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John L. Sinclair - A cowboy writer in New Mexico: the memoirs of John L. Sinclair

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A cowboy writer in New Mexico: the memoirs of John L. Sinclair: summary, description and annotation

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Brought up in England and Scotland as a reluctant aristocrat, John L. Sinclair (1902-1993) spent sixty years in New Mexico as a cowboy, museum curator, and writer. Sinclair got off a train in Clovis in 1923, saw saddle ponies and cowboys at the station, and knew that New Mexico was the place for him. He spent the rest of the 1920s cowboying around Roswell and in the Capitan Mountains, moving to Santa Fe in the 1930s after he sold his first article to New Mexico Magazine. For ten dollars a month he rented a house on Canyon Road, where he hobnobbed with artists and writers. After a stint as superintendent of the Coronado State Monument near Albuquerque, he and his wife spent the rest of their days nearby in a stone cabin with a view of the mountains. This memoir, written when the author was ninety, captures his lonely childhood and his delight in the open spaces and society of New Mexico with dazzling clarity. Although Sinclair enjoyed living like a hermit, he was a sociable person who loved to tell tales. His story is a great literary legacy. Anyone with a yen for the West in the good old days will relish it.

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Page i A Cowboy Writer in New Mexico title author - photo 1
Page i
A Cowboy Writer in New Mexico

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Page ii
John Sinclair Cynthia Farah 1988 Page iii A Cowboy Writer - photo 2
John Sinclair.
Cynthia Farah, 1988.
Page iii
A Cowboy Writer in New Mexico
The Memoirs of John L. Sinclair
University of New Mexico Press
Albuquerque
Page iv
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sinclair, John L., 1902
A cowboy writer in New Mexico: the memoirs of John L. Sinclair.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8263-1728-6
1. Sinclair, John L., 1902-Biography.
2. AuthorsAmerican20th centuryBiography.
3. Museum curatorsWest (U.S.)Biography.
4. CowboysWest (U.S.)Biography.
I. Title.
PS3537.1846Z466 1966
813'.52dc20
[B]
92-16120
CIP
1996 by Clark Kimball.
All rights reserved.
First edition
All illustrations from the Center for Southwest Research,
General Library, University of New Mexico.
Page v
Contents
Preface
By Clark Kimball
vii
Foreword
By Bruce King
ix
Introduction
By Frank Waters
xi
My First Years
1
The Sinclairs
7
Apprenticeship in Scotland
29
Leave-Taking
45
New Mexico, First Views
49
Cowboy Riding Country
59
Santa Fe in the Thirties
77
The Lincoln Museum
95
Coronado State Monument
101
After Many a Harvest
121

Page vii
Preface
John L. Sinclair was a wonderful man and a wonderful storyteller. To John and to hear or read his stories was to want to know him better and to want to hear and to read more of those storiesto wonder along with him, as was his way.
I met John in 1985, when he was eighty-three years old. He was living simply with his wife, Evelyn, and their dogs and cat in a one-room stone cabin with two chimneys on the Santa Ana Pueblo near Bernalillo, New Mexico.
John's health was failing. His eyesight was going from bad to worse, and his legs weren't "working right" any more. He was spending much less time composing on his old portable Royal typewriter and much more time just quietly cogitating in his "new-fangled" wheelchair.
John became my wonderful friend. Later, I became his literary agent, then the publisher of his last novel, The Night the Bear Came off the Mountain (The Rydal Press, 1991), and ultimately, and sadly, the executor for his wife's estate and his.
I hadn't known John long or read or listened to many of his stories before I knew I wanted to know him better and to hear and read more of his stories. I especially wondered about his own life story and knew others did too. So in 1988 we conceived a plan. John would tell his story aloud. It would be tape recorded, transcribed, and editeda long, difficult process that was undertaken by one good friend and eventually completed by another to whom we are all grateful for this book.
The manuscript was finished in 1991. But the health of the Sinclairs was failing. Evelyn fell ill and was hospitalized. Then she was moved into a nursing home. She died in the fall of 1993. A
Page viii
little over a month later, John followed her. He was ninety-one years old. Although I wish this memoir had been published during his lifetime, to read it now is to be in John's company once again and to hear his voice tell his own story at last. Hasta la vista, amigo!
Picture 3
CLARK KIMBALL
SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO
OCTOBER 1995
Page ix
Foreword
I first met John Sinclair about fifty years ago when he came to the White Lakes area as a ranch hand with the Batercell Cattle Company. He was dipping sheep and cattle, and doing other odd jobs that fall to the hands on a ranch. John and I hit it off right away and became lifelong friends. We never ran out of things to talk about because he was one of the most interesting men that I have had the privilege to call my friend and colleague. John authored one of the best articles ever written about my political career almost twenty-five years ago for The New Mexico Magazine.
John married a lovely lady by the name of Evelyn Fox. After John and Evelyn moved to Bernalillo, New Mexico, Evelyn and my mother became fast friends. My mother was a friend to everyone for miles around Stanley. She always had coffee on the stove and something good to eat. People would go for miles to visit my mother to share news, ask her advice and share one of her great homecooked meals.. Evelyn would ride the bus to our ranch occasionally and stay a week or so, and then John would drive out to the ranch and take her home to Bernalillo.
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