Griggs, George, 1866-1939
Name Entries
person
Griggs, George, 1866-1939
Name Components
Name :
Griggs, George, 1866-1939
Griggs, George
Name Components
Name :
Griggs, George
Griggs, George, 1870-
Name Components
Name :
Griggs, George, 1870-
Griggs, Jorge 1866-1939
Name Components
Name :
Griggs, Jorge 1866-1939
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Biographical History
George Griggs was born in Mesilla, New Mexico on May 2, 1866. His father, James Edgar Griggs, had come from New Jersey to Fort Filmore, New Mexico. The elder Griggs' ventures in mining and mercantile establishment led him to settle in Mesilla, where he married Eugenia Ascarate, a daughter of Cristobal Ascarate, a member of one of the most prominent Mexican families in the territory. After finishing his formal education at St. Regis College in Denver, Colorado, George Griggs migrated to Mexico. Griggs quickly won an honored place in the affections of the President of Mexico, Porfirio Diaz. Diaz appointed Griggs Governor of Baja California. While in this area, Griggs studied the Tarahumara Indians of Chihuahua and produced the first dictionary of their language. He also studied mining and his 1911 Mines of Chihuahua remains one of the most complex, technological histories of mining ever attempted. When the Mexican Revolution overthrew Diaz in 1910, Griggs was forced to flee the country and walked from Monterrey to Eagle Pass, Texas and then to Mesilla. After his return to Mesilla, Griggs began writing the history of the region, "History of Mesilla Valley or The Gadsden Purchase." Griggs also ran the Billy the Kid Museum in Mesilla and spent his latter years engaged in scholarly study. He died in 1939.
George W. Griggs was born in Mesilla, New Mexico on May 2, 1866. His father, James Edgar Griggs, educated at Princeton, moved from New Jersey to Fort Filmore, New Mexico in 1859. The elder Griggs' ventures in mining and mercantile establishment led him to settle in Mesilla, where he married Eugenia Ascarate, a daughter of Cristobal Ascarate, a member of one of the most prominent Mexican families in the territory. They had six children of whom George was the second. After finishing his formal education at St. Regis College in Denver, Colorado, George Griggs migrated to Mexico.
Griggs quickly won an honored place in the affections of the President of Mexico, Porfirio Diaz. Diaz appointed Griggs Governor of Baja California. While in this area, Griggs studied the Tarahumara Indians of Chihuahua and produced the first dictionary of their language. He also studied mining and his 1911 Mines of Chihuahua remains one of the most complex, technological histories of mining ever attempted.
When the Mexican Revolution overthrew Diaz in 1910, Griggs was forced to flee the country and walked from Monterrey to Eagle Pass, Texas and then to Mesilla. After his return to Mesilla, Griggs began writing the history of the region, History of Mesilla Valley or The Gadsden Purchase. Griggs also ran the Billy the Kid Museum in Mesilla and spent his latter years engaged in scholarly study. He died November 2, 1939.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/73544854
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2003066357
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2003066357
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
spa
Zyyy
Subjects
Mines and mineral resources
Mines and mining
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Mesilla (N.M.)
AssociatedPlace
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Mesilla (N.M.)
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>