The Wopajo Says . .
Surviving the 1930'3 in Old Albuquerque
by: f. g. lopriato y lopez

Chapter Three - Library

        The WOPAJO WAR CRY'S Historical Library is crammed full of pictures of Albuquerque as it was in the `1930's.  Those Pictures show Old Town as people who remember the  "Great Depression" and who lived in New Mexico remember. 
        The rest of the "City"  was not very much  better, The main  "Business " district included Central Avenue from about Arno or High street,  to about Seventh or Eighth Street, with no more than about  three or four blocks of spill over on either side of Central and the rest,  for the most part  was unpaved,  running water, phones, electricity, indoor plumbing, garbage pick up, and public transportation was very limited and very few people had cars.
        The business district , "New Town, " or Uptown, 'as it was called , had all those things and more. Bars, paving, side walks, several five and dime, and department  stores. cafes and a few restraints, Offices, one big one,  the El Fidel, and several movie houses, an opera house, the 
Armory doubled for so many other community activities that to list them here would take most of one column, but  the octopus that was to become a city was just starting to spread it's tentacles. 
        We knew that Progress would make life more expensive, but with progress would come jobs, people, and earning opportunities with which to rise to the challenge of new expenses. 
` If other parts of what is now the city were wanting, Old Town was in the doldrums. Not only didn't we have the modern convinces, but there was absolutely no hope of obtaining them in the near future, progress was putting a false front, a veneer, on the more visible parts of town, those that were new comers and tourists were more apt to see and get to the rest as finances and available resources COMMANDED. 
         After the boom that the railroad had brought in the housing, the railroad shops, stores, bars, 
theaters, etc., business slowed up but still, Albuquerque did not fold up during the depression.
` With the railroad depot, close by and being at the cross roads of Highways 66, and 85 helped. Cross Country traffic stopped here long enough to buy food, drink, souvenirs, clothing, and many of the necessities of the road.  Motels and Hotels for a night's rest , filling stations, and garages could count on some business from people who migrated from East to  West and Visa Versa. But Old Town had only the Blueher Farm and the Saw Mill .  The Saw Mill staggered badly , but it didn't go down. Blueher's truck farm did bite the dust, and Old Towners, lost their jobs.
        Much Later Navajo Trucking moved in there, the mansion became what is now La Hacienda Restaurant, and the shops behind it. but in that was years later, in the 30's and forties, even into  much of the 40's what you see now as Tiguex Park and the Museum directly east of La  Hacienda, was deserted and dead.  A care taker family lived in part of the property but other than that, To our knowledge, that, and the Mann Farm North of Tiguex Park were the two greatest losses Old Town suffered. The Saw Mill was not in Old Town, but it was one of the best paying jobs within walking distance of Old Towners. 
        The Mann Farm and Pefle's Apple Orchard, were both big businesses in Old Town, and both stopped operating but later,  in the l940's,  the Wopajo does not know if it was a direct victim of the depression, it's after effect,  or they decided to call it quits and do something else, the Sheraton Old Town and it's parking lot now occupy the former site of the  apple farm and  what used to be the Mann Farm is just east of the museum famous for hosting Mayor Marty Chavez,  Phallic Symbol missile for so many years.  ­ Hasta Luego! ////fglyl
 
 
 

        ///fgyl 
 

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