Hispanics, Italians, Jesuits and Land Investors in New Town Albuquerque
by Joseph Sánchez & Larry Miller
Publication Date: October 2008
2 photographs/2 maps - 258 pages
$17.95/PB (978-1-890689-44-5)
$32.95/HB (978-1-890689-53-7)
Historically, little is known about Martineztown, save for a few reports in which brief histories of Martineztown are covered in a few paragraphs. The present study adds new historical perspectives of Martineztown by emphasizing, not its rich cultural history, but land tenure patterns that emerged from 1850 to 1950.
Certainly, Martineztown is deserving of a fuller history, for even though upstanding citizens invested in lands within the community, the Hispanic people who lived there were largely looked down upon socially and discriminated against politically and economically by the citizens of greater Albuquerque. By the 1960s, Martineztown was considered by city authorities to be a blighted area. The origins of such sentiments, which were at least ethnocentric and historical, resulted from a time when disdain for all things Mexican were common and vocal.
In the 1960s, Martineztown suffered through urban renewal and emerged as a checkerboarded area that is largely zoned as both commercial and residential. The history of land tenure in Martineztown follows a predictable pattern from 1850 to 1950.
Today, Martineztown is a place where old stigmas have disappeared but not forgotten. It is a place that represents diversity, more than any other part of Albuquerque. It is a place with a historical past that must be remembered and celebrated.