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Show THE SPANISH ARCHIVES OF NEW MEXICO THE SPANISH ARCHIVES OF NEW MEXICO 273 that this officer wanted 912 oe SANCHEZ. Intestate. Santa Fe. 1839. nventory of his estate. Gaspar Orti eis Grant, Reported No. 31 Soe ee ae is grant is entirely within the limits of the grant to es pee of Nambé and its eastern bounda ry is the Nish oo ae rme 913 PABLO ORTIZ, bal. Santa Fe. — y grant to the pueblo of Pojoaque. Congress June 21, 1860, but has not Y MIERA 1838. to José Anastacio Sando- House and lot in said cit i AnasSena, Alcalde. y. Felipe o Sandoval to Ayuntamiento of Santa Fe. 1842. Do- nee of the above house and lot. Antonio 914 JUAN JOSE SARRAGINO. Santa Fe. 915 Santa Petition for land on the Pecos. FRANCISCO Mora. 1844. ee Tdstansis. SANDOBAL. it No date. Sena, Regi- Tomas on public lands on the | as SETTLERS establish themselves in the empire shall be considered as naturalized, should they exercise any useful profession or industry, by which, at the end of three years, they have a capital to support themselves with decency, and are married. Those who, with the foregoing qualifications, marry Mexicans will acquire particular merit for obtaining letters of citizenship.”’ By Article 31 it was provided that ‘‘all foreigners who have established themselves No action. de lo de Ortiz, Juez de Primera ment, will remain on the lands which they may have oc- cupied, being governed by the tenor of the law in the distribution of said lands.’’ By virtue of a decree of the Sovereign General Constituent Congress, August 18, 1824, ‘*those territories com- prised within twenty leagues of PLP in any of the provinces of the empire, under a permission of the former govern- Getrudis PE PE. Decision of the Departmental Assembly adverse on the ground that they are frontier lands. Bernardo V. Franco, Secretario de Gobierno. In this archive are a number of signatures of members of the Assembly. The national colonization law of January 4, 1823, by its first article, recites that the Mexican) government ‘‘will protect the liberty, property, and civil rights of all foreigners who profess the Roman Catholic apostolic religion, the established religion of the empire.’’ Pursuant to Article 27, ‘‘all foreigners who come to may of land made to Francisco Sandobal ntonio Garcia. 918 FOREIGNERS Sapello. 1846. PEI 911 September 9, ; 1835. : the jefe 4 politico, it Don Albino ao the alealde of Laguna to report in detail € matters contained in the petiti further proceedings. i. RAFAELA SANCHEZ vs. J Bant ee; Bautista Vigil. Santa uan Fe. 1839. AGAPITO SANDOVAL. Valle de Santa Getrudis de lode Mora. 1844. Land on the Mora river. Tomas Ortiz, Juez de Primera Instancia. The name of Francisco Sandoval is mentioned in the first part of this grant, but it appears that it must be a mistake as Francisco had land there by purchase from Juan Antonio Garcia. No. 915, q. v. EP P7 Poe ne Sees “+Se sete85252 PO Fis ee I On oe 917 7 oo eee ? PIE ? PREP eee) rer wer) oe. ar Los ar se Shai papas RIE PKA By EY. Fa Per o 9-974" * tad a +8 > 3 a Sree a welelste Sete 8e8cicti ts- i ffati) ced re Ss: smbPCPi PEet Pee 7 RIG I PEP LEI ee e Tomas Ortiz, Juez de ey SEP PP e ee Grant. Land on the Mora river. Primera Instancia. Fig oe oe oe oe CP er| al tee e pi the boundaries of any foreign nation, or within ten leagues of the seacoast, can eee to him, in order to give it to the Indians (of Laguna?) = claimed a right to the lands. n view of the foregoing, the petitioner asks th vais of the jefe politico against the arbitrary ae of the alcalde, and in a postscript he adds that the par- sir in the tract had ceded a piece of land to € said none indians, which the latter atter 1gnored i and left un- J re PP ee to take from the petitioner vetiti onethird of the crop which he had raised that year, on the particular portion of the tract which had been assigned |