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The Maxwell Land Grant, also known as the Beaubien-Miranda Land Grant, was a Mexican land grant in Colfax County, New Mexico, and part of adjoining Las Animas County, Colorado. This 1841 land grant was one of the largest contiguous private landholdings in the history of the United States. The New Mexico towns of Cimarron, Colfax, Dawson, Elizabethtown,
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Lynn Lynn may refer to: People and fictional characters * Lynn (given name), including a list of people and fictional characters * Lynn (surname) * The Lynns, a 1990s American country music duo consisting of twin sisters Peggy and Patsy Lynn * Lynn ( ...
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Maxwell Maxwell may refer to: People * Maxwell (surname), including a list of people and fictional characters with the name ** James Clerk Maxwell, mathematician and physicist * Justice Maxwell (disambiguation) * Maxwell baronets, in the Baronetage o ...
, Miami, Raton, Rayado, Springer, Ute Park and Vermejo Park came to be located within the grant, as well as numerous other towns that are now ghost towns.


History


Early days

The lands covered in the Maxwell Land Grant were originally tribal lands belonging to
Jicarilla Apache Jicarilla Apache (, Jicarilla language: Jicarilla Dindéi), one of several loosely organized autonomous bands of the Eastern Apache, refers to the members of the Jicarilla Apache Nation currently living in New Mexico and speaking a Southern Athab ...
Indians. In 1885, Helen Hunt Jackson's report for the
Bureau of Indian Affairs The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), also known as Indian Affairs (IA), is a United States federal agency within the Department of the Interior. It is responsible for implementing federal laws and policies related to American Indians and A ...
reported the Jicarilla Apaches numbered 850 at Cimarron Agency, upon what is called "Maxwell's Grant" in northeastern New Mexico. In 1821, the government of Mexico was established, and the new government retained the Spanish policy of encouraging settlement by making land grants.


Beaubien and Miranda

Carlos Beaubien was a
French-Canadian French Canadians (referred to as Canadiens mainly before the twentieth century; french: Canadiens français, ; feminine form: , ), or Franco-Canadians (french: Franco-Canadiens), refers to either an ethnic group who trace their ancestry to Fr ...
trapper who became a Mexican citizen. His partner,
Guadalupe Miranda Guadalupe Miranda (1810-c. 1890) was a Mexican public official who was mayor of Ciudad Juárez and recipient of the Beaubien-Miranda Land Grant. Early life Guadalupe de Miranda was born in Ciudad Juárez (then called El Paso del Norte). His fath ...
, was the secretary to Governor Manuel Armijo in Santa Fe. On January 8, 1841, Beaubien and Miranda petitioned Armijo for a land grant. They had to swear that they would colonize and cultivate the land. Three days later, Armijo granted them the land on the condition that they put it to good use. However, Beaubien and Miranda failed to prove up the grant for the next two years. On February 13, 1843, they asked the
justice of the peace A justice of the peace (JP) is a judicial officer of a lower or ''puisne'' court, elected or appointed by means of a commission ( letters patent) to keep the peace. In past centuries the term commissioner of the peace was often used with the sa ...
in Taos to sign an order promising them possession of the land. The justice affirmed that he had marked the boundaries of the grant and that Beaubien and Miranda were in full possession of the land grant.


Lucien B. Maxwell

Lucien Bonaparte Maxwell Lucien Bonaparte Maxwell (September 14, 1818 – July 25, 1875) was a mountain man, rancher, scout, and farmer who at one point owned more than . Along with Thomas Catron and Ted Turner, Maxwell was one of the largest private landowners in Uni ...
was a pioneer, explorer and adventurer who married Luz Beaubien, the daughter of Carlos Beaubien. Beaubien hired Maxwell to manage his interests, and Maxwell and his wife settled in
Rayado, New Mexico Rayado or Reyado (older Ryado) was the first permanent settlement in Colfax County, New Mexico, United States and an important stop on the Santa Fe Trail. The name ''Rayado'' derives from the Spanish term for "streaked", perhaps in reference to ...
, in 1849. In 1860, Maxwell built a large home in Cimarron, a stop on the Mountain Branch of the
Santa Fe Trail The Santa Fe Trail was a 19th-century route through central North America that connected Franklin, Missouri, with Santa Fe, New Mexico. Pioneered in 1821 by William Becknell, who departed from the Boonslick region along the Missouri River, th ...
. Lucient was well respected and admired by tribes and settlers. Upon the US declaring war against Mexico, hostilities broke out on his land. His business partner, a Mexican national, ceded his portion of the land grant to Maxwell and fled to Mexico. Maxwell's business acumen and relationships with the tribes and settlers are largely why the Mexican American War had so few casualties. Maxwell was beloved and caring. An example of his good nature is Delvina Maxwell, an Apache girl he saved as a child. Legend tells that Utes had conquered Delvina's tribe and taken her as a concubine. These Utes traveled through Maxwell's ranch in the Cimarron Valley. Upon seeing the Utes cruelly and viciously beat Delvina, he offered to purchase the young Apache girl. He struck a bargain for two bulls and a goat, and he later adopted Delvina. Delvina Maxwell would care for several of Maxwell's children and grandchildren. Maxwell's land grant was stolen by the United States to give to the railroads, and that theft was aided by his crooked attorney, Springer, whom the town of Springer, New Mexico, is named for. After misrepresenting Maxwell's interests as his attorney and helping the government cease his land grant through eminent domain, Springer was given land on either side of the railroad as payment for his service misrepresenting and deceiving Lucient Maxwell.


English control

In 1870, for reasons that are not clear, Maxwell decided to sell the grant. A group of financiers, representing an English syndicate, purchased the grant for a reported price of $1,350,000. Maxwell moved to Santa Fe, and then to Fort Sumner, where he died in 1875. The new owners formed the Maxwell Land Grant and Railway Company. They attempted to remove the squatters from the grant. Some of the squatters felt that they had Maxwell's unwritten permission to live on the grant. Many people left, but some stayed and fought. This struggle between owners and squatters came to be called the
Colfax County War The Colfax County War was a range war that occurred from 1873 to 1888 between settlers and the new owners of the Maxwell Land Grant in Colfax County, in the U.S. state of New Mexico. The war started when the new landowners tried to remove the lo ...
. F.J. Tolby, a minister sympathetic to the squatters, was murdered on September 14, 1875.


Dutch control

The English company was bankrupt by 1874, and it went into
foreclosure Foreclosure is a legal process in which a lender attempts to recover the balance of a loan from a borrower who has stopped making payments to the lender by forcing the sale of the asset used as the collateral for the loan. Formally, a mortg ...
in 1879. A new group of owners from the Netherlands formed the Maxwell Land Grant Company and traveled to Cimarron in 1883, dismissing Frank R. Sherwin and installing future senator and Secretary of War Stephen Benton Elkins as president. In 1885, the new owners convinced the territorial governor Lionel Allen Sheldon to use the National Guard to suppress the squatters. Because of a variety of financial problems, the Dutch company went bankrupt in 1888. In the early 1880s, the United States sued the company for making claims of lands in the public domain in Colorado. In 1887, this case reached the US Supreme Court, and was decided as ''United States v. Maxwell Land Grant Company.'' The court decision affirmed the company's ownership of the land. At this point, the settlers and squatters realized that they could not obtain good title to the land, and most of them left.


Early land sales

In 1867, Lucien Maxwell sold what he thought was a claim to J.B. Dawson. When Dawson had the land surveyed, it turned out to be underlain by coal. Phelps Dodge bought the Dawson Homestead and underlying coal in 1906. The company named the town Dawson, and it grew to have about 2,000 people.


Colorado struggle and sale

The struggles over the grant continued, especially in the Colorado portion of the grant, where quite a bit of
homesteading Homesteading is a lifestyle of self-sufficiency. It is characterized by subsistence agriculture, home preservation of food, and may also involve the small scale production of textiles, clothing, and craft work for household use or sale. Pur ...
had taken place. On August 25, 1888, there was a violent incident at Stonewall, Colorado, in which several people were killed. The Maxwell Land Grant Company continued to sue
homesteaders The Homestead Acts were several laws in the United States by which an applicant could acquire ownership of government land or the public domain, typically called a homestead. In all, more than of public land, or nearly 10 percent of th ...
, and in many cases made them pay for their homesteads a second time. In 1894, the US Supreme Court decided ''Russell v. Maxwell Land Grant Company'', which completely rejected the homesteaders' claims in favor of the company.


Vermejo Park and Valle Vidal

Many other sales of lands in the grant took place in the early 1900s. In 1902, William Bartlett, a wealthy grain operator from Chicago, bought of the grant along the drainage of the
Vermejo River Vermejo River is a tributary of the Canadian River in Colfax County, New Mexico. The river flows southeast from the confluence of North Fork Vermejo River and Little Vermejo Creek to a confluence with the Canadian River south of Maxwell. The u ...
. Under the agreement, he withheld part of the last payment until the Maxwell Land Grant Company evicted the last of the squatters. In his words, "They are given two years to get the Mexicans off and I hold back $10,000." Bartlett's Vermejo Park portion of the grant has passed through several owners during the twentieth century. Pennzoil bought the Vermejo Park Ranch in 1973 and expanded its size. In 1982, Pennzoil donated a portion of the ranch known as
Valle Vidal The Valle Vidal (Spanish, "Valley of Life") is a mountain basin in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains within the Carson National Forest, northwest of Cimarron, New Mexico. Elevations in the basin range from . Valle Vidal is noted for its pristi ...
to the US government. This area is managed as a wilderness by the US Forest Service. In 1992, Ted Turner bought Vermejo Park Ranch ( from Pennzoil. Turner did not buy the mineral rights, so Atlas Energy Group produces gas on the ranch, while Turner raises buffalo and operates a lodge for wildlife tours, trout fishing and hunting. In 2016 he restored Casa Grande, the mansion built by Bartlett, and now rents rooms there to guests.


Current use


Philmont

Beginning in 1922, Waite Phillips, an oilman from Tulsa, Oklahoma, also assembled a block of land on the Maxwell Land Grant. Phillips bought over , and named his ranch
Philmont Philmont Scout Ranch is a ranch located in Colfax County, New Mexico, near the village of Cimarron, New Mexico, Cimarron; it covers of wilderness in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains on the east side of the Cimarron_Range,_New_Mexico, Cimarron R ...
. In two separate gifts in 1938 and 1941, Phillips donated as a wilderness camping area for the Boy Scouts of America. In 1963, Norton Clapp, an officer of the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America, donated another piece of the Maxwell Land Grant to Philmont. This was the Baldy Mountain mining area consisting of .


Chase Ranch

In 1866, Manley M. Chase purchased a one-third interest in John B. Dawson's ranch (part of the Maxwell Land Grant) on the Vermejo River, forming
Chase Ranch Chase Ranch Cimarron, New Mexico was founded in 1867 by Manly and Theresa Chase. As pioneers, from Wisconsin by way of Colorado, they crossed the Raton Pass in a covered wagon and establish a new home in New Mexico. Manly Chase purchased the l ...
. Chase raised both sheep and cattle. In 1871, Chase purchased another part of the original Maxwell grant. He paid 50 cents an acre for along Poñil Creek, an area which included the old Kit Carson homestead. The two-story adobe house which he built about three miles northeast of Cimarron is still the ranch headquarters and the family home.


Other important parcels

Cimarron Canyon State Park extends along Cimarron Canyon from Eagle Nest Lake to Ute Park and along U.S. Route 64. The park is part of the Colin Neblett State Wildlife Area, which consists of acres of former grant land. This area was purchased by the state of New Mexico in the early 1950s. The Whittington Center, founded in 1973, is the largest shooting and hunting complex in the world. It is owned by the
National Rifle Association The National Rifle Association of America (NRA) is a gun rights advocacy group based in the United States. Founded in 1871 to advance rifle marksmanship, the modern NRA has become a prominent Gun politics in the United States, gun rights ...
and covers of the Maxwell Land Grant.


Supreme Court cases

Five cases involving the land grant went to the United States Supreme Court: *'' Maxwell Land-Grant Case'',
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U.S. 325 (1887) *'' Maxwell Land-Grant Case'',
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U.S. 365 (1887) *'' Interstate Land Co. v. Maxwell Land Grant Co.'', 139 U.S. 569 (1891) *'' Maxwell Land Grant Co. v. Dawson'',
151 Year 151 (CLI) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Condianus and Valerius (or, less frequently, year 904 ''Ab urbe cond ...
U.S. 586 (1894) *'' Russell v. Maxwell Land Grant Co.'',
158 Year 158 ( CLVIII) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Tertullus and Sacerdos (or, less frequently, year 911 '' Ab urbe ...
U.S. 253 (1895) *'' Thompson v. Maxwell Land Grant & R. Co.'',
168 Year 168 ( CLXVIII) was a leap year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Apronianus and Paullus (or, less frequently, year 921 ''Ab urbe co ...
U.S. 451 (1897)
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References


Further reading

* * {{Philmont Scout Ranch History of Colfax County, New Mexico History of Colorado Colonial New Mexico Las Animas County, Colorado Philmont Scout Ranch Land grants Squatting in the United States