Author: Melissa True

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Taos Pueblo and Its Neighbors

Since 1540, when Europeans under the command of Coronado’s lieutenant, Hernando de Alvarado, first visited the Indian village at the foot of the brooding Sangre de Cristo Mountains, the multistoried Pueblo of Taos, with its two large apartment buildings separated by the Taos River, has impressed all who see…

Lipan Apaches: Some Untold Stories

By Sherry Robinson   Lipan Apaches are some of the most misrepresented and Indian people in western American history. Prominent historians have repeatedly underestimated them, exterminated them, and pushed them off the map. In fact, they survived against great odds, as the historic record shows abundantly. Lipans were the…

Gallegos Ranch Historical Marker

Dedication of the Official Historical Marker In Gallegos, New Mexico June 16, 2018 Delivered by New Mexico State Historian Rick Hendricks* Jesús María Gallegos, founder of the Gallegos Ranch (also known as Rincón Colorado), was from Montón de Los Álamos, located thirteen miles northeast of Las Vegas, New Mexico.He…

Francisco de la O to James Wiley Magoffin, Hacienda de la Rosalía, 23 March 1861

Francisco de la O to James Wiley Magoffin, Hacienda de la Rosalía, 23 March 1861, Magoffin Home, I3-14a. Translation by Rick Hendricks   Hacienda de Santa Rosalía, 23 March 1861 Don Santiago Magoffin Fort Bliss             My dear sir of my particular appreciation and respect,                         I have received…

El Paso Presidio Enlistment Papers

By Rick Hendricks   Personal Information Vicente Antonio Archuleta, son of Cristóbal and Francisca Ortega, native of Socorro, dependent of this jurisdiction of El Paso, laborer by profession, widower, thirty, height 5 feet 1 inch, Roman Catholic, brown hair, ruddy complexion, brown eyes, normal lips with a scar on…