Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

Frank Ortiz was born in 1904 in Lehi, Arizona. His parents, Leo and Josefa, came from Sonora, Mexico and settled in the Mesa area in 1885. Josefa’s father, Rafael Mendibil, owned a livery stable in Chandler in east Boston Street in the early 1900s, in the area near today’s Fire Department Administration building. In the 1920s, Leo and Josefa owned a farm near McQueen and Ray Roads, but lost it during the Great Depression. The Shumway family later started a dairy there. Leo also worked as a freighter with a mule team, hauling materials for the construction of the Roosevelt Dam (started in 1906 and completed in 1911).   

Rosa Tellez Ortiz was born in 1907 in Tucson, Arizona, and her parents came from Tombstone and Sonora, Mexico. Rosa’s mother, Refugia “Cuca” Tellez, lived in the Goodyear/Ocotillo area in the 1920s. She met Ramón Tellez, who lived in Tempe, and they married. They owned a dairy farm on Pecos Road, approximately ¼ mile west of Arizona Avenue, near the Whitten farm. They later operated a gas station and a bar at their property on the southeast corner of Germann and Arizona Avenue.  Ramón had a hay baling and harvesting business, and he used his horses in the construction of St. Mary’s Church in 1932. A few years after Ramón died in 1949, Cuca sold the property and lived at 241 S. California Street until she passed away in 1967.

...

Frank Ortiz and Rosa Tellez met each other as children, and were married in 1940. Frank worked for Ramón, helping with the hay baling and harvesting business.  Rosa worked the chuck wagon, feeding her father’s approximately forty workers. Frank and Rosa had eight children:  Leo, Helen, Frank, Ernie, Alma, Josie, Carmen and Gilbert. They lived on south Oregon Street until 1947, when they moved to a 10-acre ranch on Willis and Alma School Roads. Frank farmed cotton and alfalfa on ten acres until 1955, when his failing eyesight made it too difficult.  He continued to contract out workers and machinery to other large-scale farmers for hay baling and harvesting.  He sold seven acres, but he kept the house and approximately 2-3 acres, which Rosa continued to farm.  In 1957, the Ortiz family moved to 99 W. Elgin, a home which is still in the family.  

...