Tom McCabes Genealogy 2022

Maria DELGADO

Name
Maria DELGADO
Given names
Maria
Surname
DELGADO
Married name
Maria de VERA
Birth of a daughter
#1
Regina de VERA
1620
Note: According to her will, Regina was born in Cuencame, south of Torreón.
Death of a daughterRegina de VERA
June 2, 1673
Note: Regina left a will. A copy is in the University of Arizona's
Page 1 of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673
Page 1 of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673

Note: On her deathbed Regina de Vera declared she is a widow, a native of Cuencame and her parents were Gaspar de Vera & Maria Delgado.


Page 2 (Partial) of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673
Page 2 (Partial) of Regina de Vera's Will, 1673

Note: Regina gives the names of children: Maria, Leonor, Melchor, Antonia, Josepha, Domingo, Juan, todos Gonzales y Regina de Vera.

Note

Named in their daughter Regina de Vera's will in 1673.

Note

Captain Gaspar de Vera de Perdomo/Maria Delgado Rodriguez

Posted on ancestry.com 30 Jan 2011 by PatErnieAlderete (Some of this is speculation until further proof is found. There were several men by this name and some researchers say data about them is often confused.)

Gaspar de Vera de Perdomo born about 1560s La Laguna-Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain.

Tenerife is the largest of the seven Canary Islands off the west coast of Africa. Many of the ships departing Spain for the Americas stopped in the Canary Islands to resupply.

Gaspar de Vera was a common name at the time, so there were several men by the same name.

By 1604 Gaspar was a miner in San Juan del Rio-Queretaro, Mexico which was famous for its opals. San Juan del Rio was on the route from Mexico City to the silver, and gold mining areas of Northern Mexico.

The state of Queretaro is the pioneering opal cradle and mining area of central Mexico. In this region the opal deposits are located mainly in the mountain ranges of three municipalities: Colon, Tequisqulapan and Ezequiel Montes.

Maria Delgado Rodriguez born about 1570s-80s Santa Fe-New Mexico or Cuencame-Durango or Parral-Chihuahua, Mexico. Maria Delgado married Gaspar de Vera about 1605 in Mexico. They had about five daughters; Ana Maria Ortiz de Vera, our ancestor Regina de Vera around 1610 in Cuencame-Durango. Plus Francisca, Petrona born in Cuencame, and Juana born 1612 in Remedios-Durango. I have only seen Ana Maria referred to as “Ortiz de Vera,” with the surname Ortiz never applied to our ancestor Regina de Vera, but Ortiz must have applied equally to all five sisters as we understand surnames today.

Our ancestor Regina/Rejina/Rexina (possibly Ortiz de Vera) de Vera Delgado born about 1610s- Cuencame-Durango-Mexico. Her parents Maria Delgado and Gaspar de Vera are verified in the June 2, 1673 Parral will of daughter Regina de Vera Delgado.

Francisca de Vera Delgado, born 1600s Cuencame-Durango, married Nicolas March 18, 1635 Parral, record not found.

Juana de Vera Delgado born Cuencame-Durango 1600s, married Alonso Botello who was born in Malaga, Spain on May 3, 1640 in Parral. Godparents Captain Diego de Alarcon and Captain Gregorio Carbajal implying that this wedding was a major military affair. Parents not mentioned.

Petrona de Vera Delgado, born 1600s Cuencame-Durango, married Juan del Hoio who was born in Castille, December 8, 1642 Parral. Parents not mentioned.

******Richard Says the Diego Below was From a Different Family From Canary Islands ******** Gaspar’s brother Diego Vera de Perdomo was tried for bigamy in 1626 in Mexico City. During his trial his ancestry was entered into evidence: parents Pedro Vera Perdomo and Maria Betancurt Perez, residents of the City of La Laguna on Tenerife Island in the Canary Islands, his paternal grandparents Hernan Martin Baena a native of Jerez de los Caballeros in Estremadura, Spain, and Catalina Garcia a native of La Laguna, Tenerife, maternal grandparents Antonio Perez born on the Canary Island of La Graciosa, and Catalina Aponte of Garachico on Tenerife.

There were suggestions, but no proof that Diego was a converso during his trial by the Holy Inquisition. He was ordered banished from the New World, and required to reunite with his first wife in the Canary Islands.

Gaspar de Vera was a world traveler, starting perhaps in the Canary Islands, probably stopping in Havana, Cuba, landing in Veracruz, Mexico, crossing overland to Mexico City, finding his way north to Queretaro, Durango/Chihuahua, New Mexico and probably Zacatecas and other states now in the United States and Mexico in search of mineral weath, precious stones, gold and silver.

There is a record of a Gaspar Viera in the Azores, in the North Atlantic, a Portuguese archipelago. Perhaps another person with the same name, but we can't rule out definitively that he is our ancestor.

Shared note

Manuel Jorge was born about 1592, in Portuguese Tangier, North Africa, the son of Antonio Jorge and María Alvarez.17 He may have emigrated to the mining frontier of New Spain between 1615 and 1620, since, by the mid to late 1620s, he had become a merchant at Cuencamé. Sometime prior to 1632, Manuel Jorge married Ana de Vera of Cuencamé, the daughter of CAPT. GASPAR DE VERA(or Veira)18 and MARIA DELGADO. GASPAR DE VERA had been constable of Cuencamé in 1604. Antonio Jorge de Vera, the eldest child of Manuel Jorge and Ana de Vera, was probably born at Cuencamé, around the year 1633. Manuel Jorge, Antonio's younger brother was born about 1636.

The silver discovery at Parral in 1631 led the Jorge family to relocate, and Manuel appears on a March, 1633 list of Parral retail merchants. Manuel Jorge and Ana de Vera baptized numerous children in Parral; Antonio Jorge de Vera had at least 9 siblings. Virtually all of the Jorge children's padrinos were individuals of Portuguese ancestry. Manuel Jorge lived in Parral for about 22 years, from 1633 until 1655. He wrote his will on 7 June 1655 and was buried in Parral on 18 September 1655. Francisco de Lima was one of the executors of Manuel Jorge's modest estate. According to Manuel's will, Antonio Jorge was already a resident of New Mexico by June 1655.

At about age twenty, Antonio Jorge de Vera left Parral and emigrated to New Mexico during the term of Gov. Hernando de Ugarte. He had arrived in New Mexico by 1652 or 1653, at which time he married Gertrudes Baca, the cousin of Pedro Durán y Chávez II. Antonio Jorge de Vera, the younger, son Antonio Jorge de Vera, the elder, and Gertrudes Baca, was born around 1654 at El Alamo, four to five leagues south of Santa Fe. At some point prior to 1680, the Jorge family moved to Albuquerque's north valley, where they established a modest ranch in the vicinity of present-day Los Griegos.

In late November 1644, Francisco de Lima was married in Parral to María Gonzales, the daughter of CAPT DOMINGO GONZALES and REGINA DE VERA. Regina was the sister of Ana de Vera, Manuel Jorge's wife; therefore, Francisco de Lima was Manuel Jorge's nephew by marriage. Domingo Gonzales and Regina de Vera acted as godparents for Ana Jorge de Vera, daughter of Manuel Jorge and Ana de Vera in 1639. CAPT DOMINGO GONZALES, was born around 1592 in Portuguese Tangier. Some time before 1642, CAPTAIN GONZALES, became the business agent for fray Tomás Manso and fray Juan de Salas of New Mexico.

Mexico City agent for Manuel Jorge and DOMINGO GONZALES was Francisco Franco Moreira, the wealthy Portuguese merchant who was persecuted and expropriated by the Inquisition in the 1640s. Moreira and his associate, Amaro Díaz de Maturana, were among the many Mexico City brokers who exchanged refined silver for specie, which they shipped north to Parral.

Countless individuals emigrated to the New World between 1580 and 1640, when Spain held Portugal captive, many were part of the general Iberian emigration, others fleeing anti-Jewish attitudes and policies. More than forty adult males of Portuguese ancestry in the Parral district---including the two from North Africa, Manuel Jorge and CAPT DOMINGO GONZALES---were compelled to register by the government in 1642. In some sense this registration was evidence of a wave of Lusophobia that swept the Spanish Indies in the 1630s and 1640s that grew out of the marked tendency in seventeenth-century Spanish America to confuse Portuguese with Portuguese New Christian and crypto-Jews. In another sense, the registration was an act of allegiance to the Spanish grown in light of the Portuguese restoration in 1640.

Although the evidence is circumstantial, it seems logical to conclude that some of the Portuguese of Parral had New Christian ancestry. Some may have been crypto-Jews. Indeed, many of Parral's most conspicuous Portuguese demonstrated their loyal to the Church in overt ways. DOMINGO GONZALES and Gregorio de Carvajal, assumed responsibility for the completion of the church in Parral, which might have been an effective survival strategy... Nevertheless, in the minds of some of their Spanish neighbors, the simple fact that these individuals---Gonsales, Carvajal, Lima, et al.---were Portuguese made them suspect.

From: Commerce of the Camino Real: Trade Between Nueva Vizcaya and New Mexico Before the Pueblo Revolt By Rick Hendricks on http://newmexicohistory.org