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 3 of 5)
As Hatch and I drove through Ascensión, one of the towns on the route to Colonia Juárez, he recounted the story of a hotel owner who was murdered there a few years back, and of a lynch mob that tracked down a band of three alleged kidnappers and killed them.
I’ll admit to being a bit freaked out hearing these stories: What am I doing here, in this modern-day Wild West? I wondered. But Hatch disabused me of my fears. Most of the worst violence in the region ended three years back, he told me. “We feel very blessed we have escaped the worst of it.”
Hatch would like to get the word out to his old U.S. clients who have been scared off. The Europeans, however, have kept coming, including a group from the Czech Republic that came to see local landmarks related to the history of Geronimo, the Apache fighter.
Geronimo’s wife, mother and three young children were killed by Mexican troops in a massacre in 1858, just outside the next village on our route, Janos. The enraged Geronimo then launched what would become a 30-year guerrilla campaign against the authorities on both sides of the border.
Finally, we arrived in one of the Mormon colonies, Colonia Dublán. I saw the house where George Romney was born in 1907. The old two-story, American colonial-style brick structure was sold by Romney family members in the early 1960s. Since remodeled, it now has a Mexican colonial-style stone facade.The maple-lined streets surrounding George Romney’s home were a picture of American small-town order circa 1900. There were many homes of brick and stone, some with the occasional Victorian flourish.
“This street is named for my first cousin,” Hatch told me, as we stood beneath a sign announcing “Calle Doctor Lothaire Bluth.” Hatch’s octogenarian uncle and aunt, Gayle and Ora Bluth, live on the same street. Ora was recently granted U.S. citizenship, but not Gayle, though he served on a U.S. Navy submarine (and represented Mexico in basketball at the 1960 Olympics in Rome).
It was a short drive to Colonia Juárez, where the Mormon colonies were founded and which remains the center of church life here. I first glimpsed the town as we descended a curving country road and entered a valley of orchards and swaying grasses. Even from a distance, Colonia Juárez presented an image of pastoral bliss and piety, its gleaming white temple rising from a small hill overlooking the town.
When the first settlers arrived here in the 1870s and ’80s, some were fleeing a U.S. crackdown on polygamy. (The practice ended after a 1904 LDS edict that polygamists would be excommunicated.) They dug canals to channel the flow of the Piedras Verdes River to their crops, though the river’s waters dropped precipitously low afterward. But lore has it that the Lord quickly provided: An earthquake triggered the return of an abundant flow.
There was no museum to which Hatch could direct me to learn this history, most of which I picked up from books written by the colonists’ descendants. Colonia Juárez isn’t really set up for large-scale tourism (in keeping with the Mormon ban on alcohol, it remains a dry town). Still, a stroll through the town is a pleasant experience.
I walked to the Academia Juárez, a stately brick edifice that wouldn’t look out of place on an Ivy League campus. On a gorgeous day of early spring, quiet filled the neighborhoods, and I could hear water flowing alongside most of the streets, inside three-foot-wide channels that irrigate peach and apple orchards and vegetable gardens amid small, well-kept brick homes.
Down in the center of town is the “swinging bridge,” a cable-and-plank span still used by pedestrians to cross the shallow Piedras Verdes. Hatch remembered bouncing on it as a boy.
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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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