Ghosts of Old Town Albuquerque
By Cody Polston
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About this ebook
Old Town Plaza has been the center of Albuquerque community life since the city was founded in 1706 by Gov. Francisco Cuervo y Valdez. Historically known as the crossroads of the Southwest, and reflecting an amalgamation of Spanish, Mexican, and Native American cultures, Old Town Plaza has been home to many of New Mexico’s proud ancestors—and still is.
Ghosts of Old Town Albuquerque presents the evidence of their specters wandering the shadows, gathered by author Cody Polston, president of the Southwest Ghost Hunter’s Association. Having tracked spirits for three decades, including in such landmarks as the Bottger Mansion and Casa de Ruiz, Polston explores the history and mysteries behind many of Old Town Plaza’s eerie wraiths.
Cody Polston
Cody Polston is a historian who enjoys giving tours of Albuquerque and other historic sites in New Mexico. He has appeared on numerous radio and television programs including Dead Famous (Biography Channel), Weird Travels (Travel Channel) and In Her Mother's Footsteps (Lifetime Channel exclusive), as well as Extreme Paranormal and The Ghost Prophecies (both A&E network). Cody is the author of four books on paranormal topics, the host and producer of the popular podcast Ecto Radio and the writer for Ghosthunter X magazine. He is the founder of the Southwest Ghost Hunter's Association and has been investigating paranormal claims since 1985.
Read more from Cody Polston
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Ghosts of Old Town Albuquerque - Cody Polston
Introduction
In 1985, I founded the Southwest Ghost Hunters Association (SGHA). Composed mostly of members of the military, we drifted together from one state to another until finally calling Albuquerque home. In 1997, there were only two known places in Old Town that had ghost stories associated with them: the Maria Teresa Restaurant and the Church Street Café. We had literally landed in virgin hunting grounds. Not only were we were the first ghost-hunting group in Albuquerque, we were the first in the state of New Mexico, and we quickly discovered a multitude of new haunted places, fascinating legends and urban legends.
Some of this has to do with the predominant cultures of the Land of Enchantment being a rich blend of Hispanic and Native American. Both of these cultures are highly respectful of the dead, and this itself has kept many of the haunted places concealed throughout the state. Stories may be told among friends and relatives, yet somehow they escaped the limelight. Of course, several of New Mexico’s haunted places are quite famous, being featured on national television and written about in various books. However, it is important to understand that humans are storytellers by nature. This is why we have books, movies, magazines and television. Many of you have probably heard of the proverbial fishing story in which a fisherman catches a six-inch trout, but by the time the story is retold at the bar that night, the fish has become a fourteen-inch monster that snapped the line and got away. That degree of exaggeration is technically called myth building, and ghost stories are often subject to the same exaggerations. I have even witnessed this with several of Albuquerque’s own ghost stories. This is what makes ghost hunting and paranormal research (or whatever you wish to call it) difficult. How can you separate the myth from fact?
SGHA’s research process is long and arduous, taking months and sometimes years to find an answer. We will conduct several investigations, explore the location’s history and even have a skeptical analysis to attempt to explain the reported events. In many respects, we look at the stories and their locations as mysteries rather than as a haunting or something paranormal. Some mysteries can be solved and some cannot.
So, in this book, I am not only going to tell you most of the stories, I’m also going to reveal the results of SGHA’s findings and my personal opinion of the reported paranormal activity at each location. To do this, I created a simple three-tiered rating system based on what has been solved and what is still, as of yet, unexplained:
Probable: A location or story with this rating still has too many unsolved variables to discount it as not being haunted. I have exhausted all of the resources available to me to date and have not found an explanation.
Improbable: A few mysteries remain, but the majority of this mystery has been solved. I do not believe this location could be haunted based on the present data. However, those few remaining mysteries are very interesting and may lend it the benefit of a doubt. Further investigation of these places could yield something that could move it up or down in the ratings.
Debunked: This mystery is just a story. I am very certain that the location isn’t haunted or that the story is just an urban legend.
Due to the concerns of some of the witnesses involved, I have changed the names of certain individuals. As diverse and unique as the hauntings included here are, they have one particular thing in common. These hauntings occur and recur in specific places. They are somehow linked to the site or location where they were witnessed.
For several years, SGHA conducted guided tours in Old Town as a fundraiser. Eventually, the tours became so popular that we created a business, New Mexico Ghost Tours. We tried our best to keep the integrity of the tour, adding and removing locations annually as more information became available. As such, the original ghost tour of Old Town was constantly changing as we investigated and learned more about its obscure history. As a result, Old Town is one of the most researched areas of Albuquerque for ghost investigations. Since 1998, we have had just over one hundred investigations in this section of the city alone.
By 2006, another company had taken over the tours, and we ceased doing tours altogether as we felt it created a conflict of interest with the research aspect of our organization. The locations in Old Town are known because SGHA investigated them and created the ghost tour of Old Town. Though we no longer conduct the tours or affiliate with the company that does, you will see photos and hear audio on ghost tours that SGHA collected years ago to this day.
Although our investigative process has debunked several locations, the history and locations that have unsolved elements are quite fascinating in their own right. All but two of the locations in this book are within walking distance of the Old Town Plaza, and I have marked them on a map located before the second chapter. I have also included some of the notes and stories from the original tour, as well as some observations about the locations themselves. Enjoy!
CHAPTER 1
The History of the Duke City
The ancestral Pueblo natives were the area’s first permanent occupants, probably arriving in the sixth century. They planted corn, beans and squash and constructed adobe and brick pit homes along the banks of the Rio Grande. They ultimately disappeared from the region in about AD 1300.
Albuquerque is a magnificently unique combination of the very old and highly contemporary nature, the manmade environment, the frontier town and the cosmopolitan city. It is a harmonious and spectacular combination of extremely diverse cultures, cuisines, people, styles, stories, pursuits and panoramas. It is a city with a rich history, as evidence of inhabitation dates back as long as twenty-five thousand years. That is the estimated age of bones recovered from a cave in the northwestern sector of the Sandia Mountains in 1936.
Anasazi Indians were the next to settle in the area. They lived here for two centuries, from AD 1100 to 1300, and established several communities throughout northwestern New Mexico that were connected by sophisticated transportation and communication networks.
In 1540, the Spanish arrived. Explorer-conquistador Francisco Vásquez de Coronado came north from Mexico in search of the mythical seven cities of Cibola. He—along with his entourage of troops, priests and beasts—is believed to have spent the winter of that year in an Indian pueblo on the west bank of the Rio Grande twenty miles north of Albuquerque. Coronado eventually left, but Spanish settlers began arriving in greater numbers. This was one of the factors eventually leading to the Pueblo Revolt of 1680. In that year, Pueblo natives overthrew the Spaniards, who had occupied their lands for more than eighty years. Since 1598, Don Juan de Oñate y Salazar brought a small group of colonists into the mesa and canyon country of northern New Mexico, and as a result, Spain asserted its sovereignty over the Pueblo people. Spanish officials demanded that Pueblos pay tribute to the Spanish Crown by working for encomenderos, a small number of privileged Spaniards to whom Spanish officials entrusted the Pueblos and their labor. At the same time, Spanish priests established missions in the Pueblos’ farming villages and demanded that the natives abandon their religion in favor of Christianity. The Pueblo natives, who vastly outnumbered their Spanish overlords, tolerated this arrangement for several generations.
Finally, in the late summer of 1680, the Pueblos destroyed the Spanish colony of New Mexico. Coordinating their efforts, they launched a well-planned surprise attack. From the kiva at Taos, Pueblo messengers secretly carried calendars in the form of knotted cords to participating pueblos. Each knot marked a day until the Pueblos would take up arms. The last knot was to be untied on August 11, but the rebellion exploded a day early. Tipped off by sympathetic Pueblos, Spaniards captured two of the rebel messengers on August 9.
When leaders of the revolt learned that they had been betrayed, they moved the attack up a day. Despite the warning, the revolt caught Spaniards off-guard. They could not imagine the magnitude of the planned assault. Scattered in isolated farms and ranches along the Rio Grande and its tributaries, Spaniards were easy prey for the rebels. It was estimated that the Pueblos killed more than four hundred of New Mexico’s Hispanic residents, whose total numbers did not exceed three thousand. The rebels desecrated the churches and killed twenty-one of the province’s thirty-three Franciscans, in many cases humiliating, tormenting and beating them before taking their lives.
At the time of the revolt, there were more Spanish people living on farms and ranches along the river around present-day Albuquerque than there were in Santa Fe, and about 120 Spanish settlers were killed there. Spanish survivors were driven as far south as present-day El Paso. For the next twelve years, New Mexico remained free of Spanish rule, but eventually the Spanish settlers returned. By the seventeenth century, it was sufficiently populated to have acquired a name, Bosque Grande de San Francisco Xavier. A bosque
is a forest on the banks of a river or other body of water, or simply an area of thick vegetation.
In 1706, the ambitious provisional governor of the territory, Don Francisco Cuervo y Valdez, petitioned the Spanish government for permission to establish the bosque as a formal villa. The Spanish required a minimum of thirty families in an area to establish a villa. However, Cuervo had only eighteen in Bosque Grande. But Cuervo was a shrewd politician, and he came up with a plan that he felt gave him a good chance of acceptance. Basically, he exaggerated the truth and raised the number of families living in the area. Additionally, he made an interesting offer to the man who was responsible for preliminary approval of his application, Viceroy Francisco Fernandez de la Cueva, the Duke of Alburquerque.
In his application, Cuervo declared that he wanted to establish the villa in the name of the Duke and call it Alburquerque. The petition was accepted, and thus was born the city of Alburquerque. The first r
in the original name was later dropped. Legend has it that a sign painter for the railroad omitted it either accidentally or because he didn’t have enough room for the whole name. Another possible origin of the city’s name comes from the Latin translation of Alburquerque, which means white oak.
Alburquerque, Spain, has a large number of white oak trees and thus was given the appropriate name. However, it is likely that the r
fell out of use casually over a long period, probably given that it is nearly inaudible when spoken.
The original church collapsed in 1792. Governor Fernando de la Concho ordered every Albuquerque family to donate either money or labor to rebuild it. In 1793, they began San Felipe de Neri Church on the north side of the plaza where it remains