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The earliest records, 1893, show the two structures that are today the
Briggs Building as saloons. By the late 1890s they had merged into one
large saloon, but by 1902 the building on the left sold clothes & dry goods
and the one on the right . . . — — Map (db m181829) HM
The earliest records show three saloons packed closely together along First Street here. By 1900 this building housed Louis Darass' saloon, and toward the middle of the block the third building was Joe & Anna Vergolio's bakery and general store. . . . — — Map (db m181584) HM
Before the arrival of the Spanish, the mineral rich area around Cerrillos produced turquoise, which was broadly traded across the American Southwest and into México. An early settlement of Los Cerrillos harbored Spanish refugees from the 1680 . . . — — Map (db m54706) HM
Cerrillos through the Years First the Indians, then the Spanish and Territorials who passed this way trod this land between Rio Galisteo and the Arroyo San Marcos. But in the end it was the railroad that made the town. It is hard to imagine . . . — — Map (db m181859) HM
J.H. Gerdes' tailor & dry goods store was here, possibly as early as the
mid 1880s, and certainly during the 1890s. For the first three decades of
the 20th century this was Tom DeLallo's building, first as a saloon, but by
1909 as the Cerrillos . . . — — Map (db m181787) HM
The Cerrillos Town Company first sold this lot sometime before
1893, and a general store was built upon it. By 1898 a small house was
situated on the river bank behind this store. For a time around 1902 this
was a carpentry shop, and then by . . . — — Map (db m181785) HM
This structure, St. Joseph's Catholic Church - Iglesia de San José, built
in 1922 to replace the first church (1884), which was situated on land now
occupied by the Pastor's residence. This edifice was constructed under
the direction of . . . — — Map (db m181551) HM
Charles Lyon of Carbonateville built the first structure on this site some-
time after 1884, and by 1893 he operated a restaurant and the post office
here. In the early 1900s this became Ella Weltmer's stationery & books
and ice cream parlor. . . . — — Map (db m181788) HM
The earliest records for the five lots between Simoni's building and
this corner list various members of the Granito clan, but by 1923 they
were all in the hands of Rafael's son, Joseph M. Granito. At different times
these lots had been . . . — — Map (db m181633) HM
In 1892 Sarah Jones purchased these lots and her husband, L.G. Jones,
built this two-story structure, which housed at various times Benn & Jones
bar, Miller & Legace drugs & novelties, Mrs. Doyle's dry goods, groceries
& notions, a feed store, . . . — — Map (db m181786) HM
Welcome to Cerrillos (Little Hills)
Cerrillos was once seriously considered as the capitol of New Mexico. Cerrillos mining district is one of the oldest and most marked of the old Spanish mineral developments in the Territory. Ttwenty-one . . . — — Map (db m181833) HM