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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZY_1926_Santa-Fe-NM.html
Every year since 1926, when Will Shuster and Jacques Cartier created the image, Santa Fe and friends have been able to release their ties to depression, gloom and uncertainty by burning a symbol of these misfortunes . . . Zozobra! The burning of t…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZV_1912_Santa-Fe-NM.html
In 1906, Congress passed an act that would enable New Mexico and Arizona to become one large state. The residents in Arizona voted against the act, while the New Mexicans voted for it. It was not until 1912 that the opposing forces were reconciled…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZU_1876_Santa-Fe-NM.html
While the nation was celebrating the Centennial, Santa Fe was into its 266th year. Although the Treaty of Guadalupe Hildago guaranteed the property of Hispanics and Indians, problems in the interpretation of Spanish and Mexican land laws worked to…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZP_1862_Santa-Fe-NM.html
Shortly after the Civil War began, the Confederacy turned its attention to the Southwest, and in February, 1862, three thousand three hundred troops under the command of Confederate General Sibley, defeated the Union troops at Valverde, raised the…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZO_1848_Santa-Fe-NM.html
In May of 1848, U.S. President James K. Polk ordered the invasion of Mexico by U.S. troops, thus begining the Mexican War. Three months later, General Stephen Watts Kearney led a victorious U.S. Army unopposed across northern New Mexico and into S…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZ2_1776_Santa-Fe-NM.html
When the Declaration of Independence was signed, Santa Fe was already 166 years old. English and American explorers and traders replaced the French as a source of concern to Spanish officials in New Mexico. The successful American War of Independe…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FZ0_1712_Santa-Fe-NM.html
In order to fulfill a promise that Don Diego de Vargas made, the government leaders of Santa Fe issued a proclamation calling for an annual fiesta to commemorate the peaceful reentry of the Spanish into Santa Fe in 1692. This annual celebration he…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FYY_don-diego-de-vargas-zapata-luj-ponce-de-le-el-marquez-de-la-nava-de-barcinas_Santa-Fe-NM.html
Don Diego de Vargas Zapata Luj?n Ponce de Le?n, born 1643 in Madrid, Spain, served the crown as Governor of New Mexico from 1691-1697 and 1703-1704. Vargas was a devout Christian with a strong devotion to Nuestra Se?ora La Conquistadora, Our Lady …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FYM_1692_Santa-Fe-NM.html
Under the direction of Don Diego de Vargas, the Spanish returned to recapture New Mexico after twelve years of exile in El Paso. In an attempt to encourage settlement of the land in the Rio Grande Valley, Don Diego de Vargas issued land grants for…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1FY3_1680_Santa-Fe-NM.html
In the seventeenth century New Mexico was plagued by drought, conflicts between civil and church authorities, and extreme demands placed by the Spanish settlers on the native population. The latter situation caused a deterioration so severe that b…
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