WPA William E.
Kimbrell
Writer:Edith L. Crawford
Carrizozo, N. Mex.
Narrator: William E. Kimbrell,
Carrizozo, N. Mex.
AUG 9 - 1938
PIONEER STORY
I was born at Picacho,
Lincoln County, New
Mexico, on July 16, 1877, and have lived all of my life ln Lincoln County.
I attended the public schools near home and for one term of nine months I went
to the New Mexico Military Institute, at Roswell
New Mexico. I was the youngest
son of George and Paulita (Romero) Kimbrell. My father was born in Huntsville Arkansas,
March 31, 1842. He went to Colorado with the Pike's Peak Crowd in 1859, with two of his friends. They
traveled by freight wagons, and paid for their board and transportation by
doing odd jobs for the freighters. He got sick while working in Colorado and in 1860 he left there to come to New Mexico. He came on
an ox train and landed in Las Vegas
New Mexico. He did any kind of
work he was able to do there until he regained his health. He left there in
1863 and came to Fort Stanton,
New Mexico, and worked there for
awhile as a government scout. In 1864 he squatted on a place on the Chaves
Flats, about twelve miles east of Lincoln, New Mexico, where he farmed and raised
cattle. He raised lots of corn and freighted it to Fort Stanton
by ox team and sold it for ten dollars a fanega,
(which was one hundred and fifty pounds). The Indians stole all his cattle but
his oxen and he had to do all of his farm work and plowing with his oxen. He
married my mother in 1864. My mother's people came from Manzano
New Mexico to Lincoln,
but I do not remember the date. My father and mother lived on the Chaves Flats
until 1877 when they moved to Picacho, New Mexico,
and homesteaded on one hundred and sixty acres. He lived on this place until he
died on March 25, 1924. He had lived in Lincoln
County
sixty-one years, at the time of his death. He served as Justice of the Peace in
his precinct for a great many years. He was elected sheriff of Lincoln
county
and took oath of office on January 1, 1879 and served until December 31, 1880.
He succeeded George W. Peppin, who was appointed by
the County Commissioners
in 1878 to fill out the unexpired term of William Brady, who was killed by
Billy the Kid. The Lincoln County War was just about over when
Father went in office, but it was during his term that Billy the Kid came in
and surrendered. Father never took sides with either faction during the war. He
ran against Pat Garrett for sheriff in November 1880 and Pat Garrett defeated
him by one hundred and forty votes. There were only five hundred votes cast in
this election. I was married to Virginia Romero on January 1, 1904. We have
nine children, six girls and three boys, all living in Lincoln
County
at this time. I have been County Clerk
of Lincoln County,
serving for two terms, (eight years), from January 1, 1905 to December 31,
1908. I was Probate Judge for two terms, from January 1, 1915 to December 31,
1919, and was County Assessor for two terms, from January 1,
1931 to December 31, 1934. I have served as Deputy County Assessor for the past four years. I still own the old
homestead at Picacho that my father filed on in 1877,
and call it home, as I live there when I am not working in the county seat of Lincoln
County.
NARRATOR: William E. Kimbrell, Carrizozo,
N.M. Aged 61 years.
Pasted from <http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/D?wpa:15:./temp/~ammem_DBXg::>