Harvey Girl, Elizabeth Alice Garnas |
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![]() Vaughn was a railroad terminal and division piont, and most of the people living in the community were railroad people. There were also cowboys and ranchers in town each day on horseback and on wagons. It was 1926 when Alice arrived, and although it was dusty, isolated, and small, Alice loved Vaughn and her new life as a Harvey Girl. Local ranchers were regulars at the Harvey House lunch counter, especially as the cooking skills of the German chef and baker gained a wide reputation. The prices were reasonable, and even in the middle of the hot New Mexico summer there was homemade ice cream. There was no competition for service, food, or price for hundreds of miles. Charles Lindbergh inadvertently found himself at the Vaughn Harvey House in 1926. He was forced to land his plane on the desert near town because of engine failure. With his mechanic, he waited several days for parts and assistance in the hotel across the street from the Harvey House, taking all his meals in the Harvey House Dining Room. “The town just went plum crazy,” Alice remembered. Alice’s father died and she returned to Albuquerque to help settle family affairs. As soon as her obligations at home were completed, she returned to the Alvarado and asked for another job. Alice was sent down south to Belen, New Mexico, where she became reacquainted with a railroadman she had know before in Vaughn. They married in 1929.
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