We can feel pretty cozy during New Mexico winters these days, but decades ago? Things were a little rougher for our parents and grandparents when central heating hadn’t even been imagined and paved roads in small towns were rare. During the Great Depression and World War II, anthropologist and photographer John Collier Jr. documented daily life for the Farm Security Administration (a New Deal program) and later the Office of War Information.
The photos created during this time period are best known for showcasing the hardships farmers endured at the time but also for giving us a peek at the lives our parents and grandparents led. Here’s a look at the winter in New Mexico he, and other FSA photographers, captured during those rough years. Some of the worst winters in New Mexico are long behind us… but at least there are photos!
A typical winter day in the foothills near Taos looks especially chilly, don’t you think?
John Collier/Photogrammar
The streets in Rancho de Taos are snow-covered and muddy following a January snowfall.
John Collier/Photogrammar
If the roads were especially bad in winter, nurses and doctors were often forced to make house calls on foot.
John Collier/Photogrammar
These women in Trampas are leaving mass on a blustery January morning. Can you imagine walking home in the snow and mud in those heels?
John Collier/Photogrammar
A group of children recreates the Nativity scene during a Christmas Eve Mass in Ranchos de Taos in 1942.
John Collier/Photogrammar
Meanwhile, this boys choir in Peñasco tries to stay warm while singing Christmas hymns outside.
John Collier/Photogrammar
This pregnant woman from Embudo just arrived at a hospital, ready to give birth. The vehicle next to her is the ambulance.
John Collier/Photogrammar
This older couple in Peñasco tries to stay warm in the kitchen while preparing food during a cold January day.
John Collier/Photogrammar
Schools in isolated, rural communities were sometimes just one-room buildings for multiple grades. Children and teachers bundled up like this to stay warm in the winter months if they sat too far from the stove.
John Collier/Photogrammar
These Peñasco students are eating a hot lunch provided by the school. We wonder what was for luch!
John Collier/Photogrammar
This parish priest sits by a fire to stay warm.
John Collier/Photogrammar
In some rural communities, locals still used horse-drawn wagons as transportation and work vehicles. For example, this team in Trampas transported firewood back home.
John Collier/Photogrammar
Chopping firewood is definitely much harder than you think! Here, the town mayor and his son chop up the wood from a dead tree.
John Collier/Photogrammar
These gentlemen try to warm up by the fire inside a general store in the tiny community of Chacon.
John Collier/Photogrammar
According to the photographer’s notes, corner fireplaces like this were extremely efficient, since they burn smaller quantities of wood and the heat circulates about the room more readily. It was also a gathering spot for families during the cold months.
John Collier/Photogrammar
And you often found multiple children curled up in beds at night.
John Collier/Photogrammar
“Washing up” in some communities often meant using water in a basin. If you didn’t want it to be icy cold, you had to heat it up on the stove first!
John Collier/Photogrammar
These forest rangers are heading out on skis and snowshoes to measure the snow in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.
John Collier/Photogrammar
What an interesting project these photographers captured. A story not only about New Mexico winters but about how life was for generations past. What are some of your memories of winters in New Mexico? How were those days different from today?
John Collier/Photogrammar
Our parents and grandparents lived through some pretty treacherous winters, so their stories about walking uphill in the snow both ways aren’t too far from the truth. Read about more winter towns in New Mexico and some of the most horrific winter storms in New Mexico’s history.
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The OIYS Visitor Center
Worst Winters in New Mexico November 16, 2021 Tori Jane What counts as record snowfall in New Mexico? New Mexico is more desert and plains than anything else, though it does have mountainous areas that get snow on the regular. However, from time to time, something totally crazy happens, and states like New Mexico end up with record-setting amounts of snow on their hands. For example, in 1973, the city of Alburquerque received a jaw-dropping 34.3 inches on December 31st. This was nearly unheard of, and to this day, nothing quite like it has happened since. However, history can do one better: in 1918 (interestingly, also on December 31st), the town of Clayton, New Mexico received an unreal 54.5 inches of snowfall – and those each happened in just one day. The two-day record snowfalls include Clayton, again, which received 24 inches of snow in 48 hours. Seems like if you’re into the occasional record snowfall, Clayton is the place to be! Where are some of the best places to spend winter in New Mexico? New Mexico may not be known for its crazy amounts of snow (unless it’s 1973, anyway), but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a wonderful place to explore during the winter! Some of our favorite destinations to enjoy winter in New Mexico include Sandia Peak, which usually receives enough of the white stuff for skiing. It’s home to some amazing views, too, so it’s a must-do! You can go ice fishing on Lake Maloya (or Lake Alice), go skiing or on a pleasant sleigh ride in Angel Fire, or rent a cozy cabin pretty much anywhere in the state (but it’s best if you go to the mountains for a white winter)! You can also kill some time on a chilly day at any of New Mexico’s lovely, cozy hot springs. For more ideas about what to do during winter in New Mexico, check this article out!
The OIYS Visitor Center
Worst Winters in New Mexico
November 16, 2021
Tori Jane
What counts as record snowfall in New Mexico? New Mexico is more desert and plains than anything else, though it does have mountainous areas that get snow on the regular. However, from time to time, something totally crazy happens, and states like New Mexico end up with record-setting amounts of snow on their hands. For example, in 1973, the city of Alburquerque received a jaw-dropping 34.3 inches on December 31st. This was nearly unheard of, and to this day, nothing quite like it has happened since. However, history can do one better: in 1918 (interestingly, also on December 31st), the town of Clayton, New Mexico received an unreal 54.5 inches of snowfall – and those each happened in just one day. The two-day record snowfalls include Clayton, again, which received 24 inches of snow in 48 hours. Seems like if you’re into the occasional record snowfall, Clayton is the place to be! Where are some of the best places to spend winter in New Mexico? New Mexico may not be known for its crazy amounts of snow (unless it’s 1973, anyway), but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a wonderful place to explore during the winter! Some of our favorite destinations to enjoy winter in New Mexico include Sandia Peak, which usually receives enough of the white stuff for skiing. It’s home to some amazing views, too, so it’s a must-do! You can go ice fishing on Lake Maloya (or Lake Alice), go skiing or on a pleasant sleigh ride in Angel Fire, or rent a cozy cabin pretty much anywhere in the state (but it’s best if you go to the mountains for a white winter)! You can also kill some time on a chilly day at any of New Mexico’s lovely, cozy hot springs. For more ideas about what to do during winter in New Mexico, check this article out!
The OIYS Visitor Center
The OIYS Visitor Center
New Mexico is more desert and plains than anything else, though it does have mountainous areas that get snow on the regular. However, from time to time, something totally crazy happens, and states like New Mexico end up with record-setting amounts of snow on their hands. For example, in 1973, the city of Alburquerque received a jaw-dropping 34.3 inches on December 31st. This was nearly unheard of, and to this day, nothing quite like it has happened since. However, history can do one better: in 1918 (interestingly, also on December 31st), the town of Clayton, New Mexico received an unreal 54.5 inches of snowfall – and those each happened in just one day. The two-day record snowfalls include Clayton, again, which received 24 inches of snow in 48 hours. Seems like if you’re into the occasional record snowfall, Clayton is the place to be!
Where are some of the best places to spend winter in New Mexico?
New Mexico may not be known for its crazy amounts of snow (unless it’s 1973, anyway), but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a wonderful place to explore during the winter! Some of our favorite destinations to enjoy winter in New Mexico include Sandia Peak, which usually receives enough of the white stuff for skiing. It’s home to some amazing views, too, so it’s a must-do! You can go ice fishing on Lake Maloya (or Lake Alice), go skiing or on a pleasant sleigh ride in Angel Fire, or rent a cozy cabin pretty much anywhere in the state (but it’s best if you go to the mountains for a white winter)! You can also kill some time on a chilly day at any of New Mexico’s lovely, cozy hot springs. For more ideas about what to do during winter in New Mexico, check this article out!