Category Archives: Blog

New Paved Highway to Sonoran Colonies

Tomorrow Saturday 18Feb2023, the President of Mexico will inaugurate the new paved highway (in Blue) from Agua Prieta, Sonora (across the US Border from Douglas AZ) down to Bavispe, which is about a 1.5 hour drive or less. (Google Maps says 2 hours 33 minutes, but this is not correct). This paved highway winds along, passing through the old Mormon Colony historic sites of (North to South) Colonia San José, Colonia Morelos, & Colonia Oaxaca, making them much more readily accessible then they have ever been before.
This will also create a completely paved loop such that, for example, you can drive South from Agua Prieta to Fronteras-Nacozari-Cumpas-Moctezuma and then drive Easterly to Huasabas and Aribabi, and then North Easterly to Huachinera-Bacerac-Bavispe-San Miguel and back to Agua Prieta. Or you could do just the opposite. The Presa La Angustura (the large lake) lies right in the middle of the loop, as seen on the map.
Jeffrey M. Jones

Board MemberComité Histórico de las Colonias AC

Colonia Dublan

Nvo. Casas Grandes, Chihuahua

+1 (915) 539-5633 Cell-USA+52 (55) 5436-3518 Cel-Mex

Las Colonias update to the tragic massacre of Colonia La Mora, Senora, Mexico

November 2019

The tragic massacre of women and children on the road to Colonia La Mora, Senora, Mexico were targeted towards extended members of the LeBaron clan.

Life for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints located in Colonia Dublan and Colonia Juarez, both located in the state of Chihuahua, still goes on as normal.  The cycle of caring for orchards, cultivation of chili crops, cattle ranching, and school days at the Academia Juarez still continue.

However, the colonists of Colonia Dublan and Colonia Juarez do have a heightened sense of awareness and are taking precautions such as not driving at night.

Irene Spencer

On March 12th 2017 we lost a treasure; Irene Spencer died.  Irene Spencer wrote her life’s story in a book titled Shattered Dreams.  In the book Irene chronicles her life as the second plural wife of Verlan LeBaron.  Shattered Dreams gives us a look inside both the physical and emotional privations of the LeBaron sisterwives living in Mexico during the 1950’s, 1960’s and 1970’s.

Irene Spencer details not only the physical struggles and hardships, but also the mental and emotional anguish she suffered.  She writes about how much it hurt her with every subsequent wife Verlan LeBaron married.  She details her longing for intimacy in her marriage… intimacy that Verlan was never able to provide. 

I think our sisterwives ancestors probably suffered similar emotional anguish.  Regretfully these women lived in a time when they couldn’t express their feelings in writing for the benefit of posterity. 

While visiting Mexico four years ago, we had the privilege to meet Irene near her home in Colonia LeBaron.  We told her how much we enjoyed her book and how strong she was in enduring and finally breaking away from an abusive situation.  She thanked us and asked us to her home for lunch.  Unfortunately we were on our way to Chuhuichupa and didn’t have the time that day.  We told her we would take her up on her offer another day, but regretfully that day didn’t come soon enough. 

For anyone he has not read Shattered Dreams, it is a very good read.  It is one of those books that you start reading and can’t be put down.  My wife and I have lent our copy to several people (people with no ties to the Colonies) who have raved about the book. 

While this book is very well written the most compelling part is you know that this is Irene’s real-life experience and not an HBO series.

Rustlers, Railroad, and Stagecoach Robbers The Black Jack Christian Gang in Mexico Book Review

Rustlers, Railroad, and Stagecoach Robbers

The Black Jack Christian Gang in Mexico

Book Review

In the new historical fiction book Rustlers, Railroad, and Stagecoach Robbers The Black Jack Christian Gang in Mexico, author David K. Martineau weaves fictional character Deputy Marshall Art Saenz, into the lives of Mormon Colonists as he tracks The Black Jack Christian Gang on both sides of the border.

Martineau intertwines Deputy Marshall Art Saenz not only with the Black Jack Christian Gang, but also other notable people such as Colonel Emilio Kosterlitzky, Bishop Franklin Scott, a young Bert Whetten, Bertha Martineau, and many more.  He also places Art Saenz at the Mine Riots in Cananea which some say planted the seeds of the Mexican Revolution.

David has obviously spent a lot of time researching for this book.  It was neat to learn more about Colonel Emilio Kosterlitzky, the Mexican Cossack, and his Rurales who were a cavalry unit who weren’t technically part of the army, but reported only to President Porfirio Diaz. 

In the book Deputy Marshall Art Saenz reflects on his bi-cultural background growing up on both sides of the border, saying, “He treasured both parts of his life and drew strength from having them both.  He didn’t much care for people who could only speak Spanish, nor those who could only speak English, thinking that both were missing important cultural aspects of life.  He felt he possessed a much better understanding of people and life due to his dual cultures.”

In this quote the author reflects a prescient truth about the Mormon colonists even down to this day, Colonists have the ability to speak both English and Spanish, operate seamlessly between both cultures, giving them the ability to comfortably straddle both sides of the border.  This ability affords them opportunities closed to the rest of us.

If you want to learn more about the history of the Mormon Colonies in Mexico and the cast of characters involved (both good & bad) then you should read Rustlers, Railroad, and Stagecoach Robbers The Black Jack Christian Gang in Mexico.

T.C. Christensen on Testimonies and Adoption

Last night (February 23) my daughter and I attended a fireside where Mormon film maker T.C. Christensen was the featured speaker. Christensen showed clips of his films and then explained interesting anecdotes that happened behind the scenes as they were filmed. He showed a clip from Ephraim’s Rescue that showed the handcart pioneers crossing a frigid river. T.C. discussed the scene and then opened it up to the audience for Q&A.

After a few questions, he said, “I haven’t been asked a question yet that I usually get. The question I’m usually asked is Why did God put these faithful handcart pioneers through this ordeal?”

T.C. then asked any descendants of the Martin and Wille handcart companies, and the Hunt and Hodges wagon companies to please stand. A large number stood. He said, “Thank you, you can sit down now.” He went on to say that he asks this question at many firesides around the Wasatch Front and gets similar numbers standing for crowds of this size.

He then related how he spoke at an LDS youth event in Hemet, California, Before the meeting started he thought that it wouldn’t be fair to ask that question in a place so far from the Salt Lake Valley, but during the course of his talk he asked the same question and was amazed by the results. T.C. said that there were more people who stood at that event that had just stood at our fireside with only one-third the number in attendance.

His point in this exercise was that his belief at to why the Lord put these faithful saints through this trial, “Why weren’t they given manna to eat?”

“There was something that happened within those people that drove testimony into their hearts,” he said. “They were able to pass that on to their children and their descendants.” T.C. also said that even those members who aren’t the descendants of the handcart pioneers are “adopted” descendants. “A women being baptized in Chile today can count these pioneers as her ancestors,” he said.

It is funny because I feel the same way about the Mormon Colonies pioneers. After the first Las Colonias magazine issue release I had someone email me asking to be taken off the list because he had no ancestors from the Colonies (I happen to know that his wife does). I thought to myself, “I don’t have ancestors from the Colonies either, but my kids do.”

This is why I want to share the stories and histories of the Colonies pioneers. Not only do my daughters need to have their Colonies ancestor’s testimonies burned into their hearts, but as an adopted son — I do too.

Marian Lunt “Heaton Lunt of Colonia Pacheco”

Marian L Lunt’s book, Heaton Lunt of Colonia Pacheco, was a lot of fun to read.  The biography was written from audiotapes recorded by her father-in-law, Heaton Lunt, I don’t think that Louis L’Amour or Zane Grey could have written better stories than the life Heaton lived.  It is like a Hollywood screenwriter had John Wayne or Clint Eastwood in mind as he created a script filled with banditos, hermits, army scouts, wild animals, and gunplay.

Marty Robbins must have been singing about Heaton in his western gunfighter ballads.  Heaton even uses the words outlaw when referring to an extra ornery horse that needed to be “broke” and mentions riding underneath a hanging tree where the nooses were meant for he and his compadres.  I was hoping he would use the word iron when referring to the six-shooter he smuggled back into Mexico, but I guess that would have been too Hollywood.

This is one of those books that you don’t mind staying up until 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning reading (I did). Even the next day while you are dragging because of lack of sleep, you can’t wait to stay up until the wee hours of the morning again to finish it.

Although the book starts out with great stories of adventure, it wasn’t until near the end of the narrative that I realized just how Heaton was able to live through these ordeals—his positive attitude and outlook on life. Heaton had a great attitude.  Here’s an example:  I remember people describing how hard it was, during that Depression.  Many a time I’ve told people, when they were bellyaching about what a hard time they were having, I used to say, “I don’t think it’s so hard; my kids are just as fat now as they were in the good times.  It must not have hurt them.”

He goes on to say:

The Depression…as bad as it was, we make it sound worse that it really was.  I think it was a good lesson for the country in general.  It’s getting about time for another lesson.  They’re getting so ungrateful, so wasteful.  To me, I can’t pity people who holler about hard times when they’ve been wading through such good times  (pg 420)     

Heaton remarks are straightforward and honest.  He shows humility while staying self-confident in his perspectives and abilities.  He shows us extreme clarity when he said, “Well, it’s like I believe, lots of times, success is management, and we managed.” This is sage advice for our day as we deal with trials we face in our lives.

You’ve heard people say that we need wilderness to remind us that there are still wild places and wild things in the world; well, we need to remember that there really were men like Heaton Lunt who overcame tremendous adversity and dangerous situations.

Heaton Lunt was a man’s man who lived a life full of adventure, but was faithful to his Latter-Day Saint tenants to the end.   It’s good to know that these kind of really existed and their lives were much more exciting than even Hollywood can contrive.

It is stories of people like Heaton Lunt that made me want to start Las Colonias magazine.  We need to keep these stories alive and in our collective conscious. These stories need to be saved and shared with future generations. Click on the link below to purchase the book through Amazon

Heaton Lunt book