil Florencio Martinez John Byrne Michael Lujan Frank Romero Marcello Baca Pres Salazar Eloy Maez Robert Quintana Gene Brito Michael Miller Tommy Vigil Varren Churchill Pat Gray Pat Grace Hugo Roybal Alex Owen Steve Rodriguez Ernest Garcia Mike McEwen Leroy Martinez Cosme Garcia C.hristy Martinez v-, Q M v ,f fm 'Saw- .J ip 1 4577 Wa ,iiifwi QS? A' 33 4 , as 4 .,- ,W- ,if X 4 X' .1 'A , , M ,P L A A, ' is-G ' , I 3 I ig .,q. . L M 64 S ' I -ef S. - A y K1 , 'F V' Y Q n.- : A , Q L ,.. BP' 'Cf' I J 9 'Millie lf? JI Tommy C. de Baca '4 f-.7 Louis Ludi .J f Zi' , 1 P' ,515 as f A L A' . wi ta., ..,sfj , Y-J ' -ii a1....,f Z Aww ,W 1 1 I X 2 - ' 'YJ .-,., 2 it -.-f -i s- f fall final 'rf X I' pf- JI. 1 ,gr- 2! I ,ff ,. fax, 'f?'..l r A ' , vv- v . - , fi 9 A , 4' Phillip Gregory Alan Doyle Chris Sanchez Joe Kendrick James Coleman Danny Smith Joe Kleczcka John Esquibel Joseph Fischer Steve Taylor Pat Segura John Greene Arthur Montoya George Gutierrez Fred Probst Eddie Lopez Roger Gilbert Glynn Gomes Richard Romero Donald Knapp Marshall Saiz Bennie Romero John Cunningham Horace Martinez Robert Ringler Charles Ortiz Michael Romero John Romero Bill Sykes Roy Talachy James Abeyta Ernest Ortiz ,fx 1 r 471 - sf J x 'Zu 1 I' 1, 1 - -5. gf QQ ,nfs I if f up r,, AA V ,Q F ,gi 1 X1 :ff , Q 'ff ,325 la' Q I 733 F' wt, J, J 1? ' 1 W W .iff ' f 3 , r ,LN . Q f I Q . f X v, z?f?fQJ1'p sw Un as ff 'tu ' EE- Q J 1 , f 1 if, l7l f dx 4 ,J SAINT MICHAEIJS BANDS:- Musie has always been an integral part of the curriculum at St. Michaels The bands or orchestras were organized and active from the very beginning of the institution. We read in the annals of the school that in 1869 the College Band went out to meet Bishop Lamy. who was returning from Rome. An 1870 concert program show that that year the RAND was composed of a guitar, a Cornet, a flute. an accordion, a clarinet and a drum. XVith the arrival of Brother Botulph in 1872. a talented music- ian himself. greater life and vigor was given to the organization. In 15275. Brother Dosas, brother to Brother Botulph. became Bandmaster and fulfilled this function very successfully until 1884. The revered Brother Fabian then took over and for forty- two years he was to make St, Michael's Rand an outstanding asset to the students as well as to the school. Under his enthusi- astic leatlership there were years when every pupil enrolled in school was a member of the Band. During 42 years Brother Fabian taught music to a large number of local muscians, who later on became members of the various private and civic orchestras and bands throughout the Southwest. Locally, the once famous Band of the Conquistadores, was formed of music- ians who had been pupils of Brother Fabian. 0 'S MUSIC CLASS -1904 ORCHESTRA 1921-BROTHER BEINEDICT 'N K5 1928 BROTHER LL CIAN sl .Illia 4-If! 35 ik AQ 5. 4- o fl! - ' , 4, .V I v Ah -n. -sy., x ,Yr W?-'fw 5 u . -.. - ,X v ,- . 'J .1 A .A C '!,.., F'J, ' ' 'QgEQ!gLf:gAQMQg5 f.q'al?Ql 1 '-Y-A Y' tfiif' !f ii?!fg.7.Q ..... N .K ,. 1 Q 4 ' n 5 0 I' 4 inf,-,g 1- ei'-' S .Af 3' - f 59' e . x,, gJ,g,: .if l M A 5, -E I ., X KH! .g K RN J Q , .A gf-Q it J, T f I , fl if I fr Ai -fm Richard Farrely John Caranta Ernest Bradshaw Harold Durr Ramon Valenzuela David Cordova Leonard Ludi Larry Troioni Louis Mackel William Valdes Mi ,fzuel Abeyta Xavier Ortiz SEVENTH Larry Lopez Jack Smith Leo Saiz Jim Romero Bill Curtis Charles Sanchez Adrian Ortiz John Meyer Mike Serna Skeeter Ellis Ira Billingham Anthony Garcia John Vigil Jim Heard Pat Chapman William Roche Don Chavez Jim Martinez Barry Miller Jim Carrillo Billy Healy 8 5 I I, fi 2 ir 'v 'ff 4 J s.. ' if it ' it-f gi Q 91..- . ,:f:,5ffef2f? '5 far' I ,,,-.wi J . - 551,4- ygyzi -1 , , 1172145 453122 2' ,, Joy, LA ':. ' 'wal as 1 W rw' 6' if 'J J i .3 5 1 ei in egpvrfe- 44 X H? :s. ,vi ANN 'F V It Y , My T 4 u Y ji.: , Arg? 1.1 v I 7 . .I 3, S if 5. fi' WWE. 1, 'J riff? X F if ,' ef' ',,. '59 ' 1 ,. 1 ,.. A ,,, Viz! - 5112553 ,uv- , FV' ,a Pa 3 , If X S . .iff Q 1' al! N Ll if ,J 1 I 5 li ml .vig if., M If . ' 3 X of P -2: l 233, A 'A-,. P , V !Q'1 gf H my g P I' JV .. , V fb. . 'S , ' 1' - 0 2 . if 'nl 4 if I , i 'A GRADE Camillo Tucci Ray Gonzales Sammy Garcia Mike Rohan Ben Montoya Bruno Zaldo Harold Kelly Tommy Menges Anthony Gutierrez Leo Gallegos John George Dale Glass Reynie Ortiz George Bello Mike Varela Ramon Vigil Tommy Mills Camillo Detorres Peter Beasley Wladi Senatovitch Jonclhan Walker 175 John Balling Roberto Moya Patrick Palmer Patrick Kearns Martin Espinosa Philip Rhoads Woody Shank Frank Silva Louis Ortiz Joe Sympson William Yarbrough Ernest Garcia . .i .' A 6 ls' ' if . ,X 'll x I i ,, I .- S , . 5 I . lf:'.iggff i i l l 9 1 lf ALUM I ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED I909 Officers elected ln 1909 Frank A Hubbell President Roman L. Baca ,Vice- presldent leorge W xl'lTlll0 ieeretarx Salomon Luna Treasurer. Above Board Members 1991 Alfredo Ortlz Hllarlo Delgado, Fred Garcia Fmesbo Herrera John Romero Sablno OIIVBS have been Pl'lSlll9Ilt9 Abose right Board 1948 John Xaldes President. Other PI'6SidB-IW x Communion Mass Banquet 1958 id!! The Alumni Association dld much good work the nf Frying Chicken ALUM I Rt. Rev. Msgr. Jose Garcia '21 Rt. Rev. Msgr. Philip Cassidy '26 Rev. Tito Melendez '32 Manuel Lujan, For- mer Mayor Alfredo Ortiz, For- mer May-or f 515 fi Q1 M' gr. Q. vu, ,.:a, wg .gf W +, A .ifgkfig . iw wif! H 5, N 353' A 322.3 . Q rg W 1 532' j if .f H . W 1 gag? . Q ,fr 'J' he fy, .4 sf , . ,L +1 W . ,. if li H, e ' 5 14 551. 1 'M , 7 if A , A Lf 5 'L 'lcv ' w ,fe fi K mf Ms 5 H 5 f W eff Ar! li as Q eg A f A . jg . ff 21. f HK 2, iff? E. if Y 5 ' ,J 5 'iff v af nv? if f h'L!ff:'u1'I?. . . Ji L if . .1. if . E,fq.fmm,.:,.H.. ' 5J'f?1f1fz. ,J ww , 'EEHEQ5 gf' 'H '-11. ' -mph! 2 - 1 I WH Yf ff, . 5. 4123.601 W, 1 G 1 .af y ,.1.- r 1 4 4 f ill- E. ., . - -2 -we: 13419, -9 L' 1 Z a at 1 1 H if fmlsi- - SJW . 1 ff .1 'FF' , li. i R W L ,Z lwslm f ,Q 1. K qw, 93 4 .1 s , If . .1 E51-gem,-1: 1' 1 I H 1 1 Q 1 Q if 1 'f , - 31' rate... or 1.. .b L.. ., M as X' . Y P J pw Fig .. li w .2 N ' 4 1 g Q E , Q Glee Club-1930 CAMERA CLUB 178 Conrad Hilton Centennial Committee ,: I , . Group of Alllmni 1951 ziu .v,' ,.,' 1 ' '-ii' - ' 'Z 2n vv .N or '1 . g e a 2 Boarders Stu-dying Albuquerque Alumni CATECHISTS 1943: A. HUSK. D. GONZALES, M. ECKERT, M. WINGER, S. GARCIA, A. VIRGIL, T. ROYBAL Tim Cordova Mike Driscoll Edwin Durr Miguel Esquibel Glenn Faiardo Dick Herrera fm' Ki-- fs J '! of N 'M , James Lunan Richard Martinez Mike Martinez Tom Martinez Tony Martinez Dan Montoya . It ' 4 'I' U- 1 - 'E 1 ,t.. ,B 40, I- it vt . in L' :ar iv 11 Ysf'-'XT fill r Q i 'F' ga' in ' 'Q' ln, ' ft 1 ' .. 4 avg, i f s , fi-. , T .4 . ,,xf.,' , 1, 111 fi SIXTH GR DE kg, ,' 5 ics: .. Q: lt: 'E' ,A .'w,'u .Ibn ,A ,if E M 4 L ' t ii it 'T 5 X , . K M rv it A' fl fag, 5 2 . t Q' 'gif' lk V 4 1 I X 1 I , ' ul ,fa 5 Q li if ll'-1 'N ' 'vs , yr I ' .' , 171, if tru? 'gn ,f 'Rei' deer' it . ,f ' Y ' , uf-M Rudy Apodaca Robert Barth Paul Benavides Steve Blanchard Albert Carrillo David Cisneros ,A Anal . mf' Q , w gi, Frank Gomez Mike Hoyt John Kendrick Richard Lasine JV ' I i jx Tom Lechnev Y ,Ile wi, Joel LHCGY iz W! . ' CV' i I if t .f c i'4w',' 6' 'sr ,- Z y f' -' iii' . I fm' 'V , 4 3 If ,, ' '- ' 7' H 37, 13 - 3 , ' '53 'fa if ffm elf Dan Romero y Gilbert Romero fn ,- G Frank Roybal Franco Serna Ralph Stahnke Leslie Tennyson aaa- 2 ' 'ni' gf- . -Z' A u i'-5 f vi , ,s 3 v f l . v.',. ' 1 p I 4 , N' ' Zz? M in f' 1 vga . 1 547 E by i 'R ,V Q ff T Zfaazgl' '33 lg. an O afar 'Ui Mike Montoya Bob Montoya Tom Murphy Larry Ortiz Ricky Ortiz Mike Ortiz y Pino Al Santistevan Tony Tometich Art Tuggle Fred Tuggle Jaime Padilla Juan Lujan 179 L PARENTS ORGANIZATIONS V' 4,-'fd Offlcers-1950 . f :JO W ' Left-1952 Officers and Party n Ni 55 W Y L 9 -waz, 1 180 1 rj in , , 1956 Officers 'VIL 1955 Officers: Mrs. Stella Romero Harold Durr, Charlvs Palmer, Kenneth C . orazza, Edward Holem u 'Gil as is y i in '5 Q4 Q A A 1 mn i if ,Q 5 5.22. Q ziffffffsfm .X . li N 2 ,Cf '25 ,4 s ' ,Lf h f,,,,, .. hi, 'fn' ACTIVITIES .ff ' 1,1 ,Q J ' ' J E 1 SV ,A f.,j. A' -v A SPIRITUAL ACTIVITIES ' V M XI rw , A -lf ,N . I 255. gl ,Y Y ,fx -L A 'jx ,ma I 'fx L- S-vb X' X-C 4 4 SODALITY KNIGHTS OF THE DEVINE CHILD ARCHCONFRATERNITY OF ST. JOSEPH ALTAR BOYS 39 LITERARY ACTIVITIES EL SAN MIGUEL FORENSIC THESPIANS I EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES I I I I I STUDENT COUNCIL GLEE CLUB S BAND ATHLETICS FOOTBALL BASKETBALL BASEBALL TRACK TENNIS V ' ll -- , l I V jd ggi 1- 1 , v Ir ,, U 5 s . , 131-,Wil K Ill , 1 ' f. I5 X! F , A H P ' . ' 1 111,11 1 Q 1:1 T 'kg 'Q' l I1: l 1 ..... ' C1 1 1, gr.. .a.,.9., 1-, --- ' r - 1 , Q-.af 2'-H W, 4 5, ,,,, --ff A ...E -.............. - -.,,e.1...m.-- Ji-,,.f,.. e,,,.,.. 1- - Q-S3--1, '13 '. ' N-M-I-RA-5 Pusususo MoN'rH1.v sv THE svuoenvs OF smwr NllCHAEL'S COLLEGE fu 1gg,.f' .111 s ' aj 1,1 A, JOLUME TWELVE SANTA FE, New Mexico. FEBRUARV 25. 1935. i ,1 Jamal: Num 5 'lifL':.'f 'i N EWS REACHES11 25th ANNIVERSARY 1 K--J.F.Huhl1ellFirslEditor. AN 1 5:1165-1'fEUFX'f?'11?'ii?F1if1viii, 95 11 k 1 11111 1 leee MIGUEL NEWS WINS HIGH RATING . TINEZ WIN 11 ---- :' A:WARDS WCATHOLIC vm-:ss ,xssocuvlox mms News 'ffm -Ui-1-l'1N Mui IFN WHS n.,1v1.11e Elected Press M.. Pr:-rv 1 l-'IRST noxous xx CRITIFAI, RATING ,1, x xi g 51 , ,A , 1 11,15 olume 27, No. 8 ST. MlCHAEL'S HIGH SCHOOL, SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO Ma 1, 1951 St. Michael's Speakers Win ll ll l Y UNM Speech Honors UGENE cl-:Aves wn-ns FIRST SAINT Topl'mmx 'atIl1L Emu rslu of Nun 'Vlu.1m'g,1l11rd.znnu11 paula fulxx xl cami to Q 'Vlzglnmls when the snhaol sperm if nm v1 rw might wi txumx mm vnltxfxcalcs nf Lxulhnn dur Recexves Three Excellence Awards IH FOTSIISIC M991 ng ilu Wu k u1dufAprIl llth uid I-lth ,ANN ,N NAU, N N , Natl0naI'lwLu!l1 lii:cLltih1sY11lTfzw ,ge Press Convention ,,m1,e,1 1151, ln AS N -ik 5 K K Delegales Fly lo Chicago News Second ' c I b 0 lksglvlngGar...?2 ' 'ess 5 N .. rf z -11 1- '71 fn 7 'U E Z vw x n Q 9 rv -1 fn U' l 'l Il z lun : 5 5' I cu :: O 2 3 : no 5 c: 'T o l'5 uv no :: 5 UQ s: Q. 2 m 2 U3 2 00909990 1 -1, ri .- .,, 1,, : 1 f '. 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Xu 0 Which Brothers Are Held By The Church undav 'lla Z7 Sdtuyddg X135 1 X im U IDX? x xl? ln upper ull du wr regxslranux U1 llnlnl K lmrnll I L 1 ll am u H rn Pmu 1 n tu ilu Latlwu nl 1 11 nh! 1 xl 'X 1 N I ll l Xiu 1 m xslffllll 1 1 xmul tu' ex n KL ' fumluuun xml L rm-.umnnn xt the l rnttu Ylumnx ,HH mm 4 xx xx n -xrxul ln L H mmm Xuxrlxnrx T 1 vu c-I ul 1 Xlm XtlI'lfIl SlUIl un Nlnndu Haw 72- -. 1 1 1 l Bur ox I nurdes Aff 'QA Wurxng the dax Xlgetxuffw 1 ' Llaes groups urgamzzmons and special nmnmxttees Q 00 P 'll Knmnl Kummencemem Dceruscs N4 J Fl sm xemr hook Sex erm Fave Years of Service 'xn Historical Sketch of Si Mlchadi lvl le 1 x :ll be mazlxlrle for those interested fb '-t isohffunvr rollxr 'Nm ls' 'ecph 'inert r-1 1-1. Ln-111. I ILLOCU I 10151 LOW TEST AQUCQESS. f,.1l.f1 1, ini, 13-111 W 11.1-11 1 .:1.1.f.w STATE CHAMPS 1-wBmm. n m x x L 1 fm- Xll Nlll 0 LNUS x M I N 1 1 Mlglily lllllle llen Klip 'Slate Forensic Meal. 1 l I 1 lalitv 192a Officers Pllseo Baca President, 1Villie Rounsville, gy- digg 9 treasurer Glaxe Blattman counselor Antonio Lamora, counselor, Faithful to the teachings of their Found- er, St. John Baptist de la Salle, the Bro- thers have always had and encouraged great devotion to Jesus. Mary and Joseph. The general aim of the Arehconfraternities of the Divine Child and of St. Joseph. and of the Sodality of the Most Blessed Virgin has been the spiritual good of the mem- bers: the special end of these oreanizmions has been to ask the powerful protection of Mary. St. Joseph and of the Iloly Vhild in the aufrrnentations of Catholic Schools and of religious teachers. K D C 1993 K.D.C. 1925 Brother Nazaire, Moderator 151415 Retreat 1959 1: c nssz .vt 4 591 Sodality 1959 ' Arehconfraternity of St Joseph 1997 1.1, - . , I , Y ,.g - G. Del Valle, R. Fuentes I Xoetlel if 'ff v A lf' v if Garcia. P. Sandoval L Xarela H Bus ,ai f' 1 , . xl Qs tamante S Y Q ti H A i 4 l A i f I 1 . 1 ,-, I ' 1 Y i M JH J ' X ' ' K.D.C. '59 184 uliwingp L4-slie an-lmnalu, Bin Bartlett Vincent Smithwick R. F. Thompson fi. bf 'vw Staff 194 J Front Row Alfredo Almada, Orlando Padilla. Frank Gonmles, Leland Hendricks John Mans, William Hndmger, James 0'Brien, Raymond Aragon Middle Row Paul Summers. George Glngi, Albert Spencer, Leo Garcia. Jose Vlgil, Andres Alderete Joe Koury, Tony Catanach. Back Row Dan Russel, Alfonso Melendez. Dan flummlns, Phil Lucero, Joe Frank Ortiz, Waldo Anton ledltorj Paul Gonzales lassoclate edltorl C. F. Lucero, Stanley Johnson, Eddie Moya 1Mnssmg from picture: Paul Shaya, Victor Fidel, Frank Marshall, Bill Roberts, Dave Gallegos! Staff 1 946 Right Bottom Row B Cleese. B. Hidinger, J. 0'Brien. J. Koury, B. MrKemy. M. Lujan. Second Row B Butterfield, W. Jones, A. Almada, B. Lujan, 0. Padilla. Third Row T Catanaeh, V. Fidel, M. Lujan. Fourth Row P Shaya, A. 0'Malley, A. Spencer. Fifth Row F Marshall, D. Russel, C. F. Lucero, I. Sanchez, D. Delgado. LQ lou Staff 1951 Seated lst row left to right: E. Baca, G. Del Valle, J. D. Garda, B. Martinez, R. Gonmles, R. 'Martinez Qc-ated 2nd row left to right: M. Adelo, R. Lopez fPlper Edlborl, B. Romero, J. Gonzales, J. Kourv btandmg left to right: E. Sanchez, F. Gomez, D. King, L. Montoya, E. Bird, P. Davidson lAnnua.l bdltorl D. Hollis, J. Montoya, J. Grace, T. Tope, E. Meyers, J. Schutt, B. Ortiz. LITI' R RRY SOCII' TY 1951 Standing H Ixellv I Ortiz, J Ortu, C Robertshaw, J Rey nolds, J Hubbell B Chawel, P Delgado, T 'llelendez Seated If Ballmg, B Simon, J Olnas, L Dougherty, T Omelas :vii 2 ,, gy' Qi 2 - -avi . 4-a'k'.' Staff--1 932 Staff-19,3 Staff-1950: R. Lopez, P. Daxidson J. D. Garcia, R. Madrid Assist. Editor Editor 1935 Below-,Staff 1958 Mall' 19.19 Front Row: Franc-is Sandoval, Don Baca. Miguel Romero, V W, Jim Mclaulghlin, Leroy Ortiz, Gerald Rimbert, Ernest Sanchez, liill Lentz. Miko- henenti, Rudy C. de Baca., . llark Ron: Nlarxin Smith. llznid llrtiz, Tom Padilla, Tom llolie-n, lla-n Sail. lloln-rt Romero. Mike Nl:-Xalnara. Mike M1-lbonalnl, John K4-nuorfhp, Martin Campbell, Julio Beja- ,, Tllllli- Puhlic Speaking, Debate and Dramaties have always been honorefl activities at SI. Michaela. The New Mexiean rm June 14. 1912. States: that it has often wrmrlererl at the large number of the f.fl'2if1l1HiOS of St. Miehac-l's who are prominent in public life in New Mexic-rm. Very often, in legislature, when people have prziiserl an 4-Speeially fowilile arlrlress. they have aserilieri it to natural eloquent-1-. when as a matter of fact, it was due to the careful training received from the Christian Brothers at Saint Michaels College. rm.. Debate Team 1 T. Melendes, etc. Declamatlon Winners 1942 f IVY SPEECH TEAM: Center-Championship Trophy-Left to right: George Del Valle. Jillian Grave, Raymond Martinez, Eugene Chavez, Paul Davidson, David King, Gilbert Larragoite, Bob Martinez, Jess Burch. Missing-Richard Madrid. Speech Teams 1953 and 1955 Speech 1 951 Thespians 1920 above Below-Thespians 1951 Thespians Sponsor Below-Thespians 1922 an q Career Angel--1951 Miss Rose Fidel Talent Show 1954 1 909 The Student Council is one of the youngest organizations in the school. Since its creation in 1952 it has been a real guiding spirit in the various school activities. Assemblies, Concessions, Discipline in halls, etc., the high standards of real school spirit have all benefitte d this organization. o 'II Student Council 1 958 5 S, 1958 Names Rounsville, McDonald, Gonzales, Chavez, Pino, Borques Brito, Manning andoval, Ortiz, Rome- M. Gonzales, E. Gon- zales, Burch S 1959- Baca, Armijo, Or- Lentz, Romero, nelli. Gonzales, l il, Smith D. tiz, For Vig Gonzales, Caranta. Silva, Kenworthy 186 Mason, I.. Barela, Bro. Alfred G. del Valle, J. Bradhourn, R. Miera, J. Noeld A. Valdez Student Council Vocal and instrumental music has been an integral part of the school curriculum at St. Michael's since the early days of the institution. However. the Glee Club, as such. was first organized by Brother Arsenius and Brother Lucian in 1931. Ever since these clubs have been most active in the various programs and entertainments given by the school. Top Row: J. Loewenstein, W. Dawson, J. Valdes, J. Reynolds, D. McNeil, B. Balland, B. Garibay, A. Efquibel. Middle Row: J. Abeyta, D. Dozier, J. Olivas, J. Quigley, F. Leger, E. Barncastle, C. Aguilar, B. Simon, C. Sanchez. Bottom Row: F. Hubbell, J. Papen, F. Santana, E. Cixsaidos, J. Lopez, C. liagest, E. Baca, S. Perez. l 952 Below 1951 1948 'vt xi- oo ,iw -:Dlx ,JJQHUIIS IIOISQIIILII lo lmlwx D Vg III S1 Mltcwl 1 I H Nl! S lqlggpnu r LE C A INLL ll ,,,,. ,lllrl1lI11y nLj LLL! ll H ELL II oi IEVQTESBIHCH Take Thullel 1410111 Demonb Fglgjifgif, St hlce 5 R1 hfllllltlv Fo Bump bel 111 II lllnfl 'Nei 'Mm' Ill: lzatlm V'Allll1lID Y I raels W Sl Mike s Wins Place In Csly Tru Inwfgqrlm SMC HORSEMEN CAPTURE CIIY CHAMPIONSHIP ,........v Boxtrw Show Spiral ln In o Nl ntthc L Montoya M Eckert Reach State funalc-AVVD nonsmcw CAPTURE ow crmrvlvlowsrllmf M 1 MICHAEL s DISTRICT 9 GIIAMPIVQN S Horsemen Sweep Through District Iournament tarlsbad Edge out st 'llxkt Horeemen Place Second In D1 I Z Tournu In Fthertxm smSIate Iournament 4 Al unit Ihe Horsfsm n Demon Gam Glovls Wildcats Upset Top Rated Horseme T MIKES ERASHES INTU WINNING EUL 5 Hoasemeu mme HORSEMEN ROUT f' HERS vie-As cAno1NA1.s GALLUP PANT I-IORSEMEN Retain Cnty Champlonshlg fr A60 Cauhous SI Mlke s Plays Ground Game ST MIKES Tramples Mcburdq I C Cults, Home orsem O e po e Horsemen Tromple Bobcals SI Muchael II 7517 Overpower Con eplo Co s Hornefs 'Q sumo Horlon FOOTBALL EASKETBALL PI Hens 1 s Horsemen Wm lnrd Place ln Stxtt lourney :ig 'C 5 Stamps wil -. 1411 lil Goal l xc II tn r'n'ngt0nll1mon llm utul111A?HiLT'LbPD R'IiPURgW B 1 H1114 l1Il lla itll 111111111 AA ima V M ,. , w . . ,HV VVVV A L ,SQMWMWMW 1, wiimuwk V. --'--e-1-if-ff -- -W . cn 'Hp 'r vu .,,Y,,.w A -I V , ,M , mm, Vw J , il ' f x V I V W mf '-M V l ?' 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J wtf M- V' '-' Q1 ' ww Qs- in SA:u.11iiiL 4 W ,M ,- VM ,I , A V 1, ' I . , , , VV I l x f I v, x 'A ' V V Nav-nw 1 1.50 ll' ni-iL'yfHY VV, 4 4 ,,. .. , - , .M L- I A 5 ' ' A! 'V .1,- , i - - '4 - -A-W sg, ' Q F -V 3 V.. -' j 'Q Ag. 43, ' I A .. .et lima. .. ie Wg - 3' 0 V ,, ,,.,, Y 'gig ' V' 2 - -, . D NH V VS. 5.-.f. ,fg .ws 'N' Sf' f l Q ' W , . - ..-- -..A-M -e - - H-'Y f - 1 7' 4h M- , . . , . . . V .2 V ' Qi VV V L: ., , .11 ' ,. V T ,ix V V VLH . - I I 1 fi Q P' 14:4 ' .fi all fe: . V W -' 5' V ' . ' M ' . , ' H5 i ' . ' . - O l 25 53.5 ' ff' x ' I A H 'A . . ' ,,!' ' '. Z 1 A , U ' ' V , ,, JV V V y V A .l,, ,. W 3. Q Z V ., ' ' . , V , ' H .w ' . . .. . , f 1 ' W . . V I 1, . 1 'wg f I f ', 1 -L ' if 11 we 21. If 1 ' ,' , 1 . ' '- M1 -1 , on - 1. 1 I ' ' . .ll ,mn ,f N . Q' L. ' fo gf' , . .1 1 Q fl' .I H en v r w r lmmccu.ufe , 'V -, --' ,-: . ,V V1 , , ..,-' N . ., I V ' . . 1: M H -k c In . - ' ' -P2183 .1 Klein' 4. ' ' , 'Tre Q V gy A . in M WV. 5 -4 . . 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Jam.. y D ,V I V 1 ' 1 I X nf - S --fo.-V .. .. .M M1 ,I . 0 V 9 5 11.515111 P:-elect L U L K ,A . . , ' ' A... 5 V J .rs 1 4 MNs4W,mnW,Ul,u.4 -,,.,:,., . , ,-h........4x1.. ---V.-as-4 V QQXi'f fgg5ggggBdSketvm, 4135 SI mncmxn s noasrmm ww sm IQURNAMEN1 sifazf S M C HORSEMEN ANNEX STATF TIILL Locals Place Three Men On All State Team I Hoksems M gg 3 ,,,... g 1950 cause: CHQQSE 'I Naam 64 Zfqavf -Anna 3 O U lr n 'E F' 2 Ar BK QLERQUL Joukm H T k D I 56 no s Donate S2000 for Bus - I orsemen a t T mhland 50 48, ln Fnnal Seconds fe 'S ct 'te fo' st g t Yea' 1792.9 Sl hm semi 11 Blew Mullen Mustan0's444?2 ff' s Traeksters Wm District 2 Tltle 44W N f O z new Lin foWfv1ff0wlNG mms, 4,4:Z4,Vf4E,44,4,s 4 ,eq ' QSJO SHI ,, V .,V-V - , ., an 1fs'V: ' . ,, V, , I ,M f. ... , ' -sn, '. A , f ,X Q ' 5 Q-1 3 ' 4 'f i IQ? 5.51 22:1 ' . Q 'Al Sa h ' ff' Y . , I 2 , . 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Y I l . -1, W' N -, in ni-ts: f 3-V: af 4 ,, - ' - 4 4 2 11, 434544.-fg:::':aa fiegg zu X . ,4 9 .IGH 4 ,. . 4' g. 5- . 2 g T y' K, , . , fggaffgfgi iinifegia gig i, ,, : I f II , ,, 1 , 3. ss f 5. r . v I .I L .s.- ' f' f 'g 'r : 'irgsf' sim-. 5f 4 ' K' ' - 7 1 - ' V-fi 1'-7 an ,1 ' K 1 Eensssc 3 B rr Yi to to bt lhln wladdlu Fope 51110 Run Wm 8 EH Take DBIIIUIIS 14 7 HIRSEMEN HUUK DISTRICT BY TWU PUINTSSWU L sw 144 Q fx- nc 'mum sd Fough E ca Q 9, Q eel I fy W .M men nf? hG.iSS'NEN VICTURY OVER DEMONS 5P0fkf?f'l'lfl1f Q WhThD 44o5rsemen Defeat Demons ln Annual Battle 44 4444 Gm sm Hmmm 1949 Homecoming Marks 'IU 0f50U1f3U HH! wth cnusecunva vie Years of Hlstory for School Mm? Umm ,M M, mm Wm Horsemen Beat I-loneuenwinuhvruidlf Rrlunuulnw Wlnrfrul, if aso Crusaders Clash With St Mxkes 11 Today V Y'24 f 4 .W L M Ike s Wnzs Dzst IA orsemen P 1 Hold' Demons Ho: semen Trzp Outsiders U f0l'SH5 713H0mm,. llammuth Field Da Au Horsemen set for This Sunday W ' 'l' ' H' ' D' ' H A nu H vents Scheduled H ' f ' 5 ,I rant hymn 94239 ,4 4.45 I 189 4 J ia. u .F fmfk, W 6 5 9' GN -'xr' VL i, 'W A x ,M gn ,,,, 5.fYj., WM I lp agywmfm . fe ,ft Q ' ex x fm Q 'in mf 'inf 45' ,'-52. 53, 'Q gy! wifi 1 .tum , Wes. 15f 19 13210,-:g J B as Q A wi -Q ' Q 5 in 'V , ' if Rai: v Z -gf 'Q-fx 6 17a'7A+2f QHQPSZEP9 H -'ap J, 4394! s l ,i93?f,. TQ: B F326-2525 Ile? fi im! Q5 i? 5122525 3155 N.. inn Bl th. QQASZUQ g?Sf,75 e9W'fQ 7 . 5? W Q5 Q :sigh Hg - ,a A . ,. Q 6 fgf if .v:Lrg S--' Q-'wife ' 'X B ' gs? i5.ff1 g'g5SxQf3,1,,5- .+Qf34x':.-Q gag? Aa 4 f' was gig, ff F f v 3 23.554 -li x , A I 3 f g 1 4 7 1 Jw., Q ' 1 7 1 2 16 S 1 f ' fb ii 3 ii r v 5 Cr, 1 A m i 1' - i 1 - .Q - iq I ,11. 1 1 I 1 Sf. Mi0hael's Horsemen of 1940 District No. 2 Champions Now Nlvxico State Champions Runners-up in the National Catholic I 9 4 9 1? .O -le in ' 'b 'TI iv is H. Manzanarf-S, mf' 'wg Af! 1. livkvrt, 'T Ti A 1 ,' R. Cisne-ros 22xA,'54'k'5U,'32 54 Vida! Cf R. Martinvz . Q 1 , 65 , F. Martinez 1 'll' S 1 Q. Pore-1, Coach 3 M MM , 1 JM 'iw , ,V J. mmf- . 112 'W' :i3?l ii sa' Q-:QA Q J. L. Romero X Q , V. ,. 1 mi . N. Manzanares if 54 , Y ' J. Guitivrrez X C J. Romero 1958 . 4 B1-low-1934 1952 'Y ,yum I D R 1-' if 1 X , I ff' Q Inf' 1 E , f X. 4 C I1 fl f , i P 1958-1959 S 1 if 9 A Q 4 E 3 C 1 II 9 S .J 1 BASEBALL, the National Sport. is probably the oldest intra- mural organized passtime in the history of St. Michaels. Photos and written accounts show that the game was played way back in the 80's and that any independent club that was willing to match the sluggers of St. Mikes was always welcomed. It is of record that several of the great players of 1903 and even later on were offered contracts with the ma 'fi-L Brother Fabian and 1893 Club . I Sv X 1918 M. Castillo B. Vigil E. Gonzales 19528 qeatod J Airhoirt F Romero F A Aheyta Qtandm N Xaldos F Aragon J A Montoya S m C h ix Baca, B. Briggs 1 f ?'ii 'EZI' 5 . Q93 W M 3 rfb L g A rw igsginez, Sr, A Sunday afternoon at S.M.H. 1923 ' V . , ' , K- 1- ' 1 Q W MW ' ' f ,,, F. Luna 'Q K3 G. Mirabal :WM 4 li'-sim B J. 'f il ' 'Mi I f wr Taf ' .5 . . opa W L 1 1 'M' F- Mina ' Q' Q :' E 212 I MMM' R gif'-5 IF' Soto -'J A. Valdez gf y Aft, J. Kelley 1 uc,:sfNgI' 9.-' 9 9 3 SYM swllc 0 J. Ferron F23 nj, 1 A well rounded athletic program has been developed through- out the years, thus affording all the students an opportunity of being active in one or more sports, Track, Tennis. Boxing, Gymnastics, Swimming. Skiing, and Golf. have received and continue to receive proper emphasis in the extra-curricular activities. St. Michaels has been blessed with coaches, most of them former students. who brought honors to their school as athletes, and who have done likewise as coaches. Bottom Row: P. Langdon, G. Avila, J. Ardans, U. Lucero, F. Leger. Middle Row: P. Welty, J. Castro, L. Del Curto, T. Ornelas, A. Esquibel, R. Lopez. -'Y ' f ,944 + M.- H- . t., V Q ' 'P' . Montoya. ,Q . ff . Fidel F , f Z f 3 . Shaya ' 4? ' f - A-' 4 0'Mallf-y 1 X f . Olivas ,- 7 Q -1' . Husk H Q A' .li ' I - W. Anton E. iXo E- 4 'fijyvggv' 1943 BM ' a 5 . D. Gallegos ' is fx' 'V .1 b J. Duran -. f I Prank omz k - s xly 4 ' 1959-R. Padilla breaks Mile Record D ig' if J JW- Top Row: A. Rea, B. Simon, Coach Cheney, J. Caranta, F. Lingo. wif. winwtan. al Q, --1 !l 5B 51 l 1909 F i 007' 1949 t ' N Q96 1 1 9 5 2 k P oth' . wp.. Nb I. ,HF A Coach P Garcia and Boxing Team 1949 I gpg tj, .arm , . j L .e at . 331, ,Q . p n ., ni, 1 if ,J ,wsu 9 'K L' 'F il I 1 1 5. 5 9 . 4- yi 9 9 - f ' at 5 - D N' Y l 1 ' V F D 4 'Xt N ,pac 2 ' W ?Afl if-ur' 2 1 'WV P, .,L afv'. I F FIR T PHASE CDF CENTENNIAL MAY I6 A D I :oo YEARS OF SERVICE PARADE St. La Salle, Patron of All Teachers lst Prize Entered by Sophomore A Below- St. Mic-hael's in Sports 3rd Prize Entered by Sophomore B I I 100 Yrs. Entered by 20-30 Club JKT 3 if Postal Clerks S.M.H. Graduates Send Greetings 2nd Prize Below- Old San Miguel and St. Michael'S 4th Prize Entered by Senior B fa 9 I I 'ite sz if ' lg, N A H 1- i qi ul . 3 Q . Q . E,,. it, L A-2 a I af. . I af I I E A I Q tx . I I .gn 4 J -1: 'll-4 'gd 3 X l I ' . '7. A' . - . CNENTENNIAL P RADE -ORCHID B LL rw ' Q-sr vi Knights of Columbus 9th A - Birthday Cake The Santa Maria and Football Court -iw! 91 Q. Xb, , ' 7T4TU'A' QA An pt, ' ,Q ,wfvt , W 7 Q 12 17, 'rv '50, . K 11- 'lurk x w-gh ' A f' mm, 6 ,gy , F I E S T A C O U R :TZ Frankle Lame T6l'l'lflC I ,' 5 ,j X-r, Tit' T 4' Right welcome Sirs: Ere we depart we'll share a. bounteous time. Timon of Athens MAIN SPEAKERS RENEWAL OF CENTENNIAL BANQUET SCENES HCDNORED GUESTS ACQUAINTANCES 45, lf. Governor John J. Bourroughs J' f .4514 M yilfl tf9,4.jgxg 41wfg: Brother Conrad in Paul Larrazolo ,X gl sv n 'sg if '35 'e...J 15 F w 'X x 1 x i , V , , .. x Q: .af :GX L Brother C. Luke L. CIM- E!! VW, 'm iii' ,,,,J- 1.94 If J. Martinez, R. F. Thompson C Brother Alphonsus R Arias Yv- I J. astro '29. P. Hubbell '10 q ' ' Brother Prosper, J. Carranta Brother Conrad, Provincial, Brother Alphonsus, Gen Chairman Brother Nazaire, J. Valdes PATRONS Most R9XPF9Hd Archblshop Pdwm V By rne D D it Paul s College Clint Xnderson Robert F Thompeon Fred lx Thompson 'llr 8. 'SIN Phlllp Hubbell Mr Manuel Iujan Sr Clint 'llurcheson Jr Keno X Bxker The Iwrst National Bank of Santa Fe bouthorn llnlon I as Company Courtesx of a Frlend Gordon G Gulberson James C Lee B F Dans B G Byars Courtesy of Demer Walter B Mellott P T Bee Whlllam May John W as ne I' E Wallace Paul Kas ser L S Spanell E L Folgelson Gordon 'VIcLendan P W Tronsdale Joseph F Blasl Standard Industries John T lurby banta Pe Desert Inn Frlends . V '. ' ,' . 1 , , . 1 v a, V. . , ' , , . L . T .. I ' I . . , 4 , . . , , . Q , Y I , g . A ,. 4 Y' . - V . , 1 - , I .' ' '- , . Y v 1 fy v ' ' ,.. , v Y v V 7 J. . . 1 . w , ' N Q


Suggestions in the St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) collection:

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

St Michaels High School - El San Miguel Yearbook (Santa Fe, NM) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967


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