Tom McCabes Genealogy 2022

Elvira Sanchez JIMENEZ

Name
Elvira Sanchez JIMENEZ
Given names
Elvira Sanchez
Surname
JIMENEZ
MarriageJuan de TRUJILLOView this family
yes

Note: Juan Trujillo passed muster in El Paso in 1681 and 1684 in Ysleta as the head of a household consisting of nine members. He returned to New Mexico with his first wife, New Mexico native Elvira Sánchez de Jiménez, the daughter of Antonia de Córdoba and Eugenia de Herrera... Another son, Baltazar, the widower of Nicolaso Espinosa, became the husband of Inés González Bas in 1728.
Birth of a son
#1
Baltazar de TRUJILLO
about 1670
FactJuan de TRUJILLOView this family
Origins

Note: Juan de Trujillo and his wife, Elvira Sánchez Jiménez, both natives of the Rio Abajo, returned with …
Marriage of a childBaltazar de TRUJILLOInes GONZALEZ BASView this family
1728

Death of a sonBaltazar de TRUJILLO
June 17, 1740 Age: 70
Family with parents - View this family
father
mother
Marriage:
herself
Family with Juan de TRUJILLO - View this family
husband
herself
Marriage:
son

Marriage

Juan Trujillo passed muster in El Paso in 1681 and 1684 in Ysleta as the head of a household consisting of nine members. He returned to New Mexico with his first wife, New Mexico native Elvira Sánchez de Jiménez, the daughter of Antonia de Córdoba and Eugenia de Herrera... Another son, Baltazar, the widower of Nicolaso Espinosa, became the husband of Inés González Bas in 1728.

Fact

Juan de Trujillo and his wife, Elvira Sánchez Jiménez, both natives of the Rio Abajo, returned with the Reconquest. He gave his age as forty in 1695, and forty-seven in 1696, always claiming the Rio Abajo as his place of birth. Hence, he was in all probability the Juan de Trujillo who passed muster in 1681, and the son of old Francisco Trujillo. At the turn of the century he moved from the Albuquerque area to Pojoaque, where he bought considerable property in 1701 and 1702. There he gave his age as sixty-six in 1714. His two known children were María, wife of Juan de Mestas Peralta, and Antonio, married to Ana María de Córdoba.

~ Origins of New Mexico Families: A Genealogy of the Spanish Colonial Period, p. 296

Juan de Trujillo, husband of Elvira Sánchez Jiménez (ONMF, pp. 108, 296), gave his birthplace as the jurisdiction of Isleta in New Mexico, and his age variously as 40 in 1692 and 1696, again in 1696 as 45, and 43 in 1697 (DM, 1680, no. 2; 1692, no. 9; 1696, nos. 20, 29; 1697, no. 17). Besides Antonio, who married Ana María Córdoba, there was another son, Baltasar, who married Nicolasa Espinosa, and then Ynez González Bas.

Origins of New Mexico Families: A Genealogy of the Spanish Colonial Period, p. 369

Shared note

15 Mar 1706, in Santa Fé, Juan Trujillo gave testimony in the case of alleged bigamy of Diego Arias de Quirós. In this testamony, Juan referred to his son Baltasar Trujillo, who had given testimony two days earlier that he was the son of Juan Trujillo and Elivira Jiménez. Juan declared he was a "mestizo married to Ana de Herrera, Spanish, and was the son of Cristóbal Trujillo and his legitimate wife, María de Sandoval, coyota." He also stated that he was sixty years of age and a native of New Mexico.

"Revised Trujillo Family Genealogy," Herencia, 19:2, pp. 3-4