María Rosa Villalpando

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María Rosa Villalpando

Also Known As: "Maria Rosa Villalpando", "Maria Rosa Vialpando", "Marie R Jacques", "Maria Rosa Devial Pante Villalpando"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: San Juan de los Caballeros, Rio Arriba, Provincia de Nuevo México, Reino de Nueva España
Death: July 27, 1830 (109-110)
St. Louis, St. Louis County, Missouri, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Pablo Francisco Villalpando and Maria Rosa Valdez
Wife of Juan Joseph Jaquez and Jean Baptiste (John) Baptiste De Sale Sale, dit Lajoie
Mother of José Julian Jacquez; Jean Lambert Sale, dit Lajoie; Pierre Sale, dit Lajoie; Pierre Sale; Helene Josephe Sale Dit Lajoie and 2 others
Half sister of Ana Maria Villalpando; Francisco Estevan Villalpando; Rafael Antonio Villalpando and Juan Pablo Villalpando

Managed by: Gustavo Latorre (c)
Last Updated:

About María Rosa Villalpando

From the seventeenth century into the nineteenth century, raiding and trading human beings, especially women and children, occurred with regularity in New Mexico. Native Americans took and traded human captives among themselves as well as in the communities in north-central New Mexico. Captives were necessary for religious purposes, menial tasks, and trade. Some captives were traded at trade fairs held at Taos, Abiquiu, and Pecos, where captive Hispanics were traded back to their own society or captive Indians from as far away as Nebraska were traded into New Mexican society. Many of these latter people remained in New Mexican society. They and their descendents became known as genízaros in New Mexico. Many Hispanic punitive expeditions took Native captives. Many of New Mexico’s early governors actually illegally ran sweat shops of captive Indians. They also were involved in illegally trading captives south into Mexico. The Diné or Navajo tribe raided western New Mexican settlements incessantly. At one time their raids successfully depopulated the Rio Puerco Valley, which they saw as a part of their homeland. Today, the descendents of many of these captives form a Mexican Clan in the Diné Nation. María Rosa Villalpando is one case study. Taken in a Comanche raid on Ranchos de Taos in 1760, she was traded to the Pawnee tribe, with whom she lived for ten years. During that time she had a son and met a French trader who fathered her third child, ransomed her, and took her to the new village of St. Louis, where they were married in 1770. She and her husband had three more children. After twenty-two years of marriage her husband went to France and never returned. Ten years later, in 1802, Maria Rosa’s first child, Joseph Julian Jacques, a son from New Mexico who survived that long-ago raid, crossed the plains to visit his mother. She acknowledged him and made an estate settlement with him. María Rosa Villalpando died on 27 July 1830, one month short of seventy years after she was taken captive in New Mexico. One of her St. Louis grandsons, Antione Leroux, moved to Taos in 1824 and married into the New Mexican Vigil family. Today, the Taos Valley has many Jacques, Villalpando, and Leroux surnamed people who are distant cousins. All of them are descendents of María Rosa Villalpando. The story of that infamous 1760 raid is re-enacted regularly in a communal ritual, a conquest romance of “Los Comanches” in many northern New Mexican villages. The raiding described above was a real danger of living on New Mexico’ frontier during the 17th and 18th centuries. Hispanic, Pueblo, and Nomadic peoples routinely raided each other and suffered the consequences.

Brooks, James F. Captives & Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in The Southwest Borderlands, (Chapel Hill; University of North Carolina Press, 2002). Hackett, Charles Wilson, ed., Historical Documents Relating to New Mexico, Nueva Vizcaya, and Appraches Thereto, (Washington, D. C.; Carnegie Institution, 1923-37). Lamadrid, Enrique R., Hermanitos Comanchitos: Indo-Hispano Rituals of Captivity and Redemption, (Albuquerque; University of New Mexico, 2003). Thomas, Alfred B., ed., Forgotten Frontiers: A Study of the Spanish Indian Policy of Don Juan Bautisata de Anza Governor of New Mexico, 1777-1787, (Norman; University of Oklahoma Press, 1932).

Sources Martinez, Thomas D., Descendants of Juan Joseph Jaquez and Maria Rosa Villalpando, revised 8/2/2010, pg. 1. tom.martinez@mindspring.com Tykall, Jack B., and story by Josiah Gregg 1844 "Taos New Mexico to St.Louis, The Journey of Maria Rosa Vialpando", UNM


GEDCOM Source

@R1403179790@ St. Louis, Missouri, Marriage Index, 1804-1876 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations Inc St. Louis Marriage Index, 1804-76 1,5413::0

GEDCOM Source

1,5413::64074

GEDCOM Source

@R1403179790@ Missouri, Compiled Marriage Index, 1766-1983 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations Inc Missouri Marriages, 1766-1983 1,7843::0

GEDCOM Source

1,7843::52260

GEDCOM Source

@R1403179790@ Ancestry Family Trees Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.

GEDCOM Source

Ancestry Family Tree http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=153563034&pi...

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María Rosa Villalpando's Timeline

1720
1720
San Juan de los Caballeros, Rio Arriba, Provincia de Nuevo México, Reino de Nueva España
1758
1758
Abiquiu, Rio Arriba County, NM, United States
1768
November 12, 1768
St Louis King Fr, St Louis, St Louis Distr
1771
July 21, 1771
July 21, 1771
St Louis, Missouri, United States
1773
August 11, 1773
St Louis, Missouri, United States
August 11, 1773
St Louis, Missouri, United States
1776
July 18, 1776
St Louis, Missouri, United States
1830
July 27, 1830
Age 110
St. Louis, St. Louis County, Missouri, United States