Thursday, November 29, 2018

Christmas Traditions Event Information and Tips

Christmas Traditions from Around the World 2018 is SOLD OUT!!!

To make the event run a little smoother and to make sure you have the absolute best time possible, here is a little information and some tips:

  • Tickets allow you to attend the event any time between 6-9pm
  • The time on your ticket is for the concert.  Seating begins 15 min before each performance and you have an assigned seat.  PLEASE BE ON TIME
  • White tickets do not have a time, therefore do not include the concert
  • Parking:  Limited parking is available in the Museum lot.  Overflow will be directed to the NMJC parking lot from where you can walk or wait for a shuttle
  • Be sure to fill out your ticket stub for a door prize BEFORE the event to save time and hassle
  • Strollers will not be allowed in the theater for the concert.  A Museum representative will help you
  • There are NO lines for the food tables, nor is there an order.  Bypass busy tables and circle back later
  • Please do not bring your own plates or utensils as they are provided for you
  • Please be mindful of artifacts and specifically Bonnie Moran's North Pole Village.  NO TOUCHING
  • Remember to visit Santa in the North Gallery
  • ENJOY the event!!



Thursday, November 1, 2018

Working Cowboy and Outstanding Ranchers

Working Cowboy J.D. Logan
The 2018 recipient of the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame Working Cowboy Award is local Cowboy J.D. Logan.  Born in 1987 in Odessa, Texas to Mike and Yealonda Logan, J.D. grew up in the small town of Goldsmith, Texas.  He notes that he was fortunate that his dad worked for Buster and Mary Cole on a cow/calf and yearling ranch and that he was able to tag along helping out around the ranch. Growing up he shod horses, worked the ranched and started his team roping career by participating in junior rodeos.  He first met Stefanie Smith when he visited the Smith Ranch with a friend in 2003.  They married in 2006 and eventually moved their lives to the Smith Ranch, from Goldsmith in 2009.  Since then they have called Lea County home.  Responsible for the replacement heifers of the Goat Head Ranch in Lea County and the cow/calf operation of the MLS ranch in Eddy County, Logan and his wife Stephanie work the horses and cows of the ranches while raising their young son Jaytin, who is two-years old.  J.D. notes that they are blessed to be working alongside nephews Cason (13), Kyon (8) and Shane (13) while working daily with the rest of the Smith Family. 

Outstanding Ranchers Edwin and Frances Johnston
The 2018 recipients of the Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame Outstanding Ranchers Award are Edwin and Frances Johnston.  William “Ed” Johnston was born July 27, 1934 in Ranger, Texas, the middle child and only son to Ernest and Sarah Johnston. The family moved to Monument, New Mexico when Ed was only 5 years old. Frances was born May 29, 1936 in Pampa, Texas to Claude and Ermine Coffey. Frances along with her parents and her three sisters relocated to Eunice, New Mexico. Ed and Frances met while attending school in Eunice, New Mexico and were high school sweethearts. In 1952, Ed and Frances married and will celebrate 66 years of marriage this November.  In 1962, Ed and Frances moved to Monument, New Mexico to begin their ranching career, where they raised Herefords and later added cross bred cattle and Registered Angus to their operation. Ed and Frances became involved with the New Mexico Angus Association where Frances served as secretary. Ed was also pivotal in bringing the Chianina breed to Lea County. Ed worked for El Paso Natural Gas and Sid Richardson. Frances was a homemaker until her children were grown, then worked as Post Mistress in Monument for 10 years. When the time came to retire, Ed and Frances also collaborated this venture together, by retiring in 1999 on the VERY same day, but continue to ranch to this day.  Ed and Frances have three children, Keith and wife Stacy; DeEtta and husband Mike, Kyle and wife Kimberly “Kimmie”; but their greatest joy is being called “MeMe & Grandad” by their eight grandchildren, and 11 great-grandchildren and Frances truly believe in the value of 4-H and FFA programs, so together they began their involvement with 4-H as organizational leaders of the Monument 4-H, there they dedicated 37 years together not only guiding their own children and grandchildren through the program, but also offering encouragement and support to many youth of Lea County. During their tenure, they were instrumental in expanding the Monument 4-H chapter to the largest at that time with 50 members. Because of their impact on the youth development and the lives of many 4-H members through their roles as club leaders, they were honored by being inducted into the New Mexico 4-H Hall of Fame in 2003.  Ed served on the Lea County Fair Board for 25 years as a member and chairman. While serving as a 4-H leader, Frances would be up before the sun came up, preparing her “Denver Biscuits” for the Buyer’s breakfast before the Sale of Champions, and did this relentlessly for 30 years. Ed and Frances look forward to the Fair every year. They enjoy visiting with friends, watching the rodeo, but are especially passionate about the Jr livestock shows and Jr livestock auction. They have been instrumental in strengthening the Sale of Champions, knowing the importance of rewarding youth for their hard work and accomplishments by buying their livestock projects and donating them to the New Mexico Children’s Home, an organization that Ed and Frances are also very passionate about.  Ed and Frances are members of the Jefferson Street Church of Christ in Hobbs and avid Hobbs Eagle Basketball fans. Their continued dedication to the youth of Lea County and their mission to support positive youth development can still be seen today at livestock shows, rodeos and auctions with their presence not only at the Lea County Fair, but at New Mexico State Fair and Eastern New Mexico State Fair. Ed and Frances were honored recently by the Lea County Fair & Rodeo Board for their many years of service.

2018 Silver Concho


Silver Concho Recipient Bob Reid
In addition to honoring the inductees into the Hall of Fame, the organization has selected JF Maddox CEO Bob Reid as this year’s recipient of the Silver Concho Award.  

“Bob Reid has had a tremendous impact on so many parts of Lea County, especially the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame,” noted Beauchamp.  “As CEO of the Maddox Foundation, Bob was instrumental in the construction of the Museum. In fact, there are many who believe there would be no museum if it weren’t for Bob Reid.”  

Bob Reid was born and raised in Los Angeles, California, but has lived in many areas.  He studied behavioral sciences at Cal Poly Pomona, but later turned his interests to business administration. He had four careers including child development, mental health and addictions treatment, hospital administration, and private philanthropy.  At 26, Bob founded the largest addictions treatment facility in northern California, which he managed for six years.  He later served as CEO for several hospitals in six states and eventually managed all of the acute care operations for a national hospital chain.  Bob’s specialty was in turning around under-performing hospitals.   

For the past couple of decades, Bob has served as the chief executive officer for the JF Maddox Foundation focusing on education reform, higher education, workforce training, community and economic development, arts & culture, social services, and access to healthcare.  In his spare time, he has been actively engaged in supporting work with women in extreme poverty in Bolivia and Tanzania.  He has been an avid supporter of the United4Change Center, an award-winning international nonprofit based in Houston.  

Bob, and his wife Sheryl, raised their children, Ashley and Mallet, in Hobbs.  The Reid family is very proud of its association with the community of Hobbs and surrounding areas.  Bob has a passion for cycling and raising funds for various charitable causes.  He founded Southeast New Mexico Cycling to support safe cycling and to raise funds for various organizations including the American Cancer Society, Diabetes Association, American Red Cross, University of the Southwest, and several other charitable organizations.  His greatest cycling adventure was riding 550 miles from Houston to New Orleans, which he did three times. 

Bob has received extensive training in business administration including a PhD from Oklahoma State University, OPM certification from the Harvard Business School, an MBA from Santa Clara University, and a BA degree from the University of Redlands.

Christmas Traditions


Christmas Traditions from Around the World

Thursday, December 6, 2018
6-9pm
Our annual Christmas Traditions from Around the World features performances by Irish Christmas in America at 6pm, 7pm and 8pm (you choose the time and seat for your tickets), plus Santa and Mrs. Clause, holiday food and beverages from around the world, over 40 decorated Christmas trees, Christmas Carolers, door prizes, Bonnie Moran's North Pole Village and more.
Tickets must be purchased in advanced: $10 adults, $8 seniors (65+), $8 children and free for kids 3 and under.
A portion of the proceeds benefits Phi Theta Kappa's Lea County Foster Children's Holiday Party.
Call 575-492-2678 for information.

New Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame Inductees

Charlie Butler “C.B” Cochran
Charlie Butler “C.B” Cochran was born near Spur at Bells Plains, Callahan County, Texas, to Confederate veteran Levi Thomas Cochran and Sara Rose Proctor Cochran, one of seven children.  He first came through Lea County, NM in 1902 while driving cattle to Queens, NM from Dickens County, TX.  He met and married Stella Pearl Sowell (1886-1979), the niece of Walter Greer, the cattle owner, while on the cattle drive.  The couple married during the cattle drive. At their marriage, C.B. had just turned eighteen years old and Stella was sixteen. Following the drive, the couple lived in the Guadalupe Mountains, making their home in a “dug-out” and had to filter and boil “run-off” rain water for the family.  It was there that they lost the first of two children, Oscar, when the five-year-old wandered away from the house and fell off a cliff.  Following that incident, Stella declared that she was unwilling to raise a family in that area.  The couple remembered driving cattle through the Hobbs area and relocated there, first to Nadine and then to their homestead south of Hobbs in 1909.  In 1916 their then 2-year-old son, Joel Thomas, was out with his mother gathering “prairie firewood” when he was bitten by a rattlesnake and, despite the efforts of several doctors, died from the bite.  

During their 62 years of marriage, C.B. and Stella filed on, proved up and ranched two homesteads, both Southwest of Hobbs.  The first one was located where the Drag Y is on the southwest corner of Hobbs and took up most of two sections.  C.B. received the patent for that ranch in 1914. The next claim he filed, in 1922, also took up parts of two sections and was located about six miles south of Nadine. State Road 18 now goes through where the homestead 
was.  C.B. was a charter member, officer and Vice President of the Open Range Cowboys Association in Lovington.  He attended every reunion of the association from the first organizational meeting in 1938 until his death in 1966.  He was a sheep and cattle rancher for 57 years in the Hobbs area, cowboying and ranching under the Drag Y brand. He raised mostly Hereford Cattle.  As one of the original Hobbs pioneers, the city of Hobbs name Cochran Street in his honor. Family legend has it that C.B. was in Hobbs for the 1928 oil boom where it is known that he purchased the first ice cream freezer sold in Hobbs. He was a member of the Odd Fellows Lodge, the Taylor Street Church of Christ and was proud of his charter membership and association in the Open Range Cowboy Association.  

He and Stella had six children, four of whom survived beyond childhood: Lila (1905-1995); Wayne Ayers (1909-1993); Charldee (1919-2003) and Dee Alto “D.A.” (b. 1927).  D.A. and his wife, Gerry raised their four children in Hobbs.  D.A. and Gerry still live on land near the homestead. C.B. Cochran died at his ranch home on July 7, 1966 after a lengthy illness.  Stella passed on December 22, 1979.  Both are buried in Memory Garden Cemetery in Hobbs.

Herbert Neil Love
Herbert Neil Love was born in Cottonwood, Texas and grew up in Spur Texas, son of boot makers, Herbert and Donnie Lee Love. He admired the cowboys from the surrounding ranches (including the 6666, the Pitchfork, and Matador Ranches) and when they came into the boot shop, he enjoyed listening to their stories. At a very young age, he developed a passion and love of horses and rodeo. His folks knew that Neil was happiest when he was on a horse and they encouraged him to realize his dream.

As a teenager, working in the family business, Neil began tying up ropes to sell and for his own use. He entered junior rodeos and in 1950, at the age of 18, Neil won “All Around Cowboy” at the Southwestern Championship Junior Rodeo in Post, Texas, the first of many titles over a forty-year span. 

His family moved to Lovington, New Mexico in 1953 just as Neil was drafted into the Army. Neil served in Korea, and upon discharge came to make Lovington his home, learning the boot making craft from his parents. He attended Texas Tech University and was a member of the rodeo team. In 1955, Neil and his teammates captured the National Collegiate Rodeo Association title.

He and JoAnn Bryant married in 1959 in Lovington.  A few years before they married Neil joined the Rodeo Cowboys Association and enjoyed a highly successful career on the rodeo circuit, making the National Finals six of the first seven years that they were held. He won such prestigious events as steer wrestling at Cheyenne in 1963 and calf roping at the Cow Palace in San Francisco in 1964. He also won “All Around Cowboy” at the 1968 Lea County Rodeo. 

In 1968 Neil started “Neil Love Ropes.” Neil designed and built a vertical rope twisting machine still in use today at the rope factory. He operated his rope factory for many years and at the same time kept his horses ready to go. He turned to team roping in later years, and always looked forward to saddling up for another roping. After a crippling stroke in 1995, he no longer competed.  He counted among his friends the rodeo legends Jim Shoulders, Clark McEntire and Sonny Davis. 

In 1970 Franklin Daines, a cowboy and western wear owner from Alberta, Canada invited Neil to his home to conduct a roping school. During instruction time Neil would tell about some of his rodeo experiences. He reminded the students often of how commitment and regular practice would allow the accomplished cowboy to “hang out their shingle” someday. The last evening of the school, the students presented Neil with a shingle of his own which read, “Neil Love – Cowboy.”  Neil passed away in August, 2014.  Neil’s wife, JoAnn passed away in 2018.  He and JoAnn are buried in the Grandview cemetery.  He is survived by his daughter Laurie Harris, son Ray Love, and sister Melba Hamby.

Monday, October 8, 2018

Dia De Los Muertos

The theme for the Western Heritage Museum’s October 27th Family Fun Day is Dia de los Muertos or Day of the Dead from 10 am until 3 pm. In Mexican and Central American countries, Dia de los Muertos is celebrated on November 1 and 2. This celebration is often misunderstood and confused with the western holiday tradition of Halloween but they are very different. We need to understand this tradition, to fully appreciate why its come to be so popular in the United States and around the world.

Many of the traditions of Dia de los Muertos date back to pre-Columbian and Mesoamerican societies in which “death was seen as simply another stage of living.”An article by Fabiola Enriquez-Flores on the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History’s website explains that elements of the pre-Columbian beliefs were combined with Christian beliefs after the Spanish conquest of the America’s. According to Enriquez-Flores, “this eclectic mix of culture and religion is celebrated . . . throughout most of Latin America, but especially in Mexico.”


One important feature of the holiday is the “ofrenda” a temporary altar, decorated with flowers, candles, and pictures of the family members who have passed on. Offerings of fruit, bread, candy or anything that the departed ones may have enjoyed during their life on earth are placed on the altar on October 31 – “All Souls Day.” It is believed that the souls of the departed will return to enjoy some of their favorite things.

The beautifully decorated “Calavera” has become one of the prominent symbols of the holiday and one of the most popular Family Fun Day crafts. Museum staff members make over 200 “Calaveras” or sugar skulls, which will be adorned with colorful icing by the patrons. Another tradition is “pan de muerto,” sweet bread baked for the occasion, served with butter. Children will be able to participate in breaking a “piƱata,” learning to make “flores de papel” (paper flowers), and “papel picado” (cut paper banners).


During the event, musician and educator Sagit Zilberman will present “Songs for Peace” an interactive, family friendly presentation at 11 am and 1 pm. Zilberman, who has traveled throughout the world, spreads her message of peace and tolerance through music. “Since the idea of Dia de los Muertos centers around helping the dearly departed to have a peaceful journey to their afterlife, we think that Sagit’s program will give an added dimension to the event,” said Mary Lyle, Director of Education.


The finale of the day will be the screening of the film “Coco” at 2 pm. Coco, a young boy living in Mexico, dreams of being a musician. But Coco’s family has “banned” music in their home and Coco doesn’t understand why. When he enters the Land of the Dead, Coco finally learns the reasons that he is forbidden to play music.

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Governor's Artist of the Year



Since 1974, dozens of New Mexico's best artists, authors, musicians, and philanthropists have earned the honor of calling themselves Governor's Arts Awards winners.  This year, one of the eight is from right here in Lea County:  Curtis Fort.  Examples of Curtis' sculptures can be found in the Museum throughout the galleries and outside in the Nature Trail.

CURTIS FORT
Sculptor, Tatum
It’s one thing to be a cowboy artist. It’s quite another to be a cowboy artist who occasionally puts down his tools to participate in a cattle roundup. Curtis Fort earned his spurs on legendary New Mexico spreads like the Bell Ranch and the Vermejo. He still lives on his family’s ranch in Tatum, down in the state’s southeastern corner. And despite possessing ranch skills that other cowboys envied, he turned to sculpting in 1980, soon earning accolades, sales, a story in Smithsonian magazine, and collectors as far away as Germany.
“Those of us that live the cowboy way recognize his ability to get even the very smallest detail exactly right,” says State Senator Pat Woods, Fort’s longtime friend. His bronzes combine cowboys, Native Americans, wildlife, and landscapes to tell a true story of Western life and its required amounts of grit.
Like any good cowboy, Fort has also mastered the campfire tale, and he is compiling essays he wrote for the New Mexico Stockman into what promises to be a rollicking book. He also faithfully abides by one of the codes of the West: Help your neighbor. When someone’s in trouble, he regularly whips up an artwork for auctioning off and has crafted Western-themed awards for numerous groups, including New Mexico State University, where he earned a degree not in art but in range science—and made the dean’s list doing it.
What’s Next: “I just installed a big piece in Hobbs’ Center of Recreational Excellence—life-size quail on rocks, a wagon wheel, and other things, with water flowing through. It’s a peaceful thing. I’m fixing to do a four-foot piece of a flamenco dancer for a Las Cruces collector. It’s people like that, the ones who’ve been supportive, buying your pieces. They put you in the position to get the hang of your art. I was just gonna punch cows for life otherwise!”

Monday, July 9, 2018

Classic Film Series: Liberty and Justice

The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame’s Classic Film Series, Liberty and Justice, gives our patrons the opportunity to explore the concepts, which form the basis of our democracy. Our theme is taken from the Preamble to the Constitution, which states: 

            We the People, of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect union establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

            The films chosen for this series demonstrate Americans’ aspirations for their government. In 1776, The Devil’s Disciple, Jefferson in Paris, The Alamo, and Amistad the focus is on “liberty.” In Lincoln, Inherit the WindandSeparate But Equalthe focus is on “justice.”  
            
            Although not always perfect, the constitution has survived the test of time. The Framers of the Constitution established a structure for governing a nation that could insure the opportunity for all its citizens to achieve the goals stated in the preamble. The Framers also understood that this structure would need to be modified and refined from time to time and provided a path for making amendments in Article V of the Constitution. 

            July 9th marks the 150th Anniversary of the ratification of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. The amendment, proposed on June 13th 1866, was needed to insure that the newly freed slaves (by ratification of the 13th Amendment in 1865) were given “equal protection of the law.” During the Reconstruction period that followed the Civil War, many of the former Confederate states enacted “black codes” that severely restricted the rights of black citizens.  

            In the spring of 1866, the Congress of the United States proposed a constitutional amendment that would address the aftermath of the Civil War and Reconstruction: civil rights for blacks, apportionment for Congressional representation, and the Confederate war debt. Despite President Andrew Johnson’s veto, the Congress (with large Republican majorities) overrode the veto and the amendment was submitted to the states for ratification.

            Because Congress made ratification of the 13th and 14th Amendments a condition of regaining representation in Congress, and also because of the presence of the Union Army in their midst, the former Confederate states grudgingly complied. On July 9, 1868, the states of Louisiana and South Carolina ratified the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. 

            Section 1 of the 14th Amendment states: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” There would be no going back from this point forward. 
            
            The second clause states, “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of the law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” This means that the civil rights of all legal citizens are protected against infringement by the states or federal government. 

            Since its ratification, many court decisions have involved the 14th Amendment. But some of its interpretations of have often gone against its original intent. In Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) for example, the Supreme Court ruled that segregated public facilities did not violate the equal protection clause. This decision was used to justify the “Jim Crow” laws. It wasn’t until the Court revisited the “separate but equal” doctrine in Brown v. Board of Education (1954) that the protections outlined in the 14th Amendment were reinforced. Future Justice Thurgood Marshall argued the case in front of the Supreme Court. In a unanimous decision the Court ruled, “In the field of education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place.” The ruling made it clear that segregated schools are “inherently unequal” and therefore the plaintiffs in the case were being “deprived of the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the 14th Amendment.” 

            We will show two films that specifically deal with the 13th and 14th Amendments. On July 15th we will show Lincoln (2012) directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Daniel Day Lewis (in his Oscar Winning performance). The film focuses on President Lincoln’s struggle to pass the 13thAmendment, which freed the slaves. On July 29th we will show Separate But Equal (1991) directed by George Stevens, Jr. and starring Sydney Poitier as Thurgood Marshall. We hope that you will join us for our Classic Film Series: Liberty and Justice, Sundays at 2 pm. Admission is free of charge. 

Sources 
History.com Staff. “14th Amendment.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, 2009, www.history.com/topics/black-history/fourteenth-amendment. 
Amendment XIV, Constitution Center.
Akhil Reed Amar, America’s Constitution: A Biography(New York: Random House, 2005).
Fourteenth Amendment, HarpWeek.
10 Huge Supreme Court Cases About the 14th Amendment, Constitution Center.

Poster Contest Registration


Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame Raffle

Tickets are $3 ea or 4 for $10 and can be purchased at the Museum or from Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame board members now, or when you visit the Fair.  Winners will be announced at the Fair on Saturday, August 11 at 7pm.

Proceeds benefit the NMJC Rodeo Team Scholarships.




Tuesday, June 12, 2018

June Family Fun Day


Celebrate America at the Museum's June Family Fun Day. Our two newest exhibits will be open all day: Chartering Freedom and The Cowgirl Who Became a Justice: Sandra Day O'Connor.

8-11:30am - Chalk Art Contest (registration required)
10am-2pm - Crafts (Color a Pocket Constitution cover, patriotic temporary tattoos, balloons)
2pm - Move: National Treasure

Chalk Art Contest


The Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame invites artists of all ages to participate in first ever Chalk Art Competition on June 30, 2018. The theme this year is “America the Beautiful.” Artists will create their entries on the sidewalks in front of the Museum between 8 am and 11:30 am. Judging will take place at 12 pm and prizes will be awarded at 1:30 pm.

Space is limited and will be assigned on a first-come, first-served basis.

Competition is divided into 3 groups: Grades K-5; Grades 6-12; and Adult

$5 entry fee – secures your spot and includes your chalk. All artists will use chalk issued by the Museum. 

$500 in prizes sponsored by Estacado Federal Credit Union. 1st, 2nd and 3rd places will be awarded in each division.

ALL ARTWORK must be appropriate for public viewing by all age groups. The Museum reserves the right to remove any artwork that does not comply.

DEADLINE: Completed registration forms must be received by 4:00 pm on Thursday, June 28, 2018. Space is limited to the first 30 paid entries.

For more information call 575-492-2678

Click here for the registration form

Friday, May 25, 2018

Chartering Freedom


June 14 - October 20, 2018
The simple truth at the heart of the American Revolution is that people are born with certain natural rights, including "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." These and other rights of the American people are secured by this nation's founding documents, known collectovely as the Charters of Freedom: the Declaration of Independence, Constitution, and the Bill of Rights.
The documents reproduced in this exhibition chronicle the creation of the Charters and their impact on events in this country and around the world. They reveal the story of earlier generations of Americans who had both the vision to see a better world and the audacity to build it.
"Chartering Freedom" is an exhibition featuring reproductions of the Charters of Freedom and other milestone documents that chronicle the conception, creation, and implementation of the Founding Fathers' vision.

This exhibition was created by the National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC, and is traveled by the National Archives Traveling Exhibits Service.

The Cowgirl Who Became a Justice: Sandra Day O'Connor


June 14-November 4, 2018
Prior to Sandra Day O'Connor, no other female in the United States had been given as heavy and as public a yoke to carry in representing women, the West and in turn the best interests of the nation. President Ronald Reagan appointed Justice Sandra Day O'Connor to the United States Supreme Court in 1981; she was the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court since its inception in the late 1700s.
The exhibition features family and public-life photos, ranch artifacts on loan from the Day family, and selected editorial cartoons. Arid desert scenes are juxtaposed with the confirmation hearings and the publicity that surrounded the future Justice.

The Cowgirl Who Became a Justice: Sandra Day O'Connor was organized by the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame.

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Museum Rental






Do you need a place to host your next event?  Look no further than the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame.  We have a variety of spaces available for different sized events at a great price.  Events we have hosted in the past include meetings, luncheons, banquets, wedding/baby showers, birthday parties, weddings, concerts, book clubs and book signings.  We'll work with you on making our spaces work for your event.  Be aware that some spaces and options may NOT be available depending on the exhibits in the Museum at the time.  Let's take a look at some of the spaces available for rent.




The theater is a great place to host meetings.  Our theater-style chairs seat up to 140 and we have a variety of technical options including:  projector, dvd/blu-ray, laptop, and sound system.  The theater has also been the location of birthday parties with their favorite movies.  Other events have included graduations, dance recitals and concerts.  Four hours in the theater will cost $250.

If you need a smaller meeting space, our conference room seats up to 15 and costs $50/hr.




Looking for a banquet space?  The Chuckwagon Room and our Patio are great options.  The Chuckwagon Room availability will depend on what exhibit is in the gallery at the time, but if available, it can seat comfortably 150 people and it will be $250 for the first four hours.  The patio is available for day or night events and can sit about 200 people.  We have coolers for the summer months.  The patio costs $300 for the first four hours.

There are several other spaces you can check out and, if interested, we'll quote you a price.  Check out our Rental Agreement for more information or email Darrell Beauchamp at dbeauchamp@nmjc.edu.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Dr. Samantha Uhrig


Dr. Samantha “Sammie” UhrigDVM from the Desert Willow Wildlife Rehabilitation Center in Carlsbad, NM is the featured speaker.  
            
Dr. “Sammie” as is lovingly known, was born and raised on a cattle ranch outside of Carlsbad, New Mexico. She spent most of her time working on 4-H projects and studying wildlife. In 1988, she obtained her state and federal permits to rehabilitate wildlife, and she and her mother began operating a wildlife rehabilitation facility at the family ranch. They cared for everything from songbirds and hawks to deer and raccoons. In 1998, Dr. Uhrig received her degrees in Wildlife Biology and Doctor of Veterinary Medicine at Colorado State University and went on to complete a Master’s of Science degree in Clinical Sciences, specializing in recognition and treatment of pain in animals. 

Upon her return to Carlsbad, Dr. Uhrig opened her mobile veterinary practice, providing a variety of veterinary services to the residents of Eddy County.

Friday, March 16, 2018

Worms

To the membership receiving the email newsletters for the Western Heritage Museum and Lea County Cowboy Hall of Fame or the Western Heritage Horticultural Society, ya’ll need to come and see this exciting In the Dark exhibit. Bring your kids and grandchildren, even the deep down little kid in you will connect to the exhibit displays and bring back childhood memories.

Helen, from West Texas, Seminole, THANK YOU for the phone call and conversation about this exhibit and what Dr. Dirt was adding to the displays, especially the “living soil profile series”. I greatly enjoyed that one and learned a lot.  Thank you for comments and coming to see the “In the Dark” exhibit too. Dr. Dirt will be adding more information along the way.

Question: What are some other interesting facts about worms in the soil, my yard and garden?
Answer: The term ‘worm’ can have several meanings. Generally, a worm is an immature larval stage of insects, which can be good or bad. Example, caterpillars on plants. Is that worm eating your favorite flower? Bad worm! As this worm pupates, lives to make a cocoon and lives in it for a while and then emerges turning into a beautiful butterfly. Now, this butterfly has become a great pollinator. Other worms, change into hard shell beetles and not so pretty and do damage as living adults.
What I think you are referring to, is the earthworms. They are very beneficial to the soil and they do not eat your favorite flowers roots either.

Did you Know – Facts:
Depending on soil quality, there can be 250,000-1.75 million earthworms per acre of land, in the common soils of Lea County it's closer to the 250,000…lots of worms!
Here’s an interesting note. An average farm with livestock, the weight of the worms beneath the soil’s surface will likely outweigh the livestock that walk on top.
Earthworms can consume half to one times their body weight every day. They are nature's garbage disposers and consume a wide variety of organic matter, tiny rocks; enriching the soil profile.
Certain earthworms can live up to 50-years old and other types living up to 4-8 years of age. Many only live for 1-2years as they are the bottom of the food chain for a great hosts of other animal life.
There are 6,000 species of earthworms known, and a 120 species are widely dispersed around the world.


David Hooten -AKA, Dr. Dirt