Descending the sloping grasslands toward his livestock, Ronald Mascareñas reflected on the bygone days when nearly all the pastures in this lush community were thronged with cattle or sheep and neighbors banded together for a yearly ditch cleaning.
But as the cost of land in these villages in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains rises and more transplants move in — and a younger generation of locals moves out — he sees fewer people practicing a hard-toiling, rural lifestyle along the High Road to Taos.
“Now, there’s only a handful of us with cattle,” said Mascareñas, a Taos County commissioner who lives in Llano, a small community near Peñasco, as he walked the property that has been in his family for generations. “Like I said, things have changed.”
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The mountain village of Truchas is one Northern New Mexico community concerned about gentrification and the ongoing housing trends pricing locals out.
Nathan Burton/The New Mexican
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Concerns about gentrification in Northern New Mexico are hardly new, but some longtime residents say they feel particularly priced out these days. On the other hand, the real estate market is good for landowners who wish to sell in a region that has long struggled with high rates of unemployment, poverty and population loss.
Real estate signs can be spotted in three prominent communities perched along the scenic N.M. 76, a popular route to Taos for sightseers but a familiar route home for locals. Chimayó, Truchas and Peñasco have seen modest, two-bedroom homes sell for around $400,000 and luxury properties sell for over $1 million.
Up here, land is regularly listed at $20,000 to $30,000 an acre — a sharp rise from previous decades, before locals became “land rich, money poor,” as Mascareñas put it, noting property he purchased at $3,000 an acre in the mid-1990s would likely be priced around $30,000 an acre or more today.
Some longtime residents say prices like this, bringing newcomers with bigger pocketbooks, continue to change the feel of these distinctive villages, long synonymous with big heaps of firewood, hard labor, adobe churches, art studios at high elevations and free-flowing acequias.
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“I’m concerned,” Mascareñas said. “My parents were concerned for us, and our generation did halfway decent. We were able to make a living. But it’s the next generation, our grandkids: Unless we are able to give them property to start something up, they’re probably not going to be able to stay in the area.”
The New Mexican
Renting is seldom an option in rural Northern New Mexico.
Residents in Rio Arriba and Taos counties overwhelmingly own their homes, with just 22.2% of Rio Arriba County residents renting and 20.1% of Taos County residents renting, according to a 2023 study from the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority.
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The study found about 25% of Santa Fe County residents are renters.
‘Affordability for people’
This month, the most expensive house on the market in Peñasco — about 50 miles northeast of Santa Fe on N.M. 75, just south of the highway’s intersection with N.M. 76 — is listed at $3.5 million, according to the website Realtor.com, a digital real estate marketplace that aggregates listings. That property is an outlier in the community, home to some 500 souls not far from the stunning Jicarita and Trampas peaks.
Still, a modest, three-bedroom, two-bathroom home on 1.97 acres, built in 1998, is listed at $339,000 and a four-bedroom house on 0.46 acres is listed at $480,000.
That compares with an average home price in Santa Fe of $625,000 in the first quarter of 2026, according to data from the Santa Fe Association of Realtors. And statewide, the New Mexico Association of Realtors recently reported, the average home was priced at $350,000 in April.
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Mascareñas said a majority of the people who are able to buy properties in isolated villages like Peñasco are coming from out of state, paying prices many locals could not conceive of affording. Traditionally, land in these communities — many of which were founded as Spanish land grants — is passed down through generations of families, but some heirs may elect to sell if they are unable to keep it or uninterested in moving back.
Not everyone agrees the current market is pricing locals out.
David Cordova
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Courtesy of Sotheby’s International Realty
David Cordova, a real estate agent with Sotheby’s International Realty who has deep family ties to Truchas and was born and raised in Northern New Mexico, said rural communities remain much cheaper than places like Santa Fe and Taos. He noted “there’s a lot of affordable properties out there.”
Citing data collected by the Santa Fe Association of Realtors, Cordova said 12 properties have been listed and closed in Truchas in roughly the last five years ranging from $200,000 up to $673,000.
“I still think there’s an affordability for people,” Cordova said. “I’m all about having our families being able to live there, and you can routinely find properties between $200,000 and $300,000 and $400,000.”
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He added, “I think people find themselves deeply rooted in coming back and feeling the soil, feeling the air and having a property in Northern New Mexico. Sales have been really good. The High Road to Taos is where it’s just absolutely stunning, you know.”
‘Hard to maintain’
The old Chimayó post office along N.M. 76 is now about half an acre of concrete wiped clean of any structure; its status as the community’s post office ended in a 2023 Valentine’s Day inferno.
The property has a blue Sotheby’s International Realty sign out front, and an online listing shows it is up for sale for $200,000.
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A sign from luxury real estate broker Sotheby’s advertises a home for sale in the village of Truchas on Thursday.
Nathan Burton/The New Mexican
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Pat Oviedo-Trujillo, 76, a lifelong resident of Chimayó who can trace her family roots back 12 generations in this region, likened the trends of rising prices in the local real estate market to the plight of characters in the 1974 novel The Milagro Beanfield War.
The Northern New Mexico classic, written by the late Taos County resident John Nichols, is about Hispanic farmers fighting the prospect of cultural and lifestyle loss against the backdrop of a water rights dispute.
“When John Nichols wrote that book, he was very prophetic, because that’s exactly what’s happening right now in these little towns,” Oviedo-Trujillo said.
“I’ll die here,” she said. “But all of a sudden, my property taxes have gone through the roof, and it’s hard to maintain even what you have.”
The five homes listed for sale last week on Realtor.com in the Chimayó area were priced at $1.1 million, $639,000, $439,000, $350,000 and, certainly the most affordable, $60,000.
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A housing market analysis from Zillow, a prominent online real estate marketplace, shows a substantial increase in home values in Chimayó since 2018, with values rising from an average of about $222,000 in 2018 to about $335,000 now. Home values in an area generally correspond to home prices.
A 2015 Santa Fe County plan for Chimayó addresses how the residential makeup of the village — known for being home to one of the largest Catholic pilgrimage sites in North America, El Santuario de Chimayó, but also for a decadeslong struggle with addiction — has changed in recent decades, becoming more of a Santa Fe bedroom community.
Until the mid-1900s, land development patterns were largely small, clustered residential settlements on hills above the acequias to preserve large areas of “contiguous irrigated farmland on the gentle slopes and valley floor,” the county plan says.
“As the economy changed and the community became less dependent on farming to support their families,” the plan continues, “land development patterns evolved to accommodate scattered individual home-sites on parcels spread out across the valley.”
‘Way over market’
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The only three homes listed for sale in Truchas last week on Realtor.com were priced at $800,000, $1.2 million and $599,000. A bare 1-acre lot in the scenic mountain village is listed at $39,500; 10-acre lots are listed at $339,000 and $225,000.
Truchas is approached by way of winding mountain roads — an idyllic village unfurling near cliff edges about 10 miles from the valley that cradles Chimayó and much higher in altitude — about 8,000 feet in elevation.
Sahd’s hardware store owner and Peñasco fire chief Randy Sahd inside the family-owned and operated business on Thursday in Peñasco. “We’ve become a bedroom community for Los Alamos and Santa Fe,” Sahd said, remarking on the increasing cost of land and properties in the community.
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Nathan Burton/The New Mexican
Dio Dominguez, an acequia mayordomo in Truchas, said he has seen properties, such as a 3-acre parcel with an old home on it, sell at prices that shock him. “They’re paying way, way over market, so it’s kind of messing everyone up,” Dominguez said, noting the tax burden this phenomenon can create is the hardest on locals.
These communities, particularly Truchas, have seen a migration of newcomers for some time.
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“Not Another Taos — Yet,” read a 2002 headline in The New Mexican about Truchas and the influx of artists moving there as galleries opened along its main street.
“In a town legendary for its hostility toward outsiders, Truchas is a thriving little art town these days,” The New Mexican reported, underscoring changes in Truchas, which means trout in Spanish.
Randy Sahd, a lifelong resident of Peñasco, owns the local hardware store, where locals trickled in Thursday morning to banter a bit and decide which newspapers to purchase. He attributed the cost of land in this region to the “outside influence” and “people who have money” from out of state.
“Who in New Mexico has that kind of money?” said Sahd, the local volunteer fire chief, alluding to some high-priced local properties that have sold.
He suggested many people who own land in the area no longer live there.
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The family-owned and operated Sahd’s hardware store in Peñasco has served the mountain village of roughly 500 for over 50 years.
Nathan Burton/The New Mexican
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“Everybody up here has ancestral properties, and they live in Utah or Colorado, and they have no interest in keeping their property anymore,” Sahd said. “So, when somebody offers them $20,000 an acre that a couple of years ago was only $4,000 an acre …”
Such an offer can be hard to resist.
“We’ve gone from being a rural community to a bedroom community,” Sahd said.
Embracing outsiders?
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These communities, apart from the current real estate situation, have struggled for some time with population loss, particularly as young people migrate to more urban areas. Poverty and limited professional opportunities help drive the outmigration.
Some homes in the villages sit vacant in various states of disuse.
Truchas, at least historically, had a reputation as a community suspicious of outsiders moving in as locals move out.
But Cordova pointed out the parades of hippies in rainbow buses who arrived in places like Dixon and Truchas in the 1960s and ’70s.
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The mountain village of Truchas is one Northern New Mexico community concerned about gentrification and the ongoing housing trends pricing locals out.
Nathan Burton/The New Mexican
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“People thought at the time, ‘Were they going to clash with the Hispanic culture that was there?’ ” Cordova said. “To be honest with you, a lot of friendships and bonds were made, and people are still there from back in the ’70s.”
He added, “A lot of us here are people who embrace people coming from the outside. We’ve embraced the people who are working at Los Alamos National Labs. We’ve embraced the fact that many of us work our tractors and we work our livestock — and it’s a community that knows how to work hard and appreciates anybody that works hard.”
Can’t keep kids local
Still, life in these communities — with scarce jobs and rising home prices — is increasingly unattainable for young locals, and traditions are disappearing.
“We’re having a hard time keeping our kids local,” Mascareñas said. “If they leave to go get educated, they come back and it’s challenging for them because they can’t afford to buy something.”
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He added, “We’re trying to keep these traditions and cultures alive. But if you don’t have the people to do it, you can’t keep them alive, and if you start chopping away at the properties” — subdividing for family members — “they get smaller and smaller. You can’t have cattle, you can’t have horses.”
This week, Mascareñas said the community of Llano no longer has an annual acequia cleaning because there were not enough participants.
Now, the spring cleaning is individualized, and parcientes are responsible for cleaning their own sections of ditch.
“That’s how we’ve had to change, right?” he said. “We no longer gather for ditch cleanings. Everybody does their own property because we can’t gather the amount of people it takes to do it. I remember, as a kid, there used to be 60 to 80 of us cleaning, and I’m talking from my grandpa to my dad to me.”
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Rancher and Taos County Commissioner Ronald Mascareñas returns home after feeding his cattle Thursday in Llano.
It was described as a windfall for New Mexico, a once-in-a-generation opportunity to turn the tide against an opioid epidemic three decades in the making.
But how far could some $920.5 million go, spread across the state government, counties and communities — as well as attorneys — over 18 years?
The money from massive settlement agreements with pharmaceutical companies and pharmacies, accused in a series of lawsuits of fueling the opioid crisis, has been trickling in, with the first payments arriving in April 2022 and the last expected in 2039. Slightly more than half, 55%, goes directly to the state, while more than 28% — a total upwards of $250 million — is funneled to attorneys, legislative documents show.
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The remainder is distributed directly to city and county governments, with Albuquerque and Bernalillo County seeing the largest shares, according to a Legislative Finance Committee report. Some local governments began putting their money to work right away when the checks started rolling in. Others, like the city of Santa Fe, have been slow to develop spending plans, even as deaths and emergency room visits due to opioid overdoses continue to rise.
As the state moves forward with long-awaited regional behavioral health plans, in large part to ramp up access to critical substance misuse treatment, critics contend there is no way to follow the flow of settlement funds and ensure they are making an impact.
Santa Fe officials, who so far have $9.7 million available to divvy, have defended their inaction.
“Our goal is simple: to make every settlement dollar count,” Mayor Michael Garcia said in a statement Thursday. “Rather than committing these resources without a long-term strategy, we are taking the time to ensure investments are data-driven, impactful, and aligned with the City’s greatest needs.”
During the recent Mayor’s Homelessness Summit, Youth and Family Services Director Lia Azul Salaverry said the city is exploring allowable ways to direct some of the opioid settlement money toward services for homeless people.
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“If we can pair shelter and housing with real recovery support, we can make meaningful progress on two of our community’s most interconnected challenges at once,” she said.
‘No accountability’
Anger over how hard-hit New Mexico has been by the opioid crisis resurfaced in recent weeks following explosive allegations by a former U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency official that the federal agency responsible for protecting the nation from drug trafficking allowed hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills to flow into the state while agents sought high-level drug dealers.
As state officials seek accountability in what could become a showdown with the federal government, the state and local governments’ spending on settlement money on efforts to remediate damage from the opioid crisis remains hazy.
The spending is tough to track.
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Unlike other states that saw a share of what became multibillion- dollar settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors, New Mexico doesn’t have a central dashboard to track spending.
In fact, the state ranks near the bottom when it comes to transparency for settlement spending, according to the Opioid Settlement Tracker, a national database on how much money each state has received and who gets to decide how it’s spent.
Patrick M. Brenner, president of nonprofit think tank Southwest Public Policy Institute, said the lack of transparency is concerning.
With the exception of individuals filing public records requests to try to track spending, “there’s no accountability mechanism to ensure that these monies are being spent properly,” he said.
There are guidelines surrounding the management and spending of the settlement money. The funds must be spent on abatement of the opioid epidemic, which includes training for overdose prevention, medication-assisted treatment, expansions of recovery services and housing, transportation and job training for people suffering from opioid use disorder.
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Brenner said he believes the limitations around how the money can be spent is too strict, which is leading to problems in getting it out the door quickly enough.
“We’re hamstrung by inaction, we’re hamstrung by the prohibitive nature of what the funds are being earmarked for, and we’re hamstrung by the public not even being able to know how the funds are being spent,” he said.
Strategies take shape
Santa Fe County moved quickly to allocate its portion of settlement funds on medication-assisted treatment at the jail.
County spokesperson Shawna Graves said in a statement 163 inmates received such treatment in 2025.
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Bernalillo County and the city of Albuquerque contracted with New York-based Vital Strategies, an organization that sought public input over several months in 2024 with five town hall meetings, 15 focus groups and surveys with about 700 people with opioid use disorder, according to a report provided by the county.
The plan says the vast majority of survey participants advocated for increased funding for better housing services. Many of those surveyed were homeless, the report notes, and “they deemed existing shelters and temporary housing inadequate and emphasized the need for more options and improved conditions.”
Survey responses also indicate a need for an expansion of harm reduction programs and treatment services, the plan says.
Among the more than two dozen recommendations for Albuquerque and Bernalillo County was the creation of a joint advisory committee to oversee spending in the coming years and ensure accountability.
Wayne Lindstrom, Bernalillo County’s deputy county manager for behavioral health, described the challenges of planning to spend funds disbursed over a long period of time.
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“The challenge became, how do we make some one-time investments over the course of the next three years that will enhance sustainability, while at the same time not incur recurring funds that we couldn’t sustain beyond year three?” he said in an interview earlier this year.
Lindstrom spoke of a “need to get much more upstream of these issues,” which is included in the strategic plan.
“If we could basically increase our investments in early prevention and early intervention, that would be money much better spent, and we’d see much better outcomes for our populace as a whole,” he said.
Bernalillo County and Albuquerque both made investments of opioid settlement funds to support expanding Albuquerque Public Schools’ counseling and clinical services to middle schools.
“APS really saw an important investment in expanding what’s available to high school students to their middle schools,” Lindstrom said.
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David Morgan, a spokesperson for the New Mexico Department of Health, wrote in an email the agency has received $3.5 million annually for four years — or a total of $14 million — in opioid settlement funds, with at least $1 million per year set aside for addressing the needs of tribal communities.
The money has been used to expand medication-assisted treatment and overdose prevention through five contracts with tribal entities; to increase staff at department facilities offering substance misuse treatment; to expand the agency’s Harm Reduction Section; and to help direct patients toward medication-assisted treatment and public health care, particularly following incarceration.
S.F. ‘taking the time’
It’s unclear why the city of Santa Fe has delayed creating a spending plan.
Then-Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber declined an interview late last year about the settlement funds through a spokesperson, who said in a statement the spending restrictions made utilizing the funds “complex.”
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“At this point there is not a plan in which to discuss,” the spokesperson said.
However, a former city official told the Santa Fe Reporter in 2023 work was underway to determine how to spend the money and she expected to present a proposal to the City Council in early 2024.
Community Services Director Sandra Emory, who joined the city in 2025, said she couldn’t speak about why the previous plan didn’t materialize. But she said the city must be strategic about how it uses the funds.
“Taking the time to figure out how to use them appropriately and really direct them toward where they can make the most impact I’m hoping will be time well spent,” she said.
Emory said the city is working on a “rapid landscape analysis” with Vital Strategies and hopes to move quickly to start deploying money when the analysis is complete.
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The effort likely will include some type of community engagement opportunity, she said, though she was not aware of any specific plans.
The city has not added any positions to help manage the settlement funds, something Emory said might need to happen in the future.
While the city’s allocation seems substantial, when weighed against the damage addiction has caused in the community, Emory said every dollar will count.
“There’s a lot of intention being put into how we’re going to spend the money,” she said, “because … the overall cost of addiction and the opioid epidemic just so far surpasses the amount of money that we are going to ever see from this fund.”
Staff writer Nicholas Gilmore contributed to this report.
New Mexico State pitcher Jack Turner has been taken in the 10th round of the 2026 MLB Draft by the Detroit Tigers.
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Turner becomes the 14th Aggie player selected in the MLB Draft since 2015 and the eighth selected in the first 10 rounds. The most recent NM State players selected in the MLB Draft prior to Turner were outfielders Keith Jones II, a 10th-round pick by the Texas Rangers, and Titus Dumitru, a 16th-round pick by the Atlanta Braves, both in 2024.
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Turner spent the 2025 and 2026 seasons with the Aggies after arriving from Suffolk County Community College (New York), where he was a 2024 NJCAA Division III First Team All-American. He made 24 pitching appearances, 17 being starts, and recorded a 6.15 ERA over those two years. Turner struck out 100 batters in 112.2 innings pitched across 2025 and 2026 and made one save in 2026.
He ended his NM State run on a high note by not allowing a run in the Aggies’ penultimate game of 2026 against Florida International on May 15. Turner struck out five batters that day and allowed only three hits in six innings to help NM State win 6-5.
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Turner played for the Trenton Thunder and the State College Spikes, collegiate summer league baseball teams playing in the MLB Draft League, after leaving the Aggies. He recorded a 4.09 ERA with the Thunder and a 5.14 ERA with the Spikes.
Turner made eight pitching appearances for Trenton and struck out 17 batters, allowed only five earned runs and walked eight batters in 11 innings pitched. He started two games for State College, striking out five batters, allowing four earned runs and registering a 1.114 WHIP in seven innings pitched.
Turner received recognition after his first start for the Spikes on June 3 after pitching a sinker and a sweeping curve that each had over a foot of horizontal movement.
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Turner becomes the seventh NM State player to be selected by Detroit in the MLB Draft, the first being former NM State AD Mario Moccia in the 44th round of the 1989 draft. The most recent was pitcher Ryan Beck in the 30th round of the 2013 draft.
Walter Dasheno’s mind drifted toward the distant past as he studied the small black-and-white photograph, with 11 serious-looking Native American teens staring back at him.
Dasheno still knows the names of the other 1965 graduates of St. Catherine Indian School — boys in caps and gowns from New Mexico pueblos and the Navajo Nation, their lives knitted together during their years at the Catholic boarding school in Santa Fe.
They played basketball for the Thunderbirds. They spoke in their Indigenous languages in a crowded dormitory. Overseen by a faculty largely made up of nuns, they cleaned the chapel floors and recited the rosary, sometimes in their traditional Native regalia.
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“Him and I joined the service together,” said Dasheno, 79, a former Santa Clara Pueblo governor, pointing out a former classmate in the photo, a boy from San Ildefonso Pueblo. “He went into aviation, and I became a radio man.”
Walter Dasheno, a graduate of St. Catherine Indian School and former Santa Clara Pueblo governor, smiles while looking at a small black-and-white photograph of his former classmates in the mid-1960s at his home at the pueblo on Thursday.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
A raging fire that ripped through the historic St. Catherine Indian School campus last week — claiming the iconic main building, the girls dormitory and the chapel — was painful for Dasheno and many other former students. Officials have not determined what caused the July 2 blaze at the long-vacant property north of downtown Santa Fe. A partial demolition began Friday to provide investigators with safer access to the building where they believe the fire ignited.
St. Catherine, which served students in grades 7-12, was a private boarding school for more than a century before its final graduation ceremony in 1998. Named for St. Catherine of Siena and founded by a woman who would later be known as Mother Katharine Drexel, it was run for decades by women who joined Drexel’s religious order and focused on educating Indigenous youth.
The Catholic school, founded in 1886, had a complicated history, entangled in part in the legacy of trauma caused by federal and church-run boarding schools for Native children and teens in the 19th and 20th centuries — institutions designed to culturally assimilate kids who were forced to enroll. But many former students of St. Catherine, especially in its last several decades of operation, speak of cherished memories and defend the school — known to some as St. Kate’s — as a beloved community.
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Walter Dasheno holds up a photo of himself and fellow high school graduates from St. Catherine Indian School’s Class of 1965 — teen boys from the pueblos of New Mexico and the Navajo Nation dressed in their caps and gowns. He recalled memories from his times at the Catholic boarding school in Santa Fe.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
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The July 2 fire dealt a devastating blow to the campus, which housed storied buildings bearing priceless murals, such as Our Lady of Guadalupe’s Love for the Indian Race by Edward O’Brien — which showed the Virgin of Guadalupe surrounded by images of Native people.
Competing views of St. Kate’s
The Historic Santa Fe Foundation describes St. Catherine Indian School on its website as “a remnant of a contested system of Indian boarding schools, run by missionaries of various Christian religious orders, first developed in nineteenth century New Mexico to educate, assimilate, and ‘civilize’ indigenous children into Euro-American culture.”
Others remember it as a different kind of Native boarding school. While the nuns could be strict and the campus environment was rigorous, former students have noted, they felt their culture was respected by school officials, and they look back at their time there with fondness.
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Some Native people who attended the school also have long pointed out — at least in their experiences from the 1960s forward — their enrollment was a choice made by them or their parents rather than the federal government.
City firefighters battled for hours July 2 at the historic campus of the former St. Catherine Indian School.
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Jim Weber/New Mexican file photo
Michael Peacock, a member of Laguna Pueblo who graduated from St. Catherine in 1975, described his experiences at the school in overwhelmingly positive terms, saying it helped shape him.
His mother attended the school in the 1950s before him, and many of his classmates had family legacy ties to the school as well, he said.
“St. Catherine’s was a unique school and a wonderful, wonderful experience, I believe, for me and a majority of the people who went there,” Peacock said. “It was nothing compared to the Albuquerque Indian School or any other schools throughout the United States that abused their kids or brainwashed their kids and institutionalized their kids.”
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Still, documents archived in the University of New Mexico’s digital repository show some administrators with the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, which operated St. Catherine, were bent on converting Native students to Catholicism and seemed to hold attitudes dismissive of Native religions.
Take, for example, a letter penned in 1946 by an administrator with the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament to Archbishop Edwin Byrne of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe.
Archbishop Byrne and clergy meeting with Taos dancers at St. Catherine Indian School, circa 1950.
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Tyler Dingee, Courtesy Palace of the Governors Photo Archives (NMHM/DCA), No. 120261
“There has been so little done by the Church as well as the government for the bettering of these poor wandering Navajos, the greater number of them pagans, that we have felt concerned,” the letter states, lamenting the closure of some government-run Native schools.
The letter, citing the potential construction of a new high school for Navajo youth, outlines an effort to “win as many Souls as we could through the mission of God and His glory.”
Jean Marquardt, who was president of St. Catherine for two years in the mid-1990s, said she sees the school within the context of Catholic boarding schools that “ravished” aspects of Indigenous culture.
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When she was president, she said, about 80% of the 200 students were Native American.
“In terms of academics, I think they did a very good job, but in terms of acknowledging the history of Indian boarding schools, they were very neglectful,” added Marquardt, who now lives in California.
Cochiti Pueblo pupils at chapel, St. Catherine School.
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Tyler Dingee, Courtesy Palace of the Governors Photo Archives (NMHM/DCA), No. 120417
“They did not acknowledge the trauma that generations of Pueblo and Navajo people went through in the early 1800s because of the policy of Manifest Destiny, and kids were kidnapped from their homes and brutally taken to these Indian schools,” she said.
Haaland recalls family ties
Former congresswoman and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland of Laguna Pueblo, the Democratic nominee for governor, led the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative to investigate the troubled history of Native boarding schools. The effort led to a historic apology by former President Joe Biden for the federal government’s role in such schools.
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Haaland in January 2025 wrote about listening to Biden’s apology months earlier at the Gila River Indian Reservation in Arizona. In the same reflection, still posted on the Department of Interior’s website, she also wrote about her grandmother’s experience at St. Catherine.
“I remembered my grandma Helen recount the story of when she was taken away to St. Catherine’s Indian Boarding School in Santa Fe, New Mexico,” Haaland wrote. “She told me about the day a priest from the Pueblo of Laguna came to our village of Mesita, ‘gathered up the kids,’ put them on a train, and sent them away. She was 8 years old at the time.”
Haaland said in a statement to The New Mexican last week the recollection was an accurate description of her grandmother’s experience. She went on to describe the impact the boarding school had on her family.
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Details at the historic St. Catherine Indian School in 2021 include a small cemetery where clergy were buried and murals created by some of the students.
Jim Weber/New Mexican file photo
“Because my grandma’s dad only had a horse and buggy, he was only able to visit my grandma once in the 5 years that she was at St. Catherine’s,” Haaland said in the statement. “Many parents were forced to be without their children for long periods of time, and all children are impacted when that happens. My grandma was always deeply religious, and she said the rosary every night.”
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Haaland’s grandparents met at the boarding school, she said.
“I know the school changed a lot over the years, so it’s important to recognize that the fire and loss of part of this school is felt differently across the community,” she said. “Losing a part of history is always difficult, because we must learn all of that history in order to grow and build better communities.”
‘Woven together by tradition’
For those who treasured their days at St. Kate’s, memories are flooding back of raucous basketball games where the Thunderbirds played hard and established rivalries with Pojoaque Valley and Los Alamos schools.
They remember the pleasure in beating teams from larger schools with taller players.
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Walter Dasheno unfurled a school sweater with “Thunderbirds” on the back. It had belonged to his late wife, Judy Dasheno, a former St. Catherine student who died from COVID-19 during the pandemic.
He enrolled at St. Catherine as a seventh grader.
A photo of Walter Dasheno and a female student wearing traditional clothing as they carried in the chalice and unconsecrated wine during a special Mass at St. Catherine Indian School in the mid-1960s.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
“It developed a cadre of young men and young women who went on to become successful in their lives, some of them becoming lawyers, doctors, attorneys, tribal leaders for their communities, health program directors,” Dasheno said. “And then, of course, others became successful in the arts and then, in a traditional sense, going back to their communities and becoming traditional people.”
He was in rock ’n’ roll bands that sprang up on the campus, including one called the Thundertones, influenced by surf rock and the Beatles. Dasheno played saxophone and clarinet.
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A small figure of St. Catherine with a young Native American student alongside a Hopi kachina on display at Walter Dasheno’s home in Santa Clara Pueblo on Thursday. Dasheno, a former Santa Clara Pueblo governor, graduated from St. Catherine Indian School in 1965.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
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He recalled the music’s echoes in the old school gym and the merriment of his high school years.
Peacock also arrived as a seventh grader. Though he was homesick in the early days, he grew to love St. Catherine so much he didn’t want to leave as a graduating senior.
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Bystanders watch July 2 as firefighters battle the blaze at the historic St. Catherine Indian School.
Nathan Burton/The New Mexican
He recalled his first couple of stays in the dormitory, a crowded room filled with bunk beds, hearing the voices and languages of Native students from around the Southwest. Some of his good friends were from the Navajo and Apache nations.
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“Those first nights, I remember the soft murmur of conversations in many languages and the feeling that I had joined something bigger than myself — a community woven together by tradition, learning, and shared experience,” he wrote in a reflection posted on a website devoted to the preservation of St. Catherine Indian School.
Downtown Santa Fe was his second classroom, he wrote: “The plaza was our playground and history book all in one — the Palace of the Governors standing proud, the smell of food drifting from La Fonda, the friendly chaos inside Tiano’s Sporting Goods, and the unbeatable taste of a Woolworth’s frito pie.”
The last graduating class of St. Catherine Indian School celebrates outside St. Francis Cathedral in May 1998.