Hurley Pride held its annual Spring Festival, which featured many food vendors, including a fundraiser for the Santa Niño Shrine Association, political parties, raffles, kids playground equipment, and music. The main attraction was the car show on the street by the Community Park.
After a day in the park, organizaer SaVanne Kilgore said Illusions band would be playing in the evening.
Photos by Mary Alice Murphy
Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
Susan Neal of Deming is the original owner of this Thunderbird. She bought it for $101 a month, when "I was grossing $300 a month. The license plate is my mother's name. She co-signed with me."
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
Hurley Mayor Ed Encinas and Josie Terrazas "man" the booth for the Santo Ni+?o Shrine Association Fundraiser.
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
"Catch me, grandpa!" Kady Grace Duran, 2, says to her granpa Manuel Garcia.
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
Raising money for the Wounded Warriors, Larry Coushon, Al Wranek, J.D. Sherwood and John Robbins sell raffle tickets for a quarter side of beef.
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
Brothers Robert and Gene Mu+?oz of Bayard, who along with their brother Arthur, own the 1949 Diamond T pickup that their father bought in 1950, pose by it. It was the last year the company made pickups. The company started in 1911, and their products, which were mostly semis, continued to be made, after mergers, until the 1990s..
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
Lyle Sedlacek of the Silver City Copper Country Cruizers shows off his 1932 Ford Roadster he has been working on for about three years.
2014 Hurley Pride Spring Festival and Car Show
Connie and Ernie McClanaham of Deming show off their 1957 Packard Clipper, of which only a few hundred were made.