Miss Elizabeth Garrett
Elizabeth Garrett
Elizabeth Garrett
Elizabeth Garrett (1884-1947) was a nationally acclaimed soprano and composer. She wrote the songs "El Paso" and "O, Fair New Mexico", state song of New Mexico. Garrett had been rendered blind almost from birth by an excessive application of blue vitrol (a copper sulfate chemical) to her eyes. Blue vitrol was used to prevent infection, a common practice in those days. Elizabeth received a high school education and basic training at the Texas School for the Blind in Austin and became a qualified voice and piano teacher. She soon found herself performing in respected theaters in Chicago and New York. She was called the "Songbird of the Southwest", because of her compositions about the far-west land of New Mexico. The New Mexico Legislature was so impressed by her song "O, Fair New Mexico", that they made it the state song in 1917. Her father was Pat Garrett, sheriff of Lincoln County, NM. During that time, he captured and killed Billy the Kid. He served as sheriff in New Mexico before Garrett was appointed El Paso Collector of Customs in 1901. The family stayed in El Paso for 5 years, before they returned to Dona Ana County.
Reportar esta entrada
Más sobre la misma comunidad-colección
Estación de Servicio del Hupmobile
The picture shows a service station of the Hupmobile in El Paso. ...
Escuela de Enfermería de Providence 1912 - El Paso, Tejas
This is the photo of the class of 1915 of the Providence School ...
Merrick Edificio durante la década de 1910 - El Paso, Texas
The picture shows the Merrick building during the 1910s. It ...