© Latinas in History 2008 |
ARAGÓN,
JESUSITA (19?)
Aragón
learned her trade as a partera (midwife),
from her New Mexican grandmother, and went on to deliver more than 12,000
infants throughout her career. At the age of fourteen when she delivered
her first baby, Aragón embarked on a life-long journey of helping
ranch and subsistence farming women on the northern New Mexican frontier.
Her two out of wedlock pregnancies caused a rupture with her immediate
family, therefore she built her own a home providing for her children
as a partera. Known far and wide for her skills, Aragón
knew how to comfort women in labor reducing by their stress throughout
their ordeal. Recalling her experiences, she remembered
riding long distances on horseback, wagons, or cars to deliver babies.
She believed her skills were a gift from God, and charged modest fees,
or none at all. In time, Aragón obtained a practicing license and
joined a midwives club. She baptized babies,
helped with adoptions, and cared for children and mothers in difficult
times. Eventually, with the rise of birth control and the spread of institutional
medicine, fewer mothers needed her help.
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