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                  <text>ALBERT &amp; ETHEL MAY (Chambers) ANCELL
Albert G. Ancell was born in Collinsworth, County, Texas, south of Shamrock on
October 17, 1902. His father, Thomas M. Ancell had been born in Howard County,
Missouri in October of 1871, and moved to Dallas, Texas with his parents when he was
an infant. After he was old enough to work, Thomas got a job laying ties and rails on the
Ft. Worth and Denver Railroad which was building a line from northwest Texas to
Denver. While working near Harold, Texas, Thomas found a farm he liked enough to
settle down and raise wheat and cattle.
"While dad was on the farm near Harold, he married my mother, Lettie. I was the third
of four children. Shortly after I was born, we moved to Gaines County Texas on the New
Mexico Line near Seminole. It was flat empty ranch country where I grew up. Our
nearest neighbors were 8-10 miles away. My first schooling was at a little ranch school.
Later I attended 6th and 7th grades at Lovington, New Mexico. During the drought of
1918 I quit school to help my dad drive his 1200 head of cattle to Colorado. He sold the
cattle to buy a farm, but later lost it on a mortgage. I started working for wages on the
Butler Ranch. In 1926 I headed for California in a Model T Ford. The route I took went
through Trinidad, Albuquerque, Silver City and Lordsburg. Then I went to Tucson,
Phoenix and Yuma, to San Diego and Santa Barbara. West of Yuma I had to follow the
old plank road across the sand desert. The whole trip took 13 days. There weren't any
motels so I camped along the way."

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"I soon got a job working for the Bixby Ranch, one of the biggest ranch companies in
California. They owned land in several parts of California and Arizona. Their
headquarters was in Long Beach. We ran cattle through the area where Disneyland is
now located. I stayed with the ranch for about 6 years. My wages were $60-75.00 per
month plus room and board."
"My brother at Presidio, Texas, asked me to come down there and help him operate a
filling station. At that time there was a small boom going on in that part of the country
with the building of the railroad from San Antonio to Chihuahua, Mexico, and on to the
Pacific. In 1936 I moved to Como, Colorado in South Park where I worked in the hay
and cattle business for 11 years. Then I came to Ignacio and bought Glen Rouses's
place. I raised grain and hay and did combining and other custom farm work for
neighbors. In 1965, I married Ethel May Arnspiger."
Ethel May was the seventh of eight children born to Henry Walls Chambers and Susan
Louise (Lee) Chambers, Susan's dad was a relative of Robert E. Lee. Henry and Susan
were both born in Texas, but after their marriage moved to Globe, Arizona and then on
to Colorado in 1902.

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"My dad helped build the Cascade Flume north of Durango. In 1904 they moved to
Bayfield and took a homestead on Spring Creek where I was born on July 4, 1904.
Mother died when I was 5 years old. I attended the Mason School east of town where
the Lieses now live, for 8 years, then came to Ignacio for 2 more years. That was all the
school offered here. In 1924 Ernest Arnspiger and I were married. Ernest worked in a
3

�butcher shop in Ignacio for a while, then got a job at a coal mine north of Bayfield.
Finally, we bought a farm over on the Florida Mesa near Falla where we raised our
children. We had one son, Randall, who died in 1957 and one daughter Lorraine, who
is now a Registered Nurse in Tucson, Arizona."
"My dad's second wife died in 1939, leaving him with 2 young daughters. Since one of
the girls was only 10 years old, Ernest and I decided to move over to the farm on Spring
Creek to help dad with the work and to help take care of the girls. In 1961 when Ernest
became ill, we moved to Bayfield where he died in 1963."
"Two years later, I married Albert Ancell. He had a place on the southeast corner of
Holt's farm where we still live. Albert has 3 children of his own. Lettie June lives in
Littleton, Colorado; and Lyle and Dennis live in Abilene, Texas."
The Ancells have both lived a good many years and Albert has lived a good many
places of different climate and elevation. In Albert's opinion, Southwest Colorado has
the most pleasant climate of all, otherwise he says he wouldn't have stayed here for 30
years. Of all the various periods of time Albert has lived through, he feels that today is
the best and the easiest time to be living.
Taken in August 1979
August, 1979 -- by Shelby Smith

4

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                <text>1973-1980</text>
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                <text>Collection of biographies, predominantly of residents from the Ignacio Senior Center, based on interviews conducted by Shelby Smith from approximately 1973 to 1980. The abridged interviews were originally published as individual entries in The Thoughtful Years newsletter, published by the Ignacio Senior Center, beginning in 1973. They were later published as a whole in Smith's book: Oral Histories of the Southern Pine River Valley, from which the original scans in this collection have been derived.</text>
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              <text>Biography of Albert Ancell and Ethel May (Chambers) Ancell based on an interview conducted by Shelby Smith. Originally included in the August, 1979 issue of "The Thoughtful Years" newsletter published by the Ignacio Senior Center. Later included in the book "Oral Histories of the Southern Pine River Valley" by Shelby Smith.</text>
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