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Q.) How did Trinidad get its name? A.) At least four unauthenticated versions exist of how
Trinidad was named.
-It was named for the patron Saint of Felipe Baca’s daughter.
-It was named for Baca’s daughter, not the saint.
-A group of early settlers met to select a name and patron saint
for the city. Being practical, they dedicated the town to the Holy
Trinity.
-A pioneer named Gabriel (Gutierrez threatened to shoot anyone who
did not approve the name of Trinidad. He was so belligerent that
the name was quickly adopted. Rumor was that Trinidad was the name
of a lady in Mexico whom Gutierrez loved, but never saw again, as
he lived the rest of his life with his lawful wife, Santissima.
Q.) How was the Purgatorie River named?
A.) The original name of the Purgatory River was El Rio
de Las Animas Perdidas en Pugatorio. The translation is the river
of lost (wandering) souls in Purgatory. Many legends surround the
name. Most often quoted is the tale that a group of Spaniards were
attacked by Indians on the riverbank and died there without benefit
of last rites; hence, lost souls.
Q.) What are the ruins of the mission-style Church on the
right before going over Raton Pass?
A.) It is St. Aloysious Church of the Morley Mining Camp.
The Church was dedicated on May 2, 1917. C.F. & I., then owned
by John D. Rockefeller, closed the mining camp when the coal ran
out in 1956. All that is left of the camp is the shell of the
church.
Q.) What is the story behind Trinidad’s unique brick
streets?
A.) The first brick used as paving for city streets was
probably laid in 1906 or 1907, when one block of Commercial Street
was paved as an experiment to test the durability of the vitrified
brick~ The entire street was paved with brick sometime in 1909.
There are approximately 7.6 miles of brick streets, most of them in
the area around the Baca House-Bloom Mansion-Pioneer Museum complex
In the mid 1960’s, as the bricks began to disappear, the Trinidad
Historical Society initiated a "Save the Bricks"
campaign. The earliest brick was imprinted with word
"Trinidad’ and with crow’s foot designs in the corners.
The Second vintage was simply imprinted with the word
"Trinidad".
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