Morgan Hill
– The city’s historic Madrone area is noted for the rodeo, a zoo
and strong, determined residents. Dominga Espinoza Leyva de Lujan
only lived in Madrone for a few years but left an indelible
impression on people she helped and those who helped her when the
need arose.
Morgan Hill – The city’s historic Madrone area is noted for the rodeo, a zoo and strong, determined residents. Dominga Espinoza Leyva de Lujan only lived in Madrone for a few years but left an indelible impression on people she helped and those who helped her when the need arose.

Born in 1899, Leyva de Lujan turned 105 on Sept. 3 at her home in Willow Glen where she is looked after by her children.

“She’s lived in three centuries,” said Frank Leyva, Dominga’s son, who is usually called Paco. “When she was young, people drove oxen for transportation,” he said.

Along the way, Dominga traveled to a new country, raised five children, touched the life of an internationally known artist, learned English and became a citizen. John F. Kennedy’s likeness overlooks her dining room. And she married a second time – to Francisco Lujan who, Paco said, was her reward for past troubles.

“He was a lovely man and a wonderful husband,” Dominga said. “He was good to the children, a good provider and was everything but tall,” she joked.

She also collected 30 grandchildren, 37 great-grandchildren and five – so far – great-great-grandchildren.

Dominga was born in Baja, California, married Juan José Leyva in 1920 and moved to Tempe, Ariz., in 1922 where her family worked as hard rock miners.

She came to Madrone – the area along Monterey Road just north of Cochrane Road – in the early 1920s to be with her extended family. Juan José left sometime after the fifth child was born, leaving Dominga to raise Dave, Jessie, Frank (Paco), Connie and Richard with the help of friends and family.

Paco, who grew up to have a successful career as an Interpol operative, said he didn’t learn English until he went to Burnett School, though his younger sister, Connie, did. Dominga learned her English later after she moved to San Jose in the 1930s.

“She worked so hard to keep us together,” Paco said. “A WPA job in San Jose helped. We rented a house for $12.50 a month and mother walked across town to save 5¢.”

The Workers Progress Administration (WPA) was a federal program to provide jobs during the Depression years of the 1930s. During this time Dominga went to Woodrow Wilson High School in San Jose to learn English. In 1943 she became a citizen, an achievement of which she is proud.

Besides working for the WPA, Dominga worked in a cannery and as a nanny, a job she had held before. While still living in Madrone she cared for the infant Robert Moesle, who grew up to be an artist. His realistic and serene watercolors of California and Europe are in private collections in the U.S. and Europe and in museums and universities in the United States.

The walls of Dominga’s house on Coe Avenue aren’t covered with Moesle’s paintings, but with family pictures, plus several certificates and letters of congratulations on her 100th birthday in 1999.

Better than certificates, though, are her friends. Many of them are from the neighborhood where she has lived for 60 years.

To what does she credit her long life?

“I tried to be sensible,” she said.

That and a grandmother and aunt who lived past 100.

Her rules to live by?

“Work hard and never buy on time,” Dominga said.

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