Lake Valley Cemetery

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This page highlights the Cemetery near Lake Valley townsite, New Mexico. It includes:

~ Stories we know of people buried in the Lake Valley Cemetery.
~ A detailed spreadsheet and map to the graves for the Lake Valley Cemetery known at this time.

If you have information about any person or family in the cemetery, please contact us to share your information. Every story is important to more understanding of our area’s history. We thank you!

Please contact us at hillsboronmhistory@gmail.com

Selected Stories from Lake Valley

Dr. William Guy Beals ~ 1853 - 1937

Dr. William Guy Beals (3/21/1853 – 12/24/1937) was born in Flint, Michigan and received his medical training in homeopathic medicine in Chicago. By 1887 he was practicing medicine in El Paso but soon moved to Sierra County, New Mexico. In 1889 he summoned his Michigan sweetheart, Ida Ann Morrish, married her in Hillsboro, and promptly moved to Gold Dust to try placer mining while serving as a doctor. Soon he claimed a homestead at Tierra Blanca where his brother Carl had homesteaded. There he established a tuberculosis sanitarium and became the little towns postmaster. With the decline in mining and a growing family, he moved to Lake Valley in 1907 to become the local doctor. Ida died in Hillsboro and Guy in Arizona, but both, along with other members of the family, are buried in the Lake Valley Cemetery. (Location 29)

James Robert Latham ~ 1841 - 1903

James Robert Latham (3/29/1841-8/15/1903) grew up in Live Oak County, Texas, where he enlisted in the Confederate Army in 1862. After his army duty he married Ann Eliza Faulkner in 1865 and devoted himself to ranching and growing a large family. In 1884 they decided to leave West Texas for New Mexico, eventually settling with their ten children on Macho Creek a few miles west of Lake Valley. James Latham and his children became prominent in the areas ranching business, raising cattle and later angora goats. James and his wife and at least six of his children are buried in the Lake Valley Cemetery. (Location 23)

Lake Valley Cemetery Mapping

Explanation of Lake Valley Cemetery Drone Map and Grave Sites

The Lake Valley Cemetery is located on a slight hill across Highway 27 south of the town. The grave location map shows a large fenced square with the top facing roughly northeast. The entry gate is at the bottom-left of the map. The graves that we can now identify with persons are marked with red numbers, each number often representing more than one grave. Visitors to the cemetery will observe that there are probably more unmarked than marked grave sites.

The early history of Lake Valley had a residential separation of the Anglos and Hispanics, with the Anglos living primarily in the area of the still-standing buildings and the Mexican-Americans to the west in a section referred to as Little Chihuahua or Chihuahuita. The cemetery seems to reflect this ethnic segregation. The known graves with Spanish surnames are all west of the little road that curves around to the east. We start our numbering from this Mexican-American section.

 The accompanying list of 125 individuals known to be buried in the Lake Valley Cemetery (link above) includes many for whom we know their grave sites. For these we provide an approximate Location with a number marked in red on the map. There are others for whom a death certificate or obituary indicates burial here, but we have been unable to identify a specific grave sites.

 
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