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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Guillermo Y. "Willie" Banegas: Birth: 10 FEB 1912 in Las Cruces, Dona Ana Co., NM. Death: 24 OCT 2000 in Los Angeles Co., CA

  2. Carlos "Charlie" Banegas: Birth: 27 APR 1914 in Dona Ana, Doña Ana County, New Mexico, USA. Death: 10 MAR 2007 in Las Cruces, Dona Ana, New Mexico, United States

  3. Esther Banegas: Birth: 02 MAR 1917 in La Mesa, NM. Death: 02 JAN 1996 in Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico

  4. Lorenzo "Lencho" Banegas: Birth: 22 MAY 1919 in Las Cruces, NM. Death: 15 DEC 2001 in Las Cruces, Dona Ana, New Mexico, United States

  5. Maria Susana "Susie" Banegas: Birth: 03 MAY 1921 in Las Cruces, NM. Death: 13 APR 2009 in Norwalk, Los Angeles, California, USA

  6. Candelario "Chuco" Banegas: Birth: 17 APR 1923 in Las Cruces, NM. Death: 03 OCT 2000 in Las Cruces, Dona Ana Co., NM

  7. Adelina "Lalin" Banegas: Birth: 01 MAY 1927 in Las Cruces D, New Mexico. Death: 09 SEP 1997 in Anaheim, CA

  8. Person Not Viewable


Sources
1. Title:   Social Security Death Index
Page:   Database online. Number: 525-42-1611; Issue State: New Mexico; Issue Date: Before 1951.
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2011;
2. Title:   California Death Index, 1940-1997
Page:   Date: 1997-09-09
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2000;
3. Title:   Public Member Trees
Page:   Database online.
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;
4. Title:   U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2015;
5. Title:   1930 United States Federal Census
Page:   Year: 1930; Census Place: San Ysidro, Dona Ana, New Mexico; Roll: 1394; Page: 3B; Enumeration District: 0025; Image: 1099.0; FHL microfilm: 2341129
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2002;
6. Title:   1920 United States Federal Census
Page:   Year: 1920; Census Place: Dona Ana, Dona Ana, New Mexico; Roll: T625_1075; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 25; Image: 827
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;
7. Title:   New Mexico, Territorial Census, 1885
Page:   National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Washington, D.C.; Schedules of the New Mexico Territory Census of 1885; Series: M846; Roll: 2
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;
8. Title:   California Death Index, 1940-1997
Page:   Database online. Place: Los Angeles; Date: 19 Feb 1967; Social Security: .
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2000;
9. Title:   1940 United States Federal Census
Page:   Database online.
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012;
10. Title:   U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918
Page:   Database online. Registration Location: Dona Ana County, New Mexico; Roll: ; Draft Board: .
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2005;
11. Title:   1900 United States Federal Census
Page:   Database online. Year: 1900; Census Place: Duranes, Bernalillo, New Mexico; Roll: T623_999; Page: ; Enumeration District: 179.
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2004;
12. Title:   1940 United States Federal Census
Page:   Year: 1940; Census Place: San Ysidro, Dona Ana, New Mexico; Roll: T627_2443; Page: 9B; Enumeration District: 7-31
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012;
13. Title:   U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012;
14. Source:   Footnote: Broderbund Family Archive #110, Vol. 1, Ed. 5, Social
15. Title:   Federal Census, 1900
Page:   NM, Dona Ana Co., Dist. 41, pg. 06B
16. Title:   Marriage License, County of Dona Ana, NM
Page:   Page 290, Record No. 733

Notes
a. Note:   07/29/12: 1940 Census data online:
 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KMR4-VJD
  07/12 Found Febronio in a 1900 Fed Census (Bernillo County, Duranes Precinct "Indian Population" supplement):
 http://search.ancestry.com/browse/view.aspx?dbid=7602&iid=NMT623_999-0161&pid=32182879&ssrc=&fn=Febrouio&ln=Banegas&st=g
  Tribe listing is "Pueblo" indian, with father being full Pueblo and mother being 1/2 Pueblo (Febronio is listed as 3/4 Pueblo)
 [This implies that Ysabel is full blooded Pueblo and Ricarda Lopez is 1/2 Pueblo.]
  07/12 WWI Draft record online:
 http://search.ancestry.com/browse/view.aspx?dbid=6482&iid=NM-1711860-1011&pid=24093474&ssrc=&fn=Febronia+Lopez&ln=Banegas&st=g
  June, 1999:
  Family oral history states that Febronio was Mescalero Apache.
  Febronio attended (indian?) college. He was on the school baseball team as a young man. He helped to build a church in San Ysidro. At some point in his youth, he contracted malaria. Febronio is said to have been acquainted with Pat Garrett, the lawman who shot down Jesse James.
  Febronio married Luisa Ybarra early in 1911, at the age of 30. She was 18 years old.
  Febronio was fondly known by his family as Grandpa Nono. He is remembered as being kind and mild. His children recall that he was always a very devout man of strong faith.
  _________________
  January 2000
  The following comes from a letter written by Lorenzo Banegas:
  My dad, Febronio, went to an Indian School in Santa Fe, New Mexico. From there,
 he went to New Mexico College A & M, which is now New Mexico State
 University (NMSU) When he started school there, it was the beginning of the
 college and had only three buildings. My dad played baseball and football when he
 was going to school.
  I think my dad was stationed at Ft. Bliss, Texas or worked for the army there.
 Anyway, he was one of the wagon drivers who took General Pershing to the
 Mexican border to meet General Porfirio Diaz from Mexico.
  He was also sent on a mission to the Philippines with the US Army. I think there's
 where he contracted malaria and he suffered from malaria up to the time that he and
 his family moved to California in 1941 or 1942.
  My dad was stationed at Ft. Bliss, Texas when he first met Luisa, my mom. My
 mom was about 15 or 16 years old when my dad first met her. My mom was
 staying with my aunt Lina and my aunt Carolina at the time that my dad first met
 her.
  My mom's family was so poor that they could not afford to buy my mom a pair of
 shoes. My mom was barefooted when my dad first met her. My dad gave her
 some money so she could buy herself a pair of shoes. My mom was very young at
 that time, so I guess my dad had to wait till she was of age to marry him. My dad
 was about 15 years older than my mom.
  After they were married, they lived in a little village called Hill, New Mexico. At
 that time they called Hill "El Gallo." My dad worked at La Mesa, New Mexico for
 a while. My brother Willie was the first child and I think he was born at El Gallo.
  From there, my dad moved to San Ysidro, New Mexico. For a while, he lived at
 my Grandpa Isabel's house and that's where I, Lorenzo, was born on May 22, 1919
 right at the end of World War I.
  From my Grandpa's house, my dad moved to another house on the corner of what
 is known as Engler Road and Dona Aña Road. My dad was so poor then that he
 could not buy a house, so he built his own house out of mud and barbed wire and
 twigs. To build his house, my dad went to the bosque (woods) by the river to cut
 some posts and some vigas (beams) to start the mud hut. He put the posts around
 where he built the house, then he used barbed wire to put around to form the house.
 After he put the wire all around, he wove the twigs between the wires and plastered
 it with mud. My dad could not afford to buy windows or doors for the mud hut, so
 we covered the windows with cardboard or bed sheets or rags to keep the icy cold
 from coming in. In the winter time it was so cold that the water would freeze inside
 the house.
  I think it was in 1935 that we had a big flood. And believe it or not but my dad's
 hut was the only one that didn't collapse. Some of my relatives went to stay with
 my dad because their houses fell down.
  My dad was an excellent provider. He and mom used to work from sun up to
 sundown to feed us kids. My dad and mom worked in the onion fields. In the
 summertime, dad worked in the field baling hay. He suffered from malaria most of
 his life, so you can imagine how much he suffered during the summer baling hay.
 In the winter, the worked in the cotton fields picking cotton. In the evening, after
 picking cotton, they would come home picking up whatever wood they could find
 along the way to bring home and build a fire.
  ***
 1900 Census data online
 Albuquerque Indian School, Bernalillo, New Mexico Territory
 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MST8-8H3
  ***
 1920 Census data online
 Dona Ana, New Mexico
 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M4V5-45Z
  Household Gender Age Birthplace
 SELF Flebheno Benaga M 40y New Mexico
 WIFE Lucia R Benaga F 23y New Mexico
 SON Willie Benaga M 8y New Mexico
 SON Charlie Benaga M 6y New Mexico
 DAU Ester Benaga F 2y New Mexico
 SON Lonnzo Benaga M 8m New Mexico
  ***
 1930 Census data online:
 San Ysidro, Dona Ana, New Mexico
 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XCM9-FCG
  Household Gender Age Birthplace
 Head Lopez Banegas M 50 New Mexico
 Wife Louisia Banegas F 48 New Mexico
 Son Willie Banegas M 18 New Mexico
 Son Charlie Banegas M 16 New Mexico
 Daughter Ester Banegas F 13 New Mexico
 Son Lorenzo Banegas M 11 New Mexico
 Daughter Susana Banegas F 9 New Mexico
 Son Candeliro Banegas M 7 New Mexico
 Daughter Cesilia Banegas F 5 New Mexico
 Daughter Esdalina Banegas F 3 New Mexico
 Daughter Estalia Banegas F 1 New Mexico


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