Jennifer Bohnhoff
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Alexander Grzelachowski: a Famous New Mexican

9/29/2019

14 Comments

 
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Last spring I gave a lecture at the Bear Canyon Senior Center on Civil War battles in New Mexico. Afterwards, one woman in the audience raised her hand and told me that her great-great grandfather had been a chaplain for the Union Army at the Battle of Glorieta. When I asked her if she was Polish, she smiled, knowing that I knew who she was talking about.
Alexander Grzelachowski was born in 1824 in Gracina, Poland. The son of a Polish Officer in the Napoleonic Wars, he became a Catholic priest, then emigrated to the United States in 1847. He served in Ohio until 1851, when he accompanied Jean Baptiste Lamy, the principle figure in Willa Cather’s novel Death Comes to the Archbishop, to New Mexico. He served several parishes, including Manzano’s Our Lady of Sorrows. Grzelachowski spoke fluent Spanish, and his parishioners called him Padre Polaco, the Polish Father.

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Grzelachowski left the priesthood in 1857 to open a mercantile business in Las Vegas, but when the Civil War broke out, he felt compelled to reenter the priesthood in order to serve his adopted country. He became the 2nd New Mexico Volunteers’ chaplain, and played a critical role in the Battle of Glorieta Pass.
Late on the night of March 28, 1862, Major John Chivington and his men became lost in a snowstorm in the treacherous and uncharted terrain atop Glorieta Mesa. Chivington had set out that morning with orders to drop down on the Confederate rear, so that his 400 men and Colonel John Slough’s 800 men could trap Colonel Scurry’s 1,300 Confederate troops between them. Instead, Chivington and his men had strayed off course, gone too far, and found themselves staring down at Johnson’s Ranch, where the Confederates had left their supply train under a light guard. Chivington had destroyed that train, an act that forced the Confederates to retreat to Texas, securing New Mexico for the Union.


PictureGrzelachowski's store in Puerto de Luna
By nightfall, Chivington’s men were struggling back over Glorieta Mesa. What little intelligence they received suggested that Slough’s inferior numbers had failed to hold the field. The men atop the mesa had no idea where they could descend without encountering enemy troops. The night was dark and stormy, and snow fell heavily. Suddenly, an apparition appeared out of the gloom. It was an imposingly large man on a horse so white that it appeared to glow. Many soldiers thought an angel had appeared in their midst. That angel turned out to be Alexander Grzelachowski, who led the men safely around the Confederate troops and reunited them with Colonel Slough’s men. It was not an easy job. In fact, it was so difficult that Grzelachowski’s horse collapsed and died as he led the men into camp. But without the Father, it might have been Chivington’s troops who died by blundering into an enemy camp or succumbing to the elements.
After the war, Grzelachowski returned to private life. He started a family in 1870, marrying Secundina C. de Baca, with whom he fathered at least two daughters, Emma and Adelina. By 1872, the family had moved to Puerto de Luna, a little town on the bank of the Pecos River, about nine miles south of Santa Rosa. Here he opened a mercantile store similar to the one he operated in Las Vegas. He also ran a ranch, raised sheep, cattle and horses, and maintained a large orchard and vineyard.

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Alexander Grzelachowski’s life intersected with many of New Mexico’s most famous and infamous ​citizens. Even though William Bonney, the young outlaw commonly known as Billy the Kid, reputedly rustled horses from one of his ranches, Grzelachowski seemed to have liked the young outlaw. He instructed his store clerks to allow Billy to take whatever supplies he needed. Bonney attended dances hosted by Grzelachowski, and on December 25, 1880, when Lincoln county Sheriff Pat Garrett and his posse was taking Bonney to jail in Las Vegas, the whole group stopped in Puerto de Luna, where Grzelachowski served Billy wild turkey and all the fixings for his last Christmas dinner.
Grzelachowski continued to be active in civil affairs throughout his life. He was the postmaster for Puerto de Luna, operating the post office out of his mercantile store. He also used the store as his chambers while he served as San Miguel county’s justice of the peace. After he helped lobby the territorial legislature for the creation of Guadalupe county from the southern part of San Miguel county in 1893, he served as the new county's first probate judge. Three new commissioners for Guadalupe county were sworn into office in his store.
In 1896, when he was 72 years old, the man often called Don Alejandro was thrown from a wagon while riding to his Alamogordo ranch. He is buried in the Nuestra Senora De Los Dolores Cemetery outside of Milagro, a small town in Guadalupe county.

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Jennifer Bohnhoff is a native New Mexican who has learned about many interesting New Mexicans while researching her two Civil War novels, Where Duty Calls (published in 2022) and The Worst Enemy (to be published in August 2023.) Book Three, The Famished Country, will be published in 2024. 

​She wishes to thank Bernadette Flores for sharing pictures and stories of her illustrious ancestor, who will have a small role in her upcoming book.

14 Comments
Jennifer Bohnhoff
10/6/2019 03:16:38 pm

Soon after I posted this blog, Bernadette Flores, the woman I met at the lecture emailed me with a correction. Alexander Grzelachowski is actually buried in Nuestra Senora De Refugio Cemetery in Puerto de Lunan not in Nuestra Senora De Los Dolores Cemetery outside of Milagro, New Mexico.

But Nuestra Senora De Los Dolores Cemetery outside of Milagro isn't without its notables. The outlaw Jose Chavez y Chavez, who rode with Billy the Kid during the Lincoln County War, is buried there. Ms. Flores says that she doesn't think his grave has a marker.

After the Lincoln County War Chavez was a member of Vicente Silva's gang and spent several years in prison for murdering a San Miguel County sheepherder. Ms. Flores believes the killing was ordered by Silva. Chavez was later pardoned by Governor Curry. Chavez used to brag that it was he who actually killed Sheriff Brady. Historians scoff at that claim.

Reply
Anna
5/29/2024 03:45:17 pm

He is my great grandfather. My father Carlos used to talk about my great grandpa. You did not mention that he had a daughter Leticia... You only mentioned two daughters. Why leave Leticia out? She is buried as well but not next to her father. She's buried next to her husband Adecasio J. Padilla. Alexander Grezlachowski is buried to the left about 20 ft with a fenced off barrier.

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Jennifer Bohnhoff
6/2/2024 01:52:21 pm

Thank you for telling me about Leticia, Anna. I hadn't gotten any information on her. Yours is a fascinating and very large family!

Eva Montalvo
4/17/2020 10:07:10 pm

He was not an actual priest. He pretended to be a priest so that he could come to the US. New Mexico was in need of priest.

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Bartek
1/9/2021 02:15:21 pm

Hello, that was very surprised informations to me - I wasn't know that anyone from Poland was someone knew on Wild West, thanks for that post (I'm polish and sorry for my english language because I'm not using too much anymore since I'm not living in United Kingdom anymore so it is not so good now)

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Jennifer Bohnhoff
2/4/2021 06:16:27 am

There were a lot of important people in the Wild West who had come from Poland. Another one involved in the Battle of Glorieta can be read about here: https://jenniferbohnhoff.com/thin-air-my-blog-about-writing-and-my-books/glorieta-battle-of-three-ranches-ranch-one-kozlowskis-ranch

I think your English is very good, and I'm thrilled that you are reading this!

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Bianca
7/8/2021 12:22:35 pm

Thanks, Jennifer! I just found out that Alexander is actually my great-great grandfather. This is fascinating.

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Karla
1/23/2024 09:20:53 pm

This is so cool because he is my great great grandfather as well!

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Anna
5/29/2024 03:41:51 pm

He is my great grandfather... I love the stories that my father used to tell about my grandpa!

Ronald Henderson
7/28/2022 06:08:20 pm

Fascinating, my great grandma was Rosita Padilla from PDL she told me once that she fed Billy the kid I will have to read that book with the to six shooters on it.

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Cecelia Christina Fajardo link
7/7/2024 07:43:59 am

Hi Ronald, Rosita V Padilla was my grandma. Your grandmother, Mary was my aunt. My mom was her younger sister, Agnes. We lived in Amarillo. I have never heard that Rosita fed Billy the Kid that is so amazing. I heard he taught Rosita's older brother Hilario, how to speak and read in English when he as a boy. I have a blog where I have been writing about our family in New Mexico for years. Check it out. https://christinafajardo.blogspot.com/

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Georgina s
3/19/2023 02:39:19 am

Hello, this is such an interesting blog. I just came from Puerto de Luna trying to get to the cemetery but I did not go in as it was closed, does anyone know if one can access the cemetery or if it is private ? Thank you so much for the valuable information.

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Karla Sue Sullivan
5/29/2024 03:54:09 pm

We will be going through Puerto de Luna at the end of June. I find this all very fascinating! Thank you all for sharing!

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Ruby Grzelachowski Quintana
3/5/2025 03:21:14 pm

Hello,
Alexander was my great grandfather. My father was Alexander P Grzelachowski the son of Oscar Grzelachowski. I am 63 years old and I can remember when I was eight or 9 years old my father would take us to the house in Puerta De Luna. He shared many stories about him.
I am interested in the comment that Eva shared about him pretending to be a priest. I was always told he was a priest and have read that in other publishing's.

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    ABout Jennifer Bohnhoff

    I am a former middle school teacher who loves travel and history, so it should come as no surprise that many of my books are middle grade historical novels set in beautiful or interesting places.  But not all of them.  I hope there's one title here that will speak to you personally and deeply.

    What I love most: that "ah hah" moment when a reader suddenly understands the connections between himself, the past, and the world around him.  Those moments are rarified, mountain-top experiences.



    Can't get enough of Jennifer Bohnhoff's blogs?  She's also on Mad About MG History.  

    ​
    Looking for more books for middle grade readers? Greg Pattridge hosts MMGM, where you can find loads of recommendations.

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