Albuquerque,
New Mexico dates back 12,000 years. Anasazi Indians
settled in the area and lived here for 2 centuries,
from 1100 to 1300, establishing several communities
throughout northwestern New Mexico connected by sophisticated
transportation and communication networks.
Explorer-conquistador
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado came north in 1540,
from Mexico in search of the mythical Seven Cities
of Cibola. He and his troops, cooks, priests, and
beasts reportedly spent the winter of that year in
an Indian pueblo on the west bank of the Rio Grande
20 miles north of Albuquerque. The site is now a state
monument just northwest of the town of Bernalillo.
Coronado
left, but wealthy Spanish settlers began arriving
in greater numbers, but the Pueblo Rebellion of 1680
discouraged further settlement until Spanish General
Don Diego de Vargas arrived in1692. By the 17th century
it was sufficiently populated to have acquired a name:
Bosque Grande de San Francisco Xavier. In 1706, the
ambitious provisional governor of the territory, Don
Francisco Cuervo y Valdez, petitioned the Spanish
government for permission to establish the bosque
as a formal villa and call it Albequerque, after Viceroy
Francisco Fernandez de la Cueva, the Duke of Alburquerque.
The "r" apparently fell out of use casually
and over a long period.
The
US claimed the territory when General Stephen Kearny
established an army post here in1846. Confederate
troops occupied Albuquerque briefly in the Civil War
and installed 8 defensive cannons (4 of them are still
on display in Old Town). Once the war was over, Anglo
settlers, mostly merchants, tradesmen, artisans, doctors,
and lawyers, began arriving in force.
The
railroad arrived in 1880, affecting the development
of specific sectors of the city and drastically altering
the ethnic makeup of the city. By 1885, Albuquerque
had become predominantly Anglo in population. The
consequent influx of residents from the East and the
Midwest brought enormous changes to the prevailing
architecture of the city (and the region).
In
1885, Albuquerque incorporated as a town, and 6 years
later as a city. In 1889, Albuquerque won the rather
heated battle for the right to locate the state university
in the city. In 1912, New Mexico was admitted to the
US, the 47th state in the Union (Arizona, the 48th,
was admitted later that same year).
Extending
from Chicago to Los Angeles, the original U.S. Route
66, as it passed through New Mexico, was a circuitous
(if all-encompassing) road running from Santa Rosa
to Las Vegas to Santa Fe, down to Albuquerque, farther
south to Los Lunas, and then back north and west along
the railroad right-of-way. In1937, Route 66 was straightened
, running right along Albuquerque's Central Avenue.
It was the state's first completely oil-surfaced road,
and the shortest east-west route through New Mexico.
The
Native American culture is probably the most deeply
rooted of the many branches that make up the diverse
ethnic and cultural environment of New Mexico. The Anasazi
Indians were virtually the first identifiable inhabitants
of the Southwest. They have bestowed a legacy of kivas,
cliff dwellings and traditional arts & crafts.
Today,
a wide variety of Native American culture is available
at the 19 Indian pueblos that lie within the boundaries
of New Mexico. Indigenous arts and crafts are still
widely practiced in New Mexico's pueblos, and you
can almost always find native craftspeople selling
their wares. (Whenever possible, remember to check
in at the tribal office before venturing out into
the pueblo.
Ritual
dancing, pow-wows, and feast days are another large
part of Indian culture. Some of the dances are traditional,
dating back to long before the arrival of Europeans
in America; others reenact a variety of events that
took place during the uneasy early stages of European-Native
American relations.
One
excellent way to orient yourself before any visit
to a pueblo is to tour the Indian Pueblo Cultural
Center in northwest Albuquerque. Open seven days a
week, the center offers a huge range of exhibits,
performances, and information on Native American culture
in general and Pueblo Indians in particular. Of the
center's many components (children's museum, gift
shop, bookstore, restaurant), only the museum charges
admission. Weekend performances of Native American
dances, demonstrations of arts and crafts, and a variety
of year-round special events are free to the public.
The gift shop offers an array of fine pottery, paintings,
sculpture, weaving.
Old
Town near the center of the city is the site of the
original settlement. The shops and galleries surrounding
Old Town Plaza offer arts, crafts, gifts and wonderful
food. Native American artisians vend their wares around
the plaza where bargaining is in order.
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