Skip to content

Nuestra Voz:

The Chihuahua Hill Story and the importance of community, self-representation, and remembrance.

“Aye, como pasan los años.” This was a phrase that my maternal grandmother’s adopted tia, Rosa V.
Castillo, would voice in bittersweet reminiscence as my generation, unbothered and uninterested by the
conversations of our elders, played and grew before their wistful eyes.  
 
Rosa Castillo was born in Silver City, New Mexico, in 1917, just five years after New Mexico was
admitted into the Union as a full-fledged state. She lived in this town, en el barrio de Chihuahua Hill, for
most of her life. As a child, she endured the semi-segregated schools of Silver City, where a community’s
language was suppressed in favor of the socially acceptable English. She helped raise multiple
generations of children, although she had none of her own. She moved away from Chihuahua Hill only
when Alzheimer’s disease rendered her unable, though not unwilling, to care for herself. While living in
a care facility, her memories of family and friends faded, yet her insistence that they continue buying
her Big Red gum remained. She lived a long, undoubtedly difficult yet beautiful life, one that she never
spoke of and that I never thought to ask about. Rosa Castillo died on April 26, 2009. Tenía noventa y
dos años. She was buried in the Catholic Cemetery beside the adopted siblings who took her in on
Chihuahua Hill nearly a century before. Whatever stories Rosa left unsaid, all the things she knew, and
how she felt about them, are gone. En su lugar, solo recuerdos.  
 
I remember Rosa in the background of my own life, always there but rarely a focal point. Looking back, I
am ashamed about how little attention I paid to those conversations in Spanish punctuated by quick
bouts of English that formed an ever-present backdrop to my childhood. Everybody, at some point, pays
the world the disservice of thinking it’ll never change. You take for granted the voices of those around
you, thinking that if they’re here today, they’ll be here tomorrow. Pero no es asi. Elders pass away, and
the places they inhabited give way to new voices. Now that warm atmosphere of Spanglish that
surrounded my youth has slowly been replaced by English and my own bittersweet reminiscence of
what once was. Aye, como pasan los años.  
 
Rosa’s story is representative of the history of Chihuahua Hill, a historically Mexican American
neighborhood on the southern edge of Silver City. Wherever you are in the town, La Capilla, a small
chapel overlooking the neighborhood, makes a visible backdrop. The barrio is a pillar of our history. The
first silver produced in the fledgling mining camp that became Silver City was smelted at the foot of
Chihuahua Hill by Mexicanos in an adobe smelter. Families worked as miners, freighters, servants and
farm hands, people whose labor ensured the continued success of local industries. Generations of gente,
just like Rosa Castillo, lived and died there without ever being asked about their stories. Societies, just
like people, take for granted what is around them. The Silver City Museum faces Chihuahua Hill yet
has seldom featured the community’s history within its walls. The Chihuahua Hill History Project is an
acknowledgement, and a correction, of that disservice.  
 
Started in 2021, the Chihuahua Hill History Project was envisioned by the Silver City Museum to bring
the community, as a whole and as individuals, to the forefront of history. It concerns itself less with
dates and events and more with the context that surrounds them. Experiences, memories and

perspectives. The project demands that history only becomes important when understood through the
lens of human life. With this in mind, the project was built from the ground up around oral
history. Themes, or areas of importance, emerge from the stories told by Chihuahua Hill
residents. Making personal experience the centerpiece of our research provides a new toolkit for
collecting and presenting local history. It reorients our emphasis back to the community we serve,
transforming our institution from a place that tells you what history is into a mirror that reflects the
communal experience. It is history for and by the community.  
 
The history being uncovered is staggering in its scope and relevance to the present day. Chihuahua Hill
residents have recounted stories of the joys of culture, the hardships of poverty, the pain of
discrimination and the reality of change. It has helped uncover the stories of those people who are no
longer with us. Ensuring that people, just like Rosa Castillo, will not be forgotten. Instead, they will be
forever represented, in their own words, in their own voice, for generations to come. A living and ever-
expanding marker of what we thought, and who we were, and why we mattered. 
 
The project will be presented in its first official exhibit, Nuestra Voz: The Chihuahua Hill Story on
September 29. The exhibit will explore the history of the barrio through the words of those who lived it.
It is a multimedia, multi-themed, exhibition with the core idea that the past, just like
today, isn’t composed from one single perspective, but of many. Every perspective is important because
every person is important, not just the rich or the powerful, or those whose lives are written about and
well documented. History is not just about their voice, or your voice, or mine, but all of
ours. Nuestra voz. Our voice, as a collective, is what brings the past to life, and what makes history more
than just words in a book, or on a wall.  
 
The Chihuahua Hill History Project has been the greatest pleasure for the Silver City Museum to embark
on. Nuestra Voz: The Chihuahua Hill Story is just another big step in a continuous project that will
continue to evolve with the neighborhood it represents.

perspectives. The project demands that history only becomes important when understood through the
lens of human life. With this in mind, the project was built from the ground up around oral
history. Themes, or areas of importance, emerge from the stories told by Chihuahua Hill
residents. Making personal experience the centerpiece of our research provides a new toolkit for
collecting and presenting local history. It reorients our emphasis back to the community we serve,
transforming our institution from a place that tells you what history is into a mirror that reflects the
communal experience. It is history for and by the community.  
 
The history being uncovered is staggering in its scope and relevance to the present day. Chihuahua Hill
residents have recounted stories of the joys of culture, the hardships of poverty, the pain of
discrimination and the reality of change. It has helped uncover the stories of those people who are no
longer with us. Ensuring that people, just like Rosa Castillo, will not be forgotten. Instead, they will be
forever represented, in their own words, in their own voice, for generations to come. A living and ever-
expanding marker of what we thought, and who we were, and why we mattered. 
 
The project will be presented in its first official exhibit, Nuestra Voz: The Chihuahua Hill Story on
September 29. The exhibit will explore the history of the barrio through the words of those who lived it.
It is a multimedia, multi-themed, exhibition with the core idea that the past, just like
today, isn’t composed from one single perspective, but of many. Every perspective is important because
every person is important, not just the rich or the powerful, or those whose lives are written about and
well documented. History is not just about their voice, or your voice, or mine, but all of
ours. Nuestra voz. Our voice, as a collective, is what brings the past to life, and what makes history more
than just words in a book, or on a wall.  
 
The Chihuahua Hill History Project has been the greatest pleasure for the Silver City Museum to embark
on. Nuestra Voz: The Chihuahua Hill Story is just another big step in a continuous project that will
continue to evolve with the neighborhood it represents.

Disclaimer:
The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Southwest Word Fiesta™ or its steering committee.

TOSC-ANIMATION2
Enriching Life Through Learning in Community

We respectfully acknowledge that the entirety of southwestern New Mexico is the traditional territory, since time immemorial, of the Chis-Nde, also known as the people of the Chiricahua Apache Nation. The Chiricahua Apache Nation is recognized as a sovereign Native Nation by the United States in the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Friendship of 1 July 1852 (10 Stat. 979) (Treaty of Santa Fe ratified 23 March 1853 and proclaimed by President Franklin Pierce 25 March 1853).

Related Articles

Mimbres Press Logo Large

Mimbres Press of Western New Mexico University is a traditional academic press that welcomes agented and unagented submissions in the following genres: literary fiction, creative non-fiction, essays, memoir, poetry, children’s books, historical fiction, and academic books. We are particularly interested in academic work and commercial work with a strong social message, including but not limited to works of history, reportage, biography, anthropology, culture, human rights, and the natural world. We will also consider selective works of national and global significance.