María Josefa Carson

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María Josefa Carson (Jaramillo)

Also Known As: "Chepita"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: now, Santa Cruz, NM, then known as, El Potrero de Chimayó, Rio Arriba, Nuevo Mexico, Mexico
Death: April 23, 1868 (40)
New Mexico, or, La Junta, Otero County, Colorado Territory, United States (Died in childbirth.)
Place of Burial: Taos, Taos County, New Mexico, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Francisco Estevan Jaramillo and María Polonia Jaramillo
Wife of Christopher Houston 'Kit' Carson
Mother of Charles Bent Carson; Carlos Adolfo Carson; William Julian Carson; Teresina Allen; Christobal Charles Carson, II and 4 others
Sister of Francisco Jaramillo; Maria Ygnacia Bent; Pablo Jose Jaramillo; Jose Luciano Jaramillo; Jose Guadalupe Jaramillo and 1 other

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About María Josefa Carson

Married at age 14 or 15. Parents were Francisco and Apolonia Jarmillo.

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In the summer of 1836, Kit Carson and a French trapper became rivals for the affections of a pretty Arapaho girl named Waanibe. In a scene reminiscent of a medieval joust, the two men fought a duel. Carson won. He and Waanibe, also called Alice, were married. They had one daughter, Adaline, but in 1840, Alice died giving birth to a second child.

Adaline needed a mother, and Kit soon married a Cheyenne woman, Making-Out-Road. But in short order, she divorced him Indian style. Kit came home one day to find his belongings and Adaline outside. Making-Out-Road went home to her family. At the 1840 rendezvous-which was the last one of those midsummer trapper/trader gatherings held during the heyday of the mountain man-Carson asked Father De Smet, a Catholic missionary, to baptize Adaline. Two years later, Father Antonio Jose Martinez baptized Carson, who left the Presbyterian Church to become Catholic.

By then, the era of the fur trade was drawing to a close. Settlers were beginning to trickle into lands once known only to the buffalo and the Indians. Kit Carson realized he had to change with the times. There was another, more important reason to change careers. Kit Carson was smitten with Josefa Jaramillo, daughter of a wealthy and influential Taos family.

https://www.historynet.com/kit-carson-the-legendary-frontiersman-re...

  • Residence: Santa Cruz, Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory, United States - 1828
  • Residence: Taos, Taos, New Mexico Territory, United States - 1850
  • Residence: Taos, New Mexico Territory, United States - 1860
view all 14

María Josefa Carson's Timeline

1828
March 27, 1828
now, Santa Cruz, NM, then known as, El Potrero de Chimayó, Rio Arriba, Nuevo Mexico, Mexico
March 29, 1828
Santa Cruz, Santa Fe County, New Mexico, United States
1849
May 1, 1849
Taos, New Mexico Territory, United States
1851
April 1851
Taos, Taos County, New Mexico Territory, United States
1852
October 1, 1852
Taos, Taos County, New Mexico Territory, United States
1855
July 23, 1855
Taos County, New Mexico, United States
1858
June 13, 1858
Taos, Taos County, New Mexico Territory, United States
1861
August 2, 1861
Taos, Taos County, New Mexico, United States
1864
April 13, 1864
Taos, Taos County, New Mexico, United States