Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch ...
"We were branding! And there’s my sweet old dog, Kaiser. That’s about 1938 – and the neighbors, Betty and Margaret and myself."
By Brenda Wilkinson
U.S. Bureau of Land Management
This interview with Socorro resident Evelyn Fite is a part of that effort. After years of struggle, a homestead claim eventually resulted in the development of a large ranch for Dean and Evelyn Fite. A 640-acre homestead claim under the Enlarged Stock Raising Homestead Act enabled the Fites to develop a large ranch by establishing a basewater, and to gain leasing preference on adjacent public lands after the passage of the Taylor Grazing Act.
They did without a lot in the early years, saving up to buy more private land as it became available. Early on, Evelyn wanted to build a house, but Dean told her, “You can’t make any money with a house.” So they bought more cattle and eventually more land.
Collected and transcribed by Brenda Wilkinson, Archaeologist, BLM, Socorro Field Office, 2009