From the category archives:

Roswell

He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on November 5, 1911.  The building where he was born now houses the Riverfront Stadium, also known as Cinergy Field.  Later he and his parents lived on a houseboat for a few years.  Then solid land beckoned and his dad bought a farm.  Farms require long hours, hard work,  distance from neighbors, and schools.  But it agreed with Leonard.  He rode horseback to school since it was long before the days of school busing.

Home grown entertainment was about all there was.  Radio was in its infancy and it was many years before the advent of television and computers.  Leonard learned to play the mandolin and sing.  Neighbors would be invited for square dances and soon he became expert at calling them.

He also learned to yodel by playing over and over the recording of a Swiss yodeler.  His mother also yodeled and the story goes that they used it as a way of communicating on the farm.  One kind of yodel was to let him know it was lunch time; another kind to warn of a change in weather and yet another at the end of the day.

He dropped out of high school and worked in a factory but those kinds of jobs were difficult.  He moved to California with his parents and siblings, where he worked at all and any kind of job he could find, all the while singing and playing his guitar whenever he had free time.

His sister Mary convinced him to try out for a radio program featuring amateur talent. He did, singing, yodeling, and playing the guitar.  It was his entry into the world of public entertainment as he was asked to join a country music group called the Rocky Mountaineers.  In 1933 he joined a group called the O-Bar-O Cowboys and they toured Arizona and New Mexico and the Southwest.  As it was depression years they barely made enough for gas for the trip.

While in Roswell they were given air time to announce their appearance in town.  In addition to their singing and guitar playing they talked about being homesick and especially about their favorite foods. Leonard’s favorite was his mother’s lemon pie. 

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Downtown Roswell. Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks.
Downtown Roswell.

Nestled in a valley that is the only oasis for 75 to 100 miles in the desert prairie of New Mexico, Roswell is a bustling community of about 50,000 people.  During the famed UFO Festival it grows to about 60,000 to 70,000.  Its main street, appropriately  named "Main Street," becomes U.S. Highway 285 heading north and south.  Its second main street (named what else?  "Second Street") becomes U.S. Highway 70, leading east and west.  The two highways intersect smack-dab in the middle of town so you can truly "get there from here."  According to the UFO experts, you can touch down at Roswell, even if you are from a little further out, say Alpha Centauri for instance.

The stars shine like diamond s in our beautiful night skies.  In the Southwest, we are used to prairie dogs and coyotes on our sagebrush covered plains, but in Roswell, we also host other creatures.

In the 1940s, Roswell was a sleepy little village dependant upon local farmers and the Roswell Air Field for its livelihood.  In 1947, a stir about a "flying saucer" crashing in a nearby field attracted some attention, but interest quickly died down as people returned to the task of making a living.  This was right after the Second World War, and the community’s interest was more in welcoming home their soldiers returning from the war and trying to rebuild families than it was in "little green men."  So the locals didn’t speak much about it after the hype wore off.  I grew up here and don’t remember hearing anything at all about "The Incident" until the late 1970s when the "Cover Up" conspiracy theory became world news.

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Roswell Symphony Orchestra

by PhyllisEileenBanks January 23, 2003 Chaves County

Technorati Tags: Roswell,Chaves County,southeast,A&E

The Roswell Symphony Photo Courtesy Dr. Lari Young, Mgr., Roswell Symphony Orchestra.

Now in its 38th year, the Roswell Symphony Orchestra’s 60 members come from all the major cities within a 200-mile radius of Roswell: Lubbock, Amarillo, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, Las Cruces, El Paso, Portales, Alamogordo, the states of Texas [...]

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Roswell’s Downtown Historical District

by PegStokes January 23, 2003 Chaves County

Technorati Tags: Roswell,Chaves County,southeast

The Mossman House Courtesy photo.

Roswell is becoming known for its interesting Downtown Historic District. The District was created by the Historical Society for Southeast New Mexico with the aid of a grant from the State Historic Preservation Division in 1983-84. It was named tothe State and National Registers of [...]

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Roswell, New Mexico — the city with a magnetic personality

by JoanPopek January 23, 2003 Chaves County

Technorati Tags: Roswell,Chaves County,southeast

Downtown Roswell Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks.

I grew up (more or less) in Roswell. More or less? Well, my family moved often until I hit my teens. We always managed to bounce back to Roswell for a while before we set out again searching for that elusive rainbow my [...]

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Historical Center for Southeast New Mexico — a living history

by PhyllisEileenBanks January 10, 2003 Chaves County

Technorati Tags: history

Historical Center for Southeast New Mexico.

The Historical Center for Southeast New Mexico, 200 North Lea Street, Roswell, New Mexico was constructed in 1910 and listed in the National Register of Historical Places.  This stately home, once the residence of James Phelps White, houses the Museum. The yellow-brick home, with its [...]

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Why retire in Roswell?

by PhyllisEileenBanks January 8, 2003 Chaves County

Technorati Tags: southeast,Chaves County,Roswell

Cahoon Park Photo courtesy Roswell Parks Department

Why retire in Roswell?
Let me count the reasons.
Lots of sunshine all through the year with little humidity.
Light snowfalls once or twice during the winter, except when Mother Nature throws us a curve as in December of 1997, probably referred to [...]

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Roswell — UFO Capital of the World

by PhyllisEileenBanks December 29, 2002 Chaves County

Technorati Tags: southeast,Roswell,Chaves County,community,profile,UFO

Downtown Roswell Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks

The above other-worldly tag was superimposed on Roswell with the 50th Anniversary of the Roswell Incident in July of 1997. But there’s so much more.
Roswell is the seat of Chaves County, population 58,000, and the fourth largest city in the state; [...]

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