[4] In 1832 there was severe flooding and due to the meanderings of the Rio Grande much of the village was destroyed.
[3] Further losses to the river occurred and after the Senecú Pueblo was not recognized by the Texas legislature, and after they had lost their suit of 1871 to Ysleta,[5] the inhabitants probably developed the same land which was now south of the river; however, the town was not formally established at its current location until 1949.
[3] As of 1901, Senecú still had "a tribal organization, with a cacique (who is also custodian of the church), a governor, a war-chief, and subordinate officials.
[1] The 1910 Mexican Revolution caused some members of the community to flee across the border to Ysleta and Socorro del Sur.
[7] The Pueblo is commemorated by a stone monument[3] on Alameda Street, in El Paso, about 1½ miles west of the Ysleta Mission.