Holy Cross at Deming, New Mexico
by Sr. Maria Assunta Werner, C.S.C.
On
May 12, 1923, the Sisters of the Holy Cross dedicated Holy Cross Sanatorium in
Deming,
Luna County
,
New Mexico
. The Bishop of
El Paso
,
Texas
, the Most Rev. Anthony J. Schuler, S.J., officiated.
Mother M. Aquina, CSC, Superior General, saw the completion of many
months of work.
Mother Aquina had been looking for a suitable place for a sanatorium for
Sisters suffering from tuberculosis and when she received a letter from the Rev.
G.C. Van Goethem, pastor of both Holy Family and
St. Ann
’s Churches in Deming, asking for Sisters to establish such an institution
there, she and her Council agreed to purchase and staff it.
The Sanatorium was located three miles northwest of the city of
Deming
in the
Mimbres
Valley
. It was surrounded by the
Black
Range
of the Rockies to the north, the Three Sisters to the south, and the
Floridas
to the southeast. Deming has an
altitude of 4330 feet with a mean humidity of 40%, a mean annual temperature
between 59.6˚ and 62.3˚, an average rainfall of 10”, and at least
330 days of sunshine. The winters
are mild and the summers warm but not uncomfortable with cool nights.
A few sandstorms blow up in the spring.
The whole valley boasted an unlimited supply of 99.9% pure water,
according to government tests. The
Sanatorium had wells about 177 feet deep with tans holding 100,000 gallons each.
The water was pumped by both steam and electric power; a booster pump
elevated the water to another tank 65 feel higher.
There was plenty of water for use within the sanatorium and for
irrigation. The soil was fertile and
there was, later, a large vegetable garden.
Wild grass, good for feeding cattle, mesquite, yucca, and cacti grew in
the surrounding countryside.
The sanatorium had not been built as a tuberculosis hospital. originally,
it had been constructed by the War Department during World War I for military
purposes, and the structures of temporary nature on land leased from the Chamber
of Commerce of Deming and named
Camp
Cody
. The buildings were unpainted frame
with substantial walls. They were
set on 240 acres of land which the Chamber of Commerce had leased from various
individuals and then to the government as a blanket lease.
After the war the government was eager to dispose of the property in some
way. Its way was salvage.
The eighty buildings were in good shape, but there was no longer any use
for them. The War Department
salvaged some of the buildings, but 40 buildings were turned over to the
Treasury Department for hospital purposes and were for the care of tubercular
soldiers.
Before the salvage was completed by the Treasury Department, several
estimates were gathered about the value of the remaining buildings.
In March 1922 R.O. Ferguson, custodian of the camp, wrote to Assistant
Secretary of Public Health, Edward Clifford, “(A)t salvage property prices the
property and materials here are worth more than $200,000,” a price later
considered “ridiculous.” Another
estimate put the buildings at $100,000 and if salvaged at $50,000.
A Deming contractor and builder, a Mr. Roach, was asked by Senator Bursum
to give his estimate. His opinion
was that the government would lose at least $2300 in the total salvaging
process. J.E. Morgan, another
contractor, put the government’s loss at $18,000.
In the opinion of both men the lumber would be useful only for building
pig-pens and cowsheds, with splinters for kindling.
In March 1922 thirty-five buildings remained on the property, large and
small. At the request of the Hon. H.
O. Bursum, United States Senator from
New Mexico
, the Department advertised the property for sale on February 21, 1922, bids to
be opened on March 15. In a letter
to Mr. Clifford, Senator Bursum wrote,
I
certainly do not believe that the public will justify wrecking and salvaging and
converting hospital buildings into kindling wood, pig-pens and cow sheds,
especially when there is an opportunity to preserve the establishment for useful
purposes to serve health seeking people and utilize the same for the purposes
for which the construction was originally made.
If there were no other alternative, except perhaps to permit the
improvements to decay and remain idle, in that event salvage of most any kind
providing it did not cost more than was recovered, would be justified.
In view of these circumstances, I urge that the sale on the basis on the
modified bid is more than justified and that it would be the best of public
policy to do so.
The bidder was J.A. Mahoney, acting for the Deming Chamber of Commerce
but also the President of the Parish Council of Holy Family Church in Deming.
The intention was to arrange with a religious organization to run a
hospital for tubercular patients. Finally,
the sum of $10,000 was agreed upon and paid by the Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Mahoney had the backing and help of the Bishop, Senators Bursum and
A.A. Jones of
New Mexico
, Secretary A. B. Fall of the Interior Department, Governor Merritt C. Mechem,
and W.J. Cochran of the National Catholic Welfare Council.
Later, the Chamber of Commerce purchased additional land from various
owners, for example E. Dagen of Blue Earth,
Minnesota
, and B. Watson Points of
Covington
,
Virginia
.