
Maria Montez-Skolnik
Family
Both sides of my family trace their roots in the Santa Fé area to the 1600s. In the earlier years they were primarily farmers, builders, craftsmen, artists (wood carvers and weavers), and educators. I graduated from SFHS & NMSU and received my BA & MA in Speech & Language Pathology. I divide my time between Santa Fé and the San Francisco Bay Area.
Emma Jaramillo Montez (December 21, 1919-December 6, 2006)
Emma Jaramillo Móntez (December 21, 1919-December 6, 2006)
CHASING FIREFLIES
I remember the loving spirit of my mother Emma Jaramillo Móntez, who would be ninty-six years old today. Born in a farmhouse in Chimayó, NM in the early part of the last century, as a child she studied by kerosene light, helped her brothers gather water from the acequia, learned to cook on a wood burning stove, made ristras and wove blankets, as her family had many generations before her.....and laughed as she chased fireflies at night with a child's delight, under the magnificent New Mexico sky.
Her early life taught her to trabajár con gústo/work with joy and care.
In our home mom always had a pot of something cooking on the stove--posole, frijoles, chíle, or caldo--in case someone unexpected dropped by. The house always smelled of her thoughtfulness. She religiously baked bread and made tortillas or sopapillas, so there was always something created by her to scoop up the chíle or on which to spread the peanut butter and homemade jelly. And she made the best bizcochitos, empanaditas, pastelitos and sopa....ever! She was often asked to bake for family or friends' weddings or special events....and she did so con gústo!
Mom starched my petticoats just right and made many of my school clothes. Jumpers. Ruffled blouses. And fiesta dresses, my favorite being the one I wore when I performed with other little girls on the Santa Fe plaza bandstand. She took me to Dendahl's fabric store to pick out my favorite colors of fabric and ric-rac. She held me close while guiding me in starting the first few stitches by hand, so I could feel part of this grand fashion design! And we giggled when I tried it on for the first time, eager for me to make my first twirl across our stage, the living room floor of our little adobe casita on Montez Street.
Not too long ago, she and I were sitting on the sofa marveling at all my dad's santos, art and carvings, which surround the room not unlike a nórte New Mexico gallery or capílla. Mom had started to lose some of her memory, even confusing the names of her beloved brothers long gone, or how long it had been since she had seen her grandsons, whom she loved so deeply. I guided the conversation asking her about the earlier years. I was patient as she reminisced and sorted out the details. We were comfortable sharing our feelings as we had done our whole lives. She gazed around the room and I waited for her thoughts to be processed and expressed. She said, "Someday, when your dad is gone, you will have all of this to remember him. I don't have anything to leave for you to remember me." I said, "But, mom, we ate all of your art because it was so delicious! And we wore your art until we outgrew them all! How can we ever forget that?"
Like my dad's art, it is not really the end product that leaves the memory, but rather the loving spirit of what was their life story, left behind in many forms. With my dad, I have his beautiful creations and of course so much more. With my mom, I have the tools of her art--her old sewing machine, favorite rolling pin and cookie cutters, her handmade embroidered apron, and so much more. The end products long gone. Devoured. Worn out. But memories of her remain of a life fully lived. Remember? “Mom, how can we not!”
No one ever made me laugh more or laugh harder than my mom, even towards the end when her memories became fuzzy. We had a cherished bond and a language only we understood. Usually others left us alone as we shared stories at the kitchen table, often while peeling potatoes or sorting frijoles. She was my very best friend my whole life and I am grateful for all the special moments we shared and the many gifts she created and left behind which I still see. I still feel.
I come home every spring to take care of the garden she nurtured with that attention she gave to everything else in her life. And, as she did for those she loved, I stay until "the snow is on the roses and the bluebird's flown away....."
If you ever visit the Rancho de Chimayo and notice the majestic catalpa tree near the entrance, think of my mom, for it is there she chased fireflies at night and began her life’s journey with memorable purpose.
Victor Archuleta: "Dual Citizenship"--Growing Up In Two Worlds
La Tertulia's Sangria Recipe from the Family of Willie and June Ortiz
Voces de Santa Fé extends sincere appreciation to the Ortiz Family for sharing with us their long-guarded Sangria recipe.
La Tertulia was for many, many years one of Santa Fé's most popular restaurants. Here is a brief history provided by Joy Ortiz-Zimmer, member of Voces de Santa Fé, and daughter of Willie and June Ortiz:
Our Tia Mercedes Trujillo of Centinela/Chimayo
De Vargas Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1948 and 2013
Once and Again
1948 photograph by Harold D. Walter, Palace of the Governors photo archives, #154268
and
2013 photograph by Victoria Rodriguez, Voces de Santa Fe
Willie and June Ortiz, La Tertulia Restaurant
June and Willie Ortiz met the middle of May in 1947. June had come from Nashville, Tennessee to work the telephone lines for the Bell Telephone system because there was a strike. She met an FBI agent and he asked her to go on a date which she agreed to do. Willie would be the extra on the date as they traveled to Albuquerque. Six weeks later they were married. June always told the story that her wedding was more like a wake because she wasn’t Hispanic and the Ortiz family was very somber about this new person coming into the family. Cultural expectations!!
June and Willie moved to Los Alamos and their daughter, Joy, was born in 1948. They moved back to Santa Fe in 1953 and continued commuting to Los Alamos for work. Willie continued to work in Los Alamos until 1972. June however stopped working in Los Alamos in 1954 and began a secretarial job at St. Michael’s College which later became the College of Santa Fe. Joy married in 1970 and had three children that were the apples of their grandparents eyes. Kevin, Dawn and Christopher Nashan.
In the early 1970’s June and Willie Ortiz faced what most people in their mid-life; what do we want to do with the rest of our lives. They chose to open a restaurant called La Tertulia at 416 Agua Fria. June named it La Tertulia because in Spanish that means the meeting place and she wanted the restaurant to be a fine dining Native New Mexican restaurant where locals could dine with their families. Lace tablecloths and red napkins would adorn the tables and the wait staff would wear tuxedo shirts that gave the patrons a feeling of dining in a lovely hacienda. The restaurant wasn’t what they originally thought they would do as a business they wanted to showcase local artisans and their crafts. Their vision was a little too soon and they had difficulty getting the artisans to produce. They kept the Mercado open in the old Guadalupe elementary school building but it struggled and eventually closed.
The restaurant on the other hand was a huge success for locals and tourists alike. Willie managed the kitchen and June was the greeter and tax master in the dining room. Famous people and non-famous were all treated the same. Two wonderful Santa Feans brought a business to the community that all would cherish and love and savor the memories of days gone by. In 1990 June died and the restaurant struggled until it closed in 2000.
June and Willie’s grandchildren have stayed in the food service field and are very successful in their respective positions. Kevin is an acclaimed chef and owns a restaurant in St. Louis, MO called Sidney Street Café. He has been nominated for the James Beard award multiple times and his restaurant has achieved the Best of St. Louis award for restaurants. Kevin is married to Mina Nashan and has two boys, Max and Miles. Dawn is the General Manager of the Washington State Convention Center and is the mother of a daughter and son, Gabriella and Gregory. Dawn’s manages 540 people on a daily basis and took her center to a “Green Facility”. Dawn is married to Darwin Wheeler. Christopher is Kevin’s General Manager of his restaurant and is single.
Information provided by daughter, Joy Ortiz-Zimmer
Voces de Santa Fe is honored to tell the story of two beloved Santa Feans, Willie and June Ortiz.
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Thank you from the Voces community: Telling our history in our own voices.
George Alarid, Vietnam Veteran
George, served from 1967-1970, including in Vietnam from 1968-69.
Voces de Santa Fe thanks you for your sacrifice.
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Robert Lee "Buddy" Brashears
Voces de Santa Fe honors your memory.
ACTIVITY DURING WWII
SERVED IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC 12/28/43 TO 12/22/45. SERVED ON USS YMS-431. AWARDED THE ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN MEDAL WITH 1 STAR, AMERICAN CAMPAIGN MEDAL AND WWII VICTORY MEDAL.
A YMS (YARD MINE SWEEPER) PROVED TO BE ONE OF THE U.S. NAVY'S MORE DURABLE & VERSATILE TYPES. THEY WERE USED DURING WWII FOR INSHORE SWEEPING (FOR MINES) TO PREPARE THE WAY FOR AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT. A FEW LOCATIONS FOR THE USS YMS-431 WERE HAWAII, OKINAWA, HIRO WAN, HIROSHIMA AND KURE HARBOR.Please register to post and comment.
Staff Sergeant Vicente Martinez
"Vicente proudly served his country in WWII as a United States Army Air Corps staff sergeant and ball turret gunner aboard a B-17 Flying Fortress. He flew in 20 bombing missions before being shot down over Hungary and captured by enemy forces. Vicente was held as Prisoner of War at Stalag Luft IV. During Vicente's last three months as a POW, he and thousands of other American prisoners were forced to leave camp and set out on what would become known as the Black March, a 500 mile journey westward across northern Poland and Germany, as their German captors retreated from the advancing Soviet army. This was a time of extreme hardship and hundreds of men died on this march due to disease, exposure, malnutrition and mistreatment." Son David Martinez
Voces de Santa Fe honors the memory of Vicente Martinez. Rest in peace.
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Thank you from the Voces Community
Hilliard Crown, WWII Air Force Navigator