The Romneys’ Mexican History
Mitt Romney’s father was born in a small Mormon enclave where family members still live, surrounded by rugged beauty and violent drug cartels
- By Héctor Tobar
- Photographs by Eros Hoagland
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Beyond the border crossings, in the Ciudad Juárez of big malls and wide avenues, the city did not feel especially menacing to me—until I read the local newspapers, including El Diario: “Juárez Residents Reported Nearly 10 Carjackings a Day in January.” I spent the night in the Camino Real, a sleek example of modernist Mexican architecture, an echo of the Camino Real hotel in Mexico City designed by the late Ricardo Legorreta. I dined in eerily empty spaces, attended by teams of waiters with no one else to serve.
John Hatch, my guide to the Mormon colonies, arrived the next morning to pick me up. It was Hatch who had returned my phone call to the Mormon Temple in Colonia Juárez: He volunteers at the temple and also runs an outfit called Gavilán Tours. We were to drive three hours from Ciudad Juárez to Colonia Juárez, where Hatch and his wife, Sandra, run an informal bed-and-breakfast in their home, catering to a dwindling stream of tourists drawn to Chihuahua for its history and natural enchantments.
“I’m fourth generation in the colonies,” Hatch informed me. He can trace his roots to Mormon pioneers who traveled from Utah and Arizona to Mexico in 1890. He and Sandra have six children, all raised in the Mexican colonies and all now U.S. citizens, including one deployed with the Utah National Guard in Afghanistan. Hatch himself, however, has only Mexican citizenship.
His kids, he said, would rather live in Mexico but have been forced to live in the States for work. “No one wants to claim us,” he told me. “We feel enough of a tie to either country that we feel the right to criticize either one—and to get our dander up if we hear someone criticize either one.”
This state of feeling in between, I would soon learn, defines nearly every aspect of Mormon life in the old colonies. The settlers’ descendants, numbering several hundred in all, keep alive a culture that’s always been caught between Mexico and the United States, between the past and the present, between stability and crisis.
Hatch retired ten years ago after a long career as a teacher in Colonia Juárez at a private LDS academy where generations of Mexican Mormons in the colonies have learned in English. Among other subjects, he taught U.S. history. And as we left Ciudad Juárez behind, with a final, few scattered junkyards in our wake, he began to tell me about all the history embedded in the landscape surrounding us.
“See those mountains in the distance?” he asked as we sped past a sandy plain of dunes and mesquite shrubs. “That’s the Sierra Madre.” During the Mexican Revolution, Pancho Villa’s troops followed those hills, Hatch said, on their way to raid Columbus, New Mexico, in 1916.
Villa once rode and hid in those same mountains as a notorious local bandit. He became one of the revolution’s boldest generals, and attacked the United States as an act of vengeance for Woodrow Wilson’s support of his rival, Venustiano Carranza.
The Mexican Revolution played a critical role in the history of the Mormon colonies. Were it not for that 1910 uprising and the years of war that followed, Mitt Romney might have been born in Mexico, and might be living there today raising apples and peaches, as many of his cousins do.
An especially vicious faction of revolutionaries arrived in the colonies in 1912, appropriating the settlers’ cattle and looting their stores. The revolutionaries took one of the community’s leaders to a cottonwood tree outside Colonia Juárez and threatened to execute him if he didn’t deliver cash.
Many English-speaking families fled, never to return, including that of George Romney, then a boy of 5. In the States, George grew up primarily in the Salt Lake City area, attended college nearby, worked for Alcoa and became chairman of American Motors. He was elected governor of Michigan and served in President Richard Nixon’s cabinet. Mitt Romney’s mother, Utah-born Lenore LaFount Romney, was a former actress who ran unsuccessfully for U.S. Senate in Michigan in 1970.
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Comments (17)
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This article is not accurate. It would have the readers believe that polygamy ceased among mormons in 1904. This is certainly not so. The "FLDS" still practices polygamy today and flew to Mexico to avoid US persecution. That is to say that mormon men did nt want to answer for this form of slavery and oppression of women and children
Posted by C. Aguirre on December 12,2012 | 06:14 PM
This article seems to be a travel guide than an historical essay. When reading it I get an odd romantic inference, yet no understanding-if it wasn't the desire to practice polygamy that lead Romneys family to flee, why would people do such a thing as to dramatically fling their family from their country. It was polygamy, is the answer.
Posted by Jan on August 24,2012 | 07:51 AM
Who are the "they" who say that the Margarita was invented/created at the Kentucky Club? a google of the question doesn't give any clear answer. For a tabloid or light reading article, this could be tolerated, but isn't The Smithsonian supposed to represent the media equivalent of the scholarship embodied in the institution itself?
Posted by oldleftie on May 24,2012 | 05:13 PM
I don't share the author's view that the Kentucky Club can be equaled by two dozen Mexican themed bars in LA. I've been to the Kentucky Club, when Juarez was peaceful and 3 years ago during the height of the drug wars. Many fine times and vibrant experiences. "Mexican themed bars in LA?" Please.
Posted by Rufus Laux on May 14,2012 | 11:58 PM
Nice article. I appreciate the tone of it, the lack of gotcha hostility and/or condescension.
Posted by Daniel Peterson on May 9,2012 | 11:57 PM
As to the comment made by Rose Priven April 24th 2012 I lived in Colonia Juarez from 1976 to 1996 and know the people well in both Colonia Dublan and Colonia Juarez. The LDS memebers there were NOT practicing polygamy nor do they now. Your information is inaccurate.
Posted by Pam Held on April 29,2012 | 09:04 PM
I would like to respond to Rose Priven and her comments about polygamy. Several decades ago, there were some families in Chihuahua that wanted to start practicing polygamy again. They were promptly excommunicated, which means that they are no longer members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Most of these families separated themselves from the Dublan and Juarez to start their own town called Colonia LeBaron. My guess is that your brother actually visited LeBaron and not Dublan because there are no polygamists that live in Dublan.
Posted by Jeremy on April 29,2012 | 02:30 PM
In response to Fred J. Abrahams post "Doesn't anyone realize George's run for Presidentail nonmination was unconstitutional...disqualified by viture of being born in Mexion. BTW where's Mitt's birth certificate??" The constituion reads "No person except a natural born Citizen or a Citizen of the US, at time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President;" It says nothing about be born in the US it says you have to be a citizen of the US at birth. George Romney's parents were US citizens living in Mexico. Just like John McCain's parents were US citizens living in Pamama. I am sure your reference to "where is the birth certificate" is because some question Obama being born to US citizens living outside the US and if he was a citizen at birth.
Posted by William Call on April 27,2012 | 02:13 PM
Good point,Mark. The map locates Colonia Juarez where Chihuahua city is supposed to be. I hope the travel issue doesn't result in some very lost travelers.
Posted by Richard Shieldhouse on April 26,2012 | 01:23 PM
I feel sure that most people will realize that FRED J ABRAHAMS doesn't know what he is talking about. One does NOT have to be born within the borders of the United State in order to be a natural born citizen. The alternate requirment to birth within the borders is to have an American citizen parent. As with all those natural born citizens born to military or diplomatic, or missionary, or many other category US citizen partents living out side the borders for various reasons. Were that not so, John McCain's run in the last election would also have been unconstitutional. Afterall, he was born in Panama where his father was stationed. All you birthers, get a clue.
Posted by Bill Riddle on April 25,2012 | 08:32 PM
Mitt Romney was NOT born in Mexico!! If you would read the article it will tell you his Father was, as was my Grandfather, and my Father. So unlike our current President, Mitt can provide a Birth Certificate, and any other documents that are required to prove HIS citizenship in our great country! I lived in Colonia Juarez as a youth, and still have family who live there. We were going to have a family reunion this year in Colonia Juarez, but my relatives who live there told of the drug wars, the many killings, and kidnappings, and requested to have our reunion elsewhere!
Posted by Jesse E Farnsworth on April 25,2012 | 06:15 PM
Paul Theroux's interesting article on the difficulty of learning more about Hawaii's social culture(s) is at once a testimony to the islanders' intelligence and to Theroux's capacity for scalpel-like criticism. I love Theroux's books, have read them all--some two or three times. That said, if any culture has the slightest flaw or foilble, Theoux will sniff it out and reveal it. He is equally adroit at praising people and their cultural heritage.
It may well be that Hawaiians are more experienced readers of Theroux's travel books than he might imagine and that they realize he is merciless about some peoples and their culture. Perhaps the Hawaiians realize they would have too much to lose if they cut Theroux loose?
Thank you very much for enabling Paul to present his thoughts and feelings about the island he loves.
Posted by charles Michael Shepard on April 25,2012 | 05:07 PM
My brother went on a hunting trip and stayed in Colonia Dublan. He was there for several days about twelve years ago. At that time, the LDS members were practicing polygamy. Each man had three wives and many children. I seriously doubt that they have discontinued the practice in the intervening years. With Mitt Romney running for president, I suspect that they (and he) would want to keep their polygamy under wraps.
Posted by Rose Priven on April 24,2012 | 01:14 AM
As a second cousin of Mitt Romney and a descendant of Miles Park Romney of Colonia Juarez as well as other families who settled in Colonia Dublan I appreciated this article and the author's experience in visiting the Mormon Colonies. I would point out, however, that the map of the area attached to the article is not accurate. Both Colonia Dublan and Colonia Juarez are placed incorrectly.
Posted by Mark Romney on April 24,2012 | 10:25 PM
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