Take A Peek At Los Alamos, New Mexico

Tag: Los Alamos Local (Page 2 of 16)

What’s the Deal With Oppenheimer’s House? Part 2

Last time we explored the original purpose of the Oppenheimer House as a Master Cottage for the ranch school. The first occupant was May Connell, a native New Yorker, also an artist who wanted for her cottage a stone room with enormous windows, light, and warmth. When the Los Alamos Ranch School became home of the Manhattan Project, a very different young woman chose Master Cottage #2 as her home.

When Robert and Kitty Oppenheimer came to Los Alamos, they had the first choice of housing for several obvious reasons. There is plenty of speculation on why Kitty chose May Connell’s cottage as her new home on the Pajarito Plateau, but the primary reasons are probably the most practical. Number one, the house was of a good size for their family. Number two very likely centered on May Connell’s beautiful studio windows. The light in the house was always quite lovely in comparison to other homes on Bathtub Row at that time and still remains so to this day.

The Oppenheimers did not settle into May Connell’s little cottage without needing a few renovations. Some folks might’ve imagined that the glass enclosed sleeping porch would’ve needed attending to, but Kitty and Robert never seemed to mind that feature. It was the lack of a formal dining room that just didn’t go with the Kitty and Robert’s love of entertaining guests in their home as a method of stress reduction.

In order to give the cottage enough space for Robert and Kitty’s love of entertaining guests and social engagements, the Army remodeled May Connell’s modest eat in kitchen into a dining room. A new kitchen was added to the west side of the cottage, and Robert did most of the cooking in this newly renovated room! According to Of Logs and Stone, Robert’s fave dishes to make for family and friends were spicy, exotic offerings from all over the world.

One of Kitty and Robert’s big traditions was to entertain new arrivals to Los Alamos and the Manhattan Project in their home on their first night in town. The night always began with dry martinis, generally two per person, before sitting down to a wonderful meal and conversation. Many times the guests wouldn’t anticipate the effects of strong dry martinis on the body at high altitude and visitors had trouble walking back to their lodgings at the end of the night. I suppose in that way it was good to have everything close at hand in those days!

Once the war years had passed and the Oppenheimers returned to California, Eric and Eleanor Jette were assigned to live in Master Cottage #2. In the winter of 1945-1946, before the Jettes moved in, the Army finally added a second bedroom onto the west side of the cottage. It’s so hard to believe that until that time, the house only had May Connell’s glass enclosed sleeping porch. If I suggested to any of my clients that a family of four move into a home with nothing but a sleeping porch for a bedroom, they’d likely tell me “no thanks”!

After the bedroom was completed and the Jette’s took possession, it’s said that Eleanor Jette was thrilled at the prospect of a bath. Each of the Master Cottages was originally equipped with a cast iron bathtub complete with claw feet! The tub in Master Cottage #2 had tiger feet at its base. Remember that at the time, Bathtub Row got its name because these were the only bathtubs in Los Alamos. Once iron became scare in the war, the US Government changed regulations regarding construction. Bathtubs weren’t plastic back then. They were all made of cast iron, which meant they became contraband during the war years!

Poor Eleanor Jette, finally getting to use her bathtub at Master Cottage #2, had to wait a bit longer when the pipes froze on the night she tried to take a bath in her new housing! The poor woman had to wait a week for her hot bath as the water remained frozen for an entire week and the Army had to bring truckloads up the mountain to keep the town supplied. Can you imagine? Nowadays we’re all feeling abused if the county takes more than a few hours to repair a water outage caused by broken or leaking pipes.

Eric and Eleanor Jette occupied Master Cottage #2 until 1947 when they moved to the Pojoaque Valley. The house was occupied by Frank and Betty Hoyt until the late 1950’s when Bergen and Helene Suydam got the luck of the draw and had the opportunity to choose Master Cottage #2 as their assigned home in Los Alamos. Helene Suydam once told a friend that they were 3rd or 4th on the housing list and only got assigned to the house because they had one more “point” than the other couple tied for their spot on the housing list of Los Alamos. (Housing Points and List information can be found HERE)

The Suydams loved their cottage on Bathtub Row. Helene Suydam used to tell folks that though she never met the Oppenheimers in person, but she once spotted Kitty Oppenheimer and Dorothy McKibbin walking up to Master Cottage #2. Helene speculated that Kitty was showing Dorothy where the Oppenheimers had lived while occupying the Pajarito Plateau during the war years.

The Suydams loved their cottage home and purchased it in the 1960s when the Laboratory offered housing for private ownership. Bergen Suydam worked in T Division until his retirement in 1986 and both he and Helene remained the home’s owners until 2003. The Suydams had long recognized the historical importance of Master Cottage #2 to Los Alamos and the history of the Pajarito Plateau. This led them to the decision to create a living trust agreement with the Los Alamos Historical Society in October of 2003.

This living trust provided a way for the society to preserve the home while the Suydams still maintained the right to occupy their long time home in Los Alamos. A grant from Save America’s Treasures allowed the Historical Society to stabilize the foundation of Master Cottage #2 and they held a dedication ceremony in 2004 when the bronze plaque was unveiled on the cottage. The commemorative plaque celebrating the most historic resident of Master Cottage #2 was the beginning of the home’s “official” handle as “The Oppenheimer House”. Even though it’s called “The Oppenheimer House”, it is still May Connell’s studio window that gives the home much of it’s character and class.

The Oppenheimer House is still in dire need of some serious renovations. In fact, the Historical Society and the Museum have a fund going for folks to contribute to this effort. There are some serious issues with the structural integrity of the home that need to be addressed soon lest it crumble into nothing more than a cool memory of times long gone. The house itself is a bit of a bridge between the different historical identities of Los Alamos itself, which makes it worthy of restoration. I’d encourage you to check out Master Cottage #2, the last house on Bathtub Row, and the scene of so much history here in Los Alamos! Take a drive past, drop by the museum, and have a peek in the windows to get a glimpse into a very real past.

As always, I want to give credit where it’s due! Thanks to the Historical Society, the History Museum, and their wonderful staff for their help on my exploration into The Oppenheimer House! Please stop by sometime and chat with the knowledgeable staff and see the wonderful museum and shop full of books, gifts, and facts about Los Alamos through the years! And when you’re ready to become part of our community here on the Pajarito Plateau, give me a call! I’m a hometown girl who LOVES the funky and often unique bits and pieces about real estate in Los Alamos!

What’s the Deal With Oppenheimer’s House? Part One…

So much of our local Los Alamos history sits suspended between two very distinctly different times and also vastly different uses of the property and structures. When we look at the tourists slow rolling down Central Avenue, we tend to imagine they’re here because of the Oppenheimer film. They stop at the Bradbury and then walk up the street to take pictures with the “two old guys” captured in bronze and posed between Central Ave and Fuller Lodge before wandering over to Ashley Pond.

But the coolest place in town to visit is the History Museum tucked behind the Lodge in what was once the Guest Cottage of the Los Alamos Ranch School. And no feature of the History Museum and Bathtub Row is as historically versatile as what we now refer to as the “Oppenheimer House”. Or rather, the beautiful home and studio that AJ Connell once built for his sister, May.

The Cottage that May Designed

While we often love to focus on the rigorous outdoor education of the Ranch School Boys, (don’t make me get out my boys-ice-skating-in-shorts photo!) Pond and Connell wanted a well rounded education for their students. Ranching, riding, livestock management, engineering, science, and practical skills were always encouraged. But in 1929, AJ Connell brought his sister Mary K “May” Connell to the Pajarito Plateau. May was a New Yorker. She was born and raised in the city, and was talented in music and art. A successful artist before she came to New Mexico, May had no intention of giving up painting, singing, or playing music. With that in mind, AJ Connell built his sister a beautiful new cottage. Officially known as Master Cottage #2, May’s requests and ideas changed the flavor of the school buildings for good!

Craig Martin’s and Heather McClenahan’s book, “Of Logs and Stone” remembers May Connell writing about her Los Alamos Ranch School home many years later. May stated, “My house was built by my brother, AJ, for me. He was the architect. As it was to be my studio, my brother and I talked over the studio plans. I was and am responsible for the rock walls”.

The natural rock walls inside the studio/living room of Master Cottage #2 are one of the most beautiful features of the residence even today. As you can see in the photo of May’s studio above, the rock walls are both unique and yet symmetrical. They seem to draw the focus in the room to the beautiful windows which provided light and inspiration for May’s paintings.

Master Cottage #2 was the only cottage that boasted a “vaulted” ceiling. A stone mason, Marcos Gomez of Alcalde, NM, spent more than a year building the rock walled living room of Master Cottage #2. The walls were 14 inches thick, considered an “economic thickness” at the time, and were built without the use of a level. Gomez had a natural ability to place the rocks by eyesight in such a way that they were both unique and yet level enough not to create problems in fitting the roofline or other features.

May Connell’s warm hardwood floors matched the hand hewn overhead beams and the woodwork around the windows and doors. The stone room was considered the centerpiece of May’s home and she spent her months teaching voice, music appreciation, and painting to the ranch school students while enjoying the view from her windows. A view which was much different to what later occupants of Master Cottage #2 would’ve seen. The photo below shows Master Cottages #2 & #3 against a dramatic backdrop of Ponderosa Pines. If you look long enough at that photo, I’ll bet you recognize the shape of the mountains in the background. There are less trees post fire, but the shape is still the same!

I found it interesting that part of AJ Connell’s willingness to indulge his sister’s desire for the natural rock walls involved rising concerns about fire. Connell’s own “Director’s Cottage” burned to the ground in 1931. At that time, if a structure caught fire and the Pond was iced over, water had to be lugged up from one of the canyons! While we no longer have to carry water up to the plateau from the canyon below, fire is a concern that many of our local residents share and a strong reason why you see so much stucco around Los Alamos!

All ranch school students and masters were expected to sleep on a porch. The sleeping porch below was on the Western side of Fuller Lodge and slept most of the ranch students.

May Connell’s cottage was no different! The Master Cottages provided “luxurious” glass windows on their sleeping porches, but even a glass-enclosed sleeping porch must have been an adventure for city born May Connell.

The original Master Cottage #2 was about 1200 sq ft total. It included a small kitchen behind the studio, a sitting porch in front that opened directly into the stone room, and the small sleeping porch off the rear of the house.

May occupied the cottage until the late 1930s when the school masters began to marry and have families and staff space became a hot issue. (Does that sound familiar to anyone?) Tom and Anita Rose Waring occupied Master Cottage #2 until the Wirth’s needed the space a few years later and the Warings had outgrown the cottage. Every resident who occupied the beautiful cottage with it’s North facing windows and stone room grew very attached to the view and the welcoming warmth that Master Cottage #2 became known for.

Several years later, in 1943, another young wife came to the Pajarito Plateau and occupied Master Cottage #2. Some say she and her husband are the most famous residents to call Master Cottage #2 home. And just as many folks believe the view and the warmth of the stone room to be the reason why sometimes “moody” Kitty Oppenheimer chose this for her home in Los Alamos.

We’ll talk more about Master Cottage #2’s biggest claim to fame next week. Until then, you should know that while you can visit the interior of the Hans Bethe House, the Oppenheimer House (Master Cottage #2) isn’t open to the public just yet. There are structural concerns and worries over restoration and preservation for the moment. In fact, this is a BIG THING here in Los Alamos that far too many people haven’t yet heard about!

I’d encourage all of you to go over and have a peek through the windows of this amazing piece of history. And while you’re there, check out the restoration fund being organized by the Los Alamos Historical Society. This week we focused on the beautiful and peaceful space built for May Connell. Next week, we’re going to talk about the power couple Robert & Kitty Oppenheimer and Master Cottage #2’s contribution to the war effort!

I’d like to thank the Los Alamos Historical Society for their archive photos, and the wonderful staff for their help exploring the Oppenheimer and Hans Bethe houses. In the meantime, if you’re looking for a home in Los Alamos, give me a call! I’ve got some beautiful listings just waiting for the right family. I’m a hometown girl at heart and I love every quirky bit of past, present, and future Los Alamos. Whether you’re buying or selling, I’d love to chat Los Alamos real estate with you!

The Good Old Days

Someone let me borrow a fascinating item the other day and I thought this information might be interesting to some of you. Not to mention the photographs…

This 52 page informational booklet was given to visitors in 1978. This particular booklet is dated March of 1978. As you can see below, the heading is “Welcome to Los Alamos…” The image is an aerial photograph looking westward across the Pajarito Plateau to the Jemez Mountains.

I do find the blurb on the inside flap of this booklet quite interesting. This booklet says it is designed to answer most of the nontechnical questions that visitors ask. As a point of contact for plenty of newcomers to the area, I couldn’t help but wonder what visitors back in 1978 wanted to know. Turns out, not much has changed!

The booklet opens with a brief history of the area. Brief, because they start with, “About 12 million years ago,” and cover archeological information from that time to the Los Alamos Ranch School by the end of page 4. By the way, there is ONE SENTENCE about the Ranch School in this booklet. If you’ve been a member of our community for any length of time, you’re probably already aware of the strange absence of the ranch school’s history here in town until the Los Alamos Historical Society and community members interested in the earlier history of the Pajarito Plateau got active in research and sharing this information with the locals and visitors alike!

The very tiny photo above was included in the visitor’s booklet and comes from a book by General Leslie Groves written in 1962 and titled, Now It Can Be Told. I can’t help but wonder if the purpose was to draw comparisons between the cramped appearance of “downtown Los Alamos” prior to 1948 and the photo below of the Municipal Building and Ashley Pond that appeared on the opposite page. From cramped, wooden “barracks-type structures” to sweeping green lawn and a “modern” (by 1970s standards) civic setup.

The next seemingly big concern of visitors and potential Laboratory employees was what Los Alamos could offer you to do. This certainly hasn’t changed over the years, but I did very much enjoy the old photographs of some of our most popular amenities, so I’ll share them with you!

First on offer, of course, was the opportunity to ski! Check out this photo of the Pajarito Ski Area, still operated in 1978 by the Ski Club. Keep in mind that just behind the Ski Area you see the Valle Caldera. The Caldera was closed to the public at that time due to private ownership. Many locals can recall pausing atop the ski hill for a dramatic view of the Caldera, which you just couldn’t see driving past on State Road 4. There used to be a lot of wistful sighing from hikers, snowshoers, and cross country skiers who would’ve loved the chance to explore the Caldera.

The caption of the photo below actually reads, “While you are here you can play golf…”. These days we expect many small towns to have golf courses. The oldest golf course in New Mexico is the 9 hole course at the Lodge at Cloudcroft, which sits at 9000 ft elevation and has been in operation since 1899. Today there are approximately 97 golf courses in New Mexico. Only 29 of those are municipal golf courses like ours. And back in the seventies you wouldn’t have seen many golf courses at lower elevations due to irrigation issues. It isn’t difficult to imagine how intriguing it would’ve been for visitors and newcomers to play a few rounds of golf with dramatic, natural terrain and views that would probably be downright distracting!

The photo of the skater made me chuckle as it truly appears they cleared enough snow from the ice on Ashley Pond to have her pose there for a lovely photo op. I’ll admit to not having quite enough time to research the status of the Los Alamos Ice Rink in 1978. It’s possible the rink was undergoing renovations at the time the booklet was being put together even though it appears on the included map in the current position. There are an awful lot of old stories floating around town about skating on the pond in the early years. I’ve even heard folks talk of fishing, swimming, and even boating in Ashley Pond prior to the late eighties. So if you’ve ever paddled or skated your way across Ashley Pond, I’d love to hear from you in the comments!

After things to do in town, potential employees and visitors to the Laboratory were curious about what made the Los Alamos Laboratory special. Since supercomputing was just becoming the new hot thing in the seventies, the following photos of the Laboratory’s Central Computing Facility were offered up, most certainly for bragging purposes!

Back when the Laboratory still had family days, (circa 1980s?) I can remember getting a peek at the CRAY computers, which seemed to look a bit like a spaceship to a kiddo at that time. I think all of us knew they were “expensive” and computers were said to “fill a whole room”. But these photos look to my modern mind like rolls of ribbon and fabric at Hobby Lobby, a room full of strange washing machines and dryers, and a kiosk with seats around it. Hmm.

Because the idea of “expensive” in 1978 always makes me curious what that kind of money would look like in today’s economy, I asked Google what a single unit cost in 1978. The answer was in the ballpark of $7 million dollars per machine. Los Alamos had at least seven of these.

In 2024, that $7 million dollar price tag would be $34,576,843.80.

According to the booklet, “While you are here you can play golf, ski, raft down the Rio Grande, hike, fish, and camp, swim and bowl, play tennis, go to museums, attend colloquia, fiestas, Indian dances, and the Santa Fe Opera, tour ancient ruins and modern towns and cities, shop for sand paintings, pottery, jewelry, and hand woven rugs and blankets, and see some of the oldest buildings in the United States.”

Oddly enough, none of that has changed since 1978. What has changed are the expectations and standards of the general public. Folks used to come out here for the outdoor life, for the distinct seasons, for the opportunity to experience dramatic terrain and see a glimpse of wild animal life. So perhaps Los Alamos hasn’t really changed, which is sometimes what we both love and don’t love about it! When you’re ready to join our community, give me a call! I’m a hometown girl who loves to talk Los Alamos Real Estate. And I’d love to hear from you!

4th of July 2024 in Los Alamos!

Happy Fourth of July week everybody! It is so hard to believe that July is already here and the summer is practically halfway over. As many of you know, the Fourth of July is always celebrated here in Los Alamos, but it’s sometimes difficult to figure out exactly what those celebrations will look like. Because there is one significant change this year, I wanted to give folks an important heads up.

For many of the long time Los Alamos locals, we’re used to thinking North Mesa for the Los Alamos Fourth of July Celebration. I can remember gathering at the ballpark or even on the field in front of the Middle School in the old days. Kids would do sparklers and eat junk food while parents enjoyed a day off relaxing with neighbors and friends until the fireworks began. But for a good number of years now, private fireworks aren’t such a great idea and the big display has been moved to Overlook where there is just more space for our booming population to gather and dance to the music!

Overlook Park

The venue for this year will once again be Overlook Park in White Rock. However, if you didn’t know, the Overlook Park complex is undergoing some significant renovations. Because of this, there will be NO PARKING for any of the public unless you have a handicap requirement. This is a change from previous years. Even though you could ride the ATC shuttle, folks were still using some limited parking options. Now the county is saying there will be NO public parking beyond handicap. All parking areas are reserved for vendors and activities. So please check out the county website HERE for a phone number or email if you’d like more info about the parking situation. The county is still advertising shuttle access from the White Rock Visitor Center and from Sullivan Field with regular shuttles beginning at 3PM.

4th of July Spectacular Event Schedule:
4:00pm – The Los Alamos Community Winds
5:00pm – DJ Optamystic
7:00pm – Prince Again
9:00pm – Drone Show
9:15pm – Fireworks Display

Come Support the Local Elements and Enjoy the Guest Performers!

The festivities kick off at 4:00PM with the Los Alamos Community Winds. Don’t miss out on this wonderful local non profit which provides such beautiful and sometimes traditional Fourth of July music. Involving the Los Alamos Winds gives us the opportunity to mix a bit of old school Norman Rockwell style patriotic medleys with some new and innovative sound. You can read more about the Winds HERE!

DJ Optamystic might not be well known, but this Northern New Mexico DJ has been building a following of innovative sounds and effects and is likely a good choice for a time slot when folks are looking to grab some food, talk with friends, wander the booths, and just enjoy the atmosphere. You can find more about DJ Optamystic on the artist’s Facebook page HERE.

Prince Again is a Los Angeles based tribute band showcasing the music and style of one of the most interesting musicians in American pop music culture. While the music of Prince (or the artist formerly known as Prince for some of us), might not be your regular jam. But it certainly sounds like a fun way to belt out lyrics that almost everyone knows in a venue where even the headliner is just an opening act for the main event.

I’m not going to pretend I had any clue what a “Drone Show” was when I first saw this on the schedule. But I checked out the Sky Elements website HERE and I have to say that I’m rather intrigued! It almost looks like a marching band performance if all of the band members were small, LED equipped aircraft. Kind of like modern technology meets Gandalf’s fireworks from Fellowship of the Ring. I think this is going to be a cool way to celebrate the Fourth of July with color and lights and music! But maybe with slightly less fire danger? Certainly seems like a good idea!

And don’t forget our Los Alamos Kiwanis Club who will be providing the fireworks display again this year! Most of us don’t realize just how often our lives are impacted by the Kiwanis Club. You can find them on Facebook HERE. They provide the See’s Candies fundraiser at the holidays, sponsor fundraisers for wildland firefighting efforts, and touch the lives of our students through the Key Club. Check them out and then enjoy the beautiful fireworks this coming Fourth of July!

So this week as we’re reminding ourselves that rain is good, remember that this wet weather is actually the BEST way to start the Fourth of July Celebrations here in Los Alamos! Grab your camp chairs, pack a cooler, and head for the closest shuttle pick up and join your nearest friends and neighbors for a wonderful afternoon and evening of local color and entertainment! And when you’re ready to make Los Alamos your home, give me a call! I love Los Alamos and I’d love to chat Los Alamos Real Estate with YOU!

The Los Alamos Organization & Procedure

This interesting phrase caught my eye when reading the other day. When I first read it, I found my brain automatically going to the laboratory. The Manhattan Project must’ve had an official “Los Alamos Organization & Procedure”, right? There’s probably a procedure manual on every desk today. Or, I suppose it’d be located on a hard drive these days. But surely LANL would need plenty of organizational procedures.

I’m sure they did and still do. But that particular phrase actually referred to something Fermor Church and Lawrence Hitchcock came up with to describe the summer camp at the Los Alamos Ranch School. In reading about the way camp was set up and run, I couldn’t help but contrast it to modern summer camp experiences.

The Three Trip Summer Camp

I’ve talked before about the big overnight pack trips at camp and at the Ranch School in general. In my post about the Los Alamos Diamond Hitch, I discussed plenty about the why of summer camps at Los Alamos. It was primarily financial. And honestly, a good bit of the “how” of summer camps at the ranch school can be credited to the structure of Boy Scouting. Scouting was really developing during that time and Connell required every summer camper to be registered for scouting. In 1919 Connell wrote a letter to one parent stating, “All of our boys are expected to become Scouts the first month of camp. I have just discovered…that [your son] is the only one who has made absolutely no effort to do so. I have told him that he will have to be prepared before tomorrow or he cannot go on the long trip.”

The “long trip” was the final camping trip of the summer camp season. A two week trek by horseback with pack train across the Espanola Valley to the Pecos. If you have ever looked at a map of our region, you might be able to imagine just how grueling that trip would be. On their return, the boys would stop in Santa Fe to enjoy a dance given by the Girl Scouts before heading back to the ranch school.

Scouting provided a list of necessary skills for outdoor survival, a method for learning them, and milestones to track progress. It also provided the ranking and organizational system that would become the heart of the Los Alamos Organization and Procedure.

Hard Life Lessons

Summer camp students, like school year students, were assigned to one of three patrols. Spruce Patrol was reserved for the older and more experienced boys. Pine Patrol was made up of boys with an intermediate range of skills. Fir Patrol was made up of young boys at least 12 years old and up. Patrols were assigned at the beginning of the camp season. From there, a ranking list would come out before each of the three trips. Between trips the boys would earn as many scouting awards and new skills as possible in order to get the best ranking prior to the upcoming trip.

Ranking lists could be changed during the pack trips depending on development and accomplishment of the boys. For the most part rankings determined who was boss of smaller groups within the patrol. There was a rank for everything, even who was boss between the two boys assigned to each tent. Jobs were assigned and lists were posted before the patrols left the ranch school on their trips. At the end of the summer, the staff would hand out awards based on attitude and accomplishments during the summer trips. Awards could be “best camper”, “cleanest tent”, best horseman, “best fisherman”, “best trail cook”, and so on. One kiddo got an award for “best camper” because Connell “bawled him out” all summer long and he never complained to staff, the other campers, or his parents. That sort of suggests what was valued in a camper. I wonder how modern teenaged boys would stack up?

Modern methods would suggest letting the boys “work out who is in charge” because we tend to hope that our kids develop leadership skills in a loosely structured environment. But then, “modern” methods would likely be shocked at the idea of sending 12 year olds with a group of twenty something fresh college graduates miles and miles over rough terrain via horseback where if someone got a snakebite it was likely to end in amputation of the limb at a minimum. There were no helicopter rescues, ambulances, or GPS beacons. If your child didn’t follow the rules, he was toast!

Motivational Pep Talks or Full Metal Jacket?

In 1942, Camper Bill Carson wrote home to tell his parents that during morning announcements, “every boy in the camp was told his faults and what he should do to improve”. AJ Connell was very vocal on his ideas that this was the ultimate way to change boys into men. How are men to improve themselves if nobody ever tells them what they’re doing wrong after all? Connell believed that selfishness was the worst fault a boy could have. Connell told the boys that selfishness was rampant in the world and it was their job to work against it.

Some of Connell’s comments seem right on. Others not so much. I think it’s difficult to digest some of these ideas because they’re from such a long time ago and a very different “world”. If my kiddo came home and told me of such a thing happening at school or at summer camp, I’d probably be on the phone to the director to ask why on earth someone was shaming my kid in public!

And yet, in 1930 Connell sent a young man home from summer camp and told his parents, “[Your son] has been…extremely disobedient, which has resulted in one accident, fortunately not as serious as it might have been. Against absolute orders plainly announced to all, and after being reminded by one of the boys, he insisted on trying to ride and jump a horse that was assigned to another boy, resulting in the horse kicking one of the boys and inflicting a painful injury. In a camp of this kind disobedience is dangerous.” Connell went on to add, “it is very seldom that I have dismissed boys from the camp…only…in cases where necessary for the protection and safety of the boys entrusted to me.”

Perhaps it’s tough to remember that a summer camp experience like the one offered at Los Alamos was a privilege for boys in the early 1900’s. It was the sort of privilege that had to be respected by following rules set out to protect everyone involved. Not just the boys, but the staff, the livestock, and the land.

In 1925 a former camper applied for a military commission in the early days of WWII. Ranch School Master Fermor Church sent camp records with a letter of recommendation that stated: “He made a very good camper and received valuable instruction in caring for himself and equipment under mountain conditions, in the New Mexico Rockies. The camp work stressed discipline, leadership, and general responsibility of both the individual and the group.” It’s such a simple statement without flowery language and yet what a reference in support of a young man who had goals of being in charge of a military unit!

Think about modern reality shows like “Survivor” or “The Amazing Race”. My belief is that the ranch school campers would’ve survived “Naked and Alone” far more successfully than the folks picked for that experience to date. Connell would’ve had them making loincloths out of moss and tree sap!

Lawrence Sill “Hitch” Hitchcock

It seems as though this hypothesis was proved true by a man the campers and students called “Hitch”. Pond and Connell recruited him from Yale where he’d just completed his bachelors degree. He was a Classics scholar, not an outdoorsman. In 1930 he attended the American School for Classical Studies in Rome. He came to the Los Alamos Ranch School because he thought the idea sounded exciting. I suppose you could probably consider him like one of the Greek classical heroes. Traveling to the ‘wild west’ from the ‘civilized’ East Coast area where he’d grown up.

From 1919 until 1943 Hitch taught most of the classes at Los Alamos. His teaching passion was always Latin and he served as headmaster from 1927 until 1943. Once the job at LARS was no longer available due to the Manhattan Project, Hitch went into full time military service. Pond and Connell had always encouraged their school masters to continue their education. After beginning at LARS, Hitch got a masters degree in 1936 in Classics, also from Yale. He studied at the University of Chicago, and he was in the US Army Training Corps and the Army Reserves. That East Coast boy embraced everything the West had to teach him and kept going in the best of ways!

Eventually Hitch continued to be critical to just about everything. He was an Army Colonel and eventually served as the Army Secretary General for a time. He was part of the Inter-American Defense Board and the CIA. He even helped to supervise the construction of CIA headquarters at Langley! Plus, he was a board member of the Los Alamos Foundation from 1940 to 1973 because, as most of us locals have figured out, Los Alamos gets under your skin and becomes an intrinsic part of who you are.

The Real Traditions of Los Alamos

I think what has begun to fascinate me is the long standing tradition of education, outdoor enjoyment, tenacity, resilience, and passion that have always been part of this place. Our modern minds tend to focus so closely on the LANL part of our history. But people have been drawn to this area since before the first settlers in Frijoles Canyon started living in and around the ruins we now call Bandelier. Los Alamos challenges us. And maybe sometimes these challenges change over the years, but they still exist and they still bring us to this place where a good number of us fall in love with the region and never want to leave!

If Los Alamos is calling your name, give me a call! I’m a hometown girl who loves all of the unique and sometimes unexpected things that come with life in Los Alamos. I’d love to chat real estate and life on the Pajarito Plateau with you! If you’d like to read more about the history of the Ranch School, my quotes come directly from John D Wirth and Linda Harvey Aldrich’s book, “Los Alamos: The Ranch School Years 1917-1943”. You can find it at the Historical Society’s website or in the museum at Fuller Lodge. If you haven’t been there, please stop by and visit!

See America First!

As the parking lot in front of our Re/Max First office fills with out of state license plates, I’ve been continually surprised by the distance which some folks travel to come play tourist in our very remote city on the hill. Not that all out of state cars belong to tourists. We have quite a variety of residents here in Los Alamos. I’ve worked with buyers from cities on almost every continent at this point. Our National Laboratory recruits minds from all over the globe in the name of scientific collaboration. But post docs, visiting scientists, and guest lecturers don’t generally have the same look as your run of the mill tourist.

Sure. Tourism here in Los Alamos got a boost from the recent Oppenheimer film. But I started thinking about tourism in general. When I was reading some research materials for last week’s blog post about Camp Hamilton, I ran across a reference to something called the “See America First!” campaign. This campaign was said to have helped the original owner/operator of Camp Awanyu (later Camp Hamilton) grow his business offering automobile tours of the Pajarito Plateau. So, I started looking around for what this “See America First!” campaign was all about.

Turns out it isn’t necessarily called that. The campaign was more of a movement, and the timing was heavily influenced by the Panama-California (also called Panama Pacific) Exposition in 1915. The Exposition was a 600 acre fair that covered 2.5 miles of San Francisco waterfront to celebrate the completion of the Panama Canal. But that’s on the West Coast. In the early 1900s a LOT of our population was mostly centered on the East Coast and in the South.

The OTHER thing going on was the expansion of a National Highways and Byways system. Most of us are familiar with Route 66. We also see plenty of signs in the Santa Fe area about the National Historic Roadways or National Historic Trails because the Santa Fe Trail is a pretty big deal in American History, right? In 1912, The National Old Trails Road, also known as the Ocean-to-Ocean Highway. It was 3,096 miles long and stretched from the New York City/Baltimore, Maryland area to San Franciso, California. Eventually this “official” roadway was decommissioned and the Western portion became part of Route 66. Looking at the map below (you can find a version of this map HERE), it becomes pretty obvious why Camp Awanyu and the Pajarito Plateau became a great place to stop and see the wild and beautiful scenery of the Southern Rocky Mountains. There’s literally nothing else around!

Something else that drives tourists up the winding switchbacks of our Main Hill is the very long habit of people living in the US to plan domestic vacations. If you spend much time talking to folks from outside the US, you’ll find that they take their “holidays” in countries other than their own. When Americans leave the Lower 48, it seems like they’re usually headed to Alaska or Hawaii. A lot of that has to do with timing and geography. The United States is HUGE! You could spend a lifetime traveling inside our borders without seeing it all. Many Americans never bothered with a passport and plenty of Americans have lived and died in this country without ever having one.

I was rather surprised to learn that part of the “See America First!” campaign was literally designed to make that a long standing American tradition. According to Marguerite Schaffer’s book, “See America First: Tourism and National Identity, 1880-1940”, there was a growing trend of “upper middle class” folks having enough time and income to travel. As you can imagine, it became a concern of railroad owners, car makers, and domestic businesses that Americans would use their leisure time and money to travel to Europe. A marketing campaign got rolling and then the Parks Service got involved in 1920 when advertising began to convince the general public that National Parks were also a National Asset.

Considering Los Alamos is a small town literally stranded in the middle of three enormous National Parks, I suppose WE are also a National Asset. Not that any of us had a doubt…

This idea of traveling within the continental United States was said to promote nationalism and a sense of American identity. But the widespread ownership of cars took that concept to the next level! Instead of going on a train to a specific destination, driving your own car to a vacation destination allows you to experience a new place in unique ways. You see parts of the rural countryside you’d never see if you were headed to a train station. The same holds true for air travel. Have you ever “flown through” a city without actually experiencing any of the local flavor? It’s hard for us to imagine what it would have been like to have NEVER driven your own car through a rural town or viewed sights like the wind turbines and oil rigs all over Texas and Oklahoma from the window of your family car or van.

Put in this context, it seems obvious that a place like Camp Awanyu would become a hot vacation destination in the early 1900s. It must have been like a trip to Mars for those East Coast visitors. Riding in an open seven passenger vehicle up the twisting road to Buckman Mesa before climbing all over prehistoric ruins? I can’t begin to imagine how cool that must’ve been! Probably just a shade cooler than it is now.

Visitors and tourists come to Los Alamos everyday, but some of us have the opportunity to enjoy everyday life here in Los Alamos! When you’re ready to chat about buying or selling your dream home in Los Alamos, give me a call!

What about Camp Hamilton?

There’s a lot of talk in town about Camp May. I did a post on it a few weeks ago and you can visit that HERE. But Camp May wasn’t the only staging area used by the Los Alamos Ranch School for fun outdoor adventures. Camp Hamilton was more well known by the boys than Camp May and the cabin at Camp Hamilton eventually became part of the Ice House during the Manhattan Project. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves.

If you Google Camp Hamilton and Los Alamos you’ll find dozens of references to trails. A connecting trail, the Ranch School Trail, the Camp Hamilton Trail, and even the Tent Rocks Trail which intersects with the Camp Hamilton Trail at one point and has an interesting and entwined history with Camp Hamilton. The existing Camp Hamilton Trailhead is located down near the county maintenance buildings on Camino Entrada. From here you can still hike down to the remains of the old cabin which used to play such a huge part in the Ranch School Boys’ introduction to life on the Pajarito Plateau. The actual remains of the cabin sit on the southern edge of the decommissioned Bayo Canyon Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Camp Hamilton wasn’t called that to begin with. It was Camp Awanyu. The man who obtained the first land leases for that beautiful spot in lower Pueblo Canyon is known as F. Coomer. Nobody knows what F stands for, but the man did quite a booming business with his Rocky Mountain Camp Company. At that time, the West was becoming a popular vacation destination. Beginning in the first few decades of the 1900s, the “See America First” Campaign was being advertised to Americans nationwide. Automobiles were becoming more common. Folks were starting to travel. And the Rockies became a popular place to visit!

Coomer guided travelers and tourists through the Pajarito Plateau’s beautiful scenery using cabins like the one he built at Camp Awanyu as staging areas. One of the things that made his location such a great starting point is the same reason so many of our still popular trails cross each other within just a few miles or yards of each other in that area. The local collection of tent rocks, Tsankawi, and the Buckman Mesa were very popular geographical features with tourists in the 1900s just as they are today. Coomer utilized seven passenger vehicles to cruise through the canyons and show his guests the amazing West.

When Coomer gave up the tour business in 1926, the parents of a Los Alamos Ranch School student named Sam Hamilton donated enough money for the school to buy out Coomer’s land lease and renovate the cabin. The ranch school added a kitchen, a stone fireplace, and a window with a view down the canyon. Because of it’s accessibility by car, it’s location in the midst of the Ponderosa Pines and the closeness to other trails, sites, and ruins, the ranch school began using Camp Hamilton as a place to introduce new students to life on the Pajarito Plateau.

Many of the younger boys just starting school didn’t have much experience with riding. They couldn’t tie a diamond hitch or balance a pack pannier. They needed some time to be introduced to outdoor skills that would become the backbone of their success at LARS. Camp Hamilton became just that.

This doesn’t mean the older boys didn’t find Camp Hamilton useful. There were several older students who used Camp Hamilton as a base camp to study and photograph nearby ruins and geographical features. While the older boys were at Camp Hamilton, they often acted as camp counselors, cooking, cleaning, and helping to introduce their younger schoolmates to outdoor life. The older boys would generally come down from the ranch school by horseback utilizing what we now call the Ranch School Trail.

If you have the chance, hike the Camp Hamilton Trail or the Ranch School Trail in order to check out the incredible views. It’s so cool to see solid evidence of the amazing can do attitude of the Los Alamos Ranch School boys! Several stacked stone retaining walls still hold the trail in place on narrow ledges and in several areas deep grooves had to be cut into the volcanic tuff using picks and other hand tools. The trails are considered to be some of the oldest purpose built equestrian trails in the region and were intentionally created using switchbacks to allow pack animals to pass up and down.

The cabin certainly doesn’t look today as it did when the boys were enjoying it. Some trail bloggers have declared it to be in “deplorable condition”. A good portion of it was salvaged to build the Ice House during the Manhattan Project era. But the current condition of the cabin doesn’t negate the wonderful history of that area. A place where young students of the Los Alamos Ranch School learned to live, work, and play in the unforgiving conditions on the Pajarito Plateau.

Nowadays, Camp Hamilton can serve a similar purpose to those who hike down for a peek and a few gorgeous photographs. Life in Los Alamos is soaked in history, scenery, and unique experiences! So when you’re ready to join our unique community, give me a call. I’m a hometown girl who loves to chat about real estate in Los Alamos!

Looking for more info on Camp Hamilton? I’ve enjoyed Sharon Snyder’s blog post for the Los Alamos Historical Society HERE. You can also find some excellent trail descriptions from the Los Alamos Woods Wanderer HERE.

What Are YOU Doing This Summer?

Maybe it’s because my middle child is getting ready to graduate from high school this weekend, but I’ve really got summer on the brain lately! The sun is out. The breeze is cool. The sky is blue and I’m super excited to see what things are happening in Los Alamos this summer!

Tuesdays @ the Square

This super fun summer event happens every Tuesday evening June 11-July 23. The beautiful stretch of lawn beside Boese Brothers in the Central Park Square. Grab dinner at a nearby restaurant or bring it with you and sit on the lawn and enjoy the live music!

Featured bands are all from our local regions. The music will be a mixture of jazz, folk rock, swing, and Tejano sound. The opener on June 11 is Candace Vargas, a 22 time award winning female Tejano vocalist known for her incredible voice and sound. She performs with the Northern 505 and I hope everyone heads out to enjoy this great performance to kick off a wonderful summer of fun! Learn more HERE.

Science Fest!

No summer in Los Alamos would be complete without Science Fest! This year’s theme is Creative Energy. Registrations are open now for some of the coolest parts of this event so I hope everyone clicks on the link and gets their kiddos signed up for a great time!

Discovery Day is on July 13 this year and promises to be just as educationally engaging as past years. The bulk of the fun stuff for kiddos happens between 9AM and 2PM. There will be food, music, fun crafts, exciting experiments to play with and plenty to learn! From noon to 2PM there will be “Beer & Music” for adults. Central Avenue is closed for this event and booths will be set up at Ashley Pond and on the lawn at Fuller Lodge. Don’t miss this amazing annual event!

Discovery After Dark was previously called “Play Crawl”. This is Science Fest for Adults! Get a team of your smartest friends and challenge yourselves to tabletop math games, astronomy challenges, and a whole list of other fun things to do around Los Alamos! Check out the Science Fest website for more information.

Los Alamos Summer Concert Series

No summer in Los Alamos would be complete without our Gordon’s Concerts! Of course, they aren’t called that anymore. But Conoco Hill is still Conoco Hill to a lot of us and in the same way, the concerts will always belong to Gordons.

Concerts kick off THIS WEEKEND with the Powell Brothers on May 24! Come out and enjoy food trucks, bounce houses, and all of your friends and neighbors as we get outside and LOVE the heck out of Ashley Pond for the Summer of 2024! You can see a full concert lineup HERE.

Pajarito Environmental Education Center

It doesn’t matter if you’re looking for a quick place to stop and let the kids burn off some energy, or you’re looking for a film about the National Parks. PEEC has you covered! This summer the PEEC has a full schedule of events for all ages. Most events are free and all of them are fun and educational. Check out their schedule for the latest information on Nature Walks, films, Astronomy tutorials, Planetarium presentations, and of course, summer CAMPS!

So whether you’re looking for something fun for yourself, a special night out, or events to keep the family outside moving and shaking all summer long, Los Alamos has you covered! And when you’re ready to buy or sell your home here in Los Alamos, give me a call! I’d LOVE to talk Los Alamos Real Estate with you. And Congratulations Hilltopper Class of 2024!

The Los Alamos Diamond Hitch

As I’m seeing a good number of advertisements and flyers for summer programs here in Los Alamos, I’m reminded of the importance of summer camps to businesses in Los Alamos. Summer camps benefit the public who enjoys them. But summer camps are also how a good number of businesses stay afloat! In fact, that was how the Los Alamos Ranch School stayed afloat starting in 1917. The last summer camp season was in 1941 although AJ Connell ran a skeleton operation in 1942. The last official full camp season was the summer of 1941.

In the minds of AJ Connell and Ashley Pond, boys became good men through contact with nature. In Connell’s mind, a boy shouldn’t come to the Los Alamos Ranch School as a student if he didn’t attend summer camp. Initially this caused some problems. When Pond first started the school, his vision allowed boys to spend weeks, months, or years at the ranch school depending upon health needs and family willingness. But this method of open door attendance created both financial and administrative issues.

For those of us who operate a business in Los Alamos, the financial challenges have NEVER been other than they are. The area is remote. It’s not easy to get supplies or customers up here and never has been. At that time the access to the Los Alamos Ranch was barely passable by car. During the summer of the first camp in 1917, they were still using horse or oxen drawn wagons to get supplies up the mountain. So having a steady income from camp and school tuition became critical to ranch operations.

With that in mind, Connell and Pond made their first change within a few years of the school starting up. Students were supposed to be at school year round. Of course, families weren’t too excited about this notion of only seeing their sons during holidays or short breaks from school. If you think about it from a slightly different angle, if your goal is to have your son take over the family business you don’t want him disappearing for 4-6 years before that happens.

Eventually, the summer camp became popular all on its own and the summer boys were generally an entirely new group from the regular school year boys. Summers were about long pack trips. In the early years, Connell used to take the boys out on at least three different pack trips for nearly three weeks apiece. The most important thing the boys would learn is the diamond hitch. The knot is popular with outfitters everywhere, but the Los Alamos Ranch boys learned the Los Alamos Diamond Hitch. It kept the cinches tight, the pack loads steady, and prevented the mules and horses from getting rid of their packs via scraping them off on a tree, rolling them off in the mud, or bucking them off just for kicks.

It’s unlikely that many of us in the modern era have learned the lessons those boys were taught. It isn’t algebra or essay composition, but the skills you pick up from backpacking or outfitting with horses and mules are character development at its core.

The wrangler would lead, the director would bring up the rear. There were generally more than thirty riders, fifteen packhorses, a mule or two, and a few camp dogs. That’s nearly fifty head of stock. The outfit had to stay on schedule with the boys learning to get their horses to walk at the fast pace instead of trot in order to prevent saddle sores on both boys and horses. Days in the saddle ended by caring for your horse, “pitching and ditching” your tent, and then crashing in your bedroll after a meal and songs around the campfires.

Can you imagine what it would’ve been like to be a staff member? How exhausted would you be? Modern summer camp situations usually allow for camp counselors and directors to go home, put their feet up, and maybe enjoy a glass of wine. Out on the trail you were glad to get in a few rounds of poker and a slug of whiskey before dropping from pure exhaustion only to wake up and do it again.

The routes were generally fairly set for each pack trip. This map shows some of the trails used with camp spots designated by small triangles. “Baca Location No 1” is in the region of the Valles Caldera. I think that’s what intrigues me the most. AJ Connell’s brother and his business partner eventually purchased the Baca Land Grant, the Valles Caldera, and the school had permission to ride that country on their pack excursions. The views would’ve been spectacular. The experience unmatched. And I cannot begin to imagine just how amazing a summer here at the Los Alamos Ranch School would’ve been!

So find a summer program for yourself and the family! Find a camp, a tour, a hike, a trail run or something fun to do outdoors. Make this summer the best one yet! And when you’re ready to buy or sell your home in Los Alamos, give me a call! I’m a hometown girl and I love to chat about real estate in Los Alamos!

Unconventionally Educated in Los Alamos

I think there are two things that almost all Los Alamos Public Schools alumni can agree upon. One: the education a student receives from the schools in Los Alamos is excellent! Two: the education a student receives from the schools in Los Alamos tends to be unconventional.

Why unconventional? If you spend any time at all on Central Avenue you’ll probably notice a LOT of tour busses, out of district yellow school buses and a significant number of vehicles with out of state plates. They’re coming to Los Alamos to learn about science. To study history. To follow the US Parks Service Tour of the Manhattan Project Historical Sites. But they’re all here to learn. The actual source of what they want to learn is part of the daily lives of average citizens here in Los Alamos. So I suppose living here in town means you’ve got access to a lot of knowledge!

I’ve heard stories of fellow LAHS alumni bemoaning that their Physics teacher actually wrote the textbook. We have outdoor classrooms and guest speakers from LANL in all of our schools from elementary to high school. When Jean Nereson was still teaching in the elementary schools, she utilized teaching aids she had literally brought back from her travels to every continent on the planet. She wasn’t the only one. Our teachers have traditionally been some of the most intelligent and capable scientists, doctors, historians, writers, and musicians in their own right. And that’s before we take into account the incredible cooperation between UNM-LA and our public schools or the possibility of a high school internship at a National Laboratory.

But that unconventional and sometimes eclectic education began much earlier than the scientific laboratory. In fact, it started at the beginning. When AJ Connell approached Yale graduates and asked if they’d like to sign on for an adventure!

Come on! What could be more adventurous than signing on to teach between 6 and 9 boys of varying ages at a high mountain ranch school far from “modern” civilization in an area so remote that you had to grow your own food? In 1918 that was the status of Ashley Pond’s and AJ Connell’s Los Alamos Ranch School.

In September of 1918, AJ Connell was joined at the Los Alamos Ranch School by Fayette Samuel Curtis, Jr. “Fay” Curtis, as he became known, had only just graduated from Yale in June. He’d been struggling to overcome tuberculosis, and he would be responsible for teaching all subjects because that’s all the school could afford one master.

The only goal at the Los Alamos Ranch School was that the students would show success and development. They were to learn. How the masters managed this was left entirely up to them. Which is probably why the boys learned so much, so well, and went on to become amazing members of society.

One LARS graduate later recalled shooting craps with the masters using algebra problems and latin lines as currency and allowing luck to determine whether the students had more or less homework. Fermor Church, the school master who later married Ashley Pond’s daughter Peggy, utilized environmental attributes such as the slope of ski hills to illustrate gradients, help students understand geometry, and also as a way to demonstrate principles of physics and geology. He was also known for demonstrating gravity by having boys plunge their hands into boiling water at ten thousand feet altitude!

It seems to me that the largest benefit of the way LARS was run was that school masters and staff were encouraged to continue their own learning. Oddly enough I often think that the fireplace in Fuller Lodge hosted many of the same kind of discussions the beer garden at Bathtub Row Brewery does now. The common denominator is young, highly educated, intelligence professionals. They love to gather and chat about the latest advancements in their fields, possible ways to get more information about new ideas. How to test hypothesis and develop new and better ways to do things. This is how great learning happens. And here in Los Alamos we’ve got this down to an art. Or perhaps a science…

Regardless of your educational background, I hope that as we come to the close of this school year, you consider all the ways in which you and your family can keep the positive learning happening this summer. Attend Science Fest! Hit the PEEC for their summer programs. Attend a talk, a concert, or see a play. The best ways to learn in Los Alamos don’t always happen in the classroom! And when you’re ready to join our unique community on the hill, give me a call! I’m a hometown girl who would love to chat about real estate in Los Alamos with you!

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