Thursday, April 19, 2012

A TRIP TO TAOS NEW MEXICO


A Taos Timeline - A Long Winding Road

 
6,000 years ago: Nomadic hunter-gatherers pass through the area leaving behind arrowheads, potshards and pictographs.

900 years ago: The people of Taos Pueblo and Picuris Pueblo inhabit their villages.

1540: Conquistador Hernando de Alvarado follows the Rio Grande north to Taos Valley. When he sees the sun shining on the straw in the adobes at Taos Pueblo, he believes he has found the famed Cities of Gold.

1680: The Pueblo people unite to drive out the Spanish.

1696: Don Diego de Vargas of Spain resettles the area around Taos Pueblo, Taos Plaza and Ranchos de Taos.

Early 1800s: Taos becomes the headquarters for mountain men, such as Kit Carson, who marries Taoseña Josefa Jaramillo.

1826: Padre Antonio Jose Martinez begins serving the Taos parish. He starts the first newspaper west of the Mississippi, an offshoot of which is still in existence today.

1847: During the war with Mexico, some of the people of Taos rebel and kill U.S. Territorial Governor Charles Bent in his Taos home, as he attempts to escape through a hole he has dug in his adobe wall.

1898: Artists Bert Phillips and Ernest Blumenschein stop to have a broken wagon wheel repaired, become enchanted with Taos and decide to stay. This event starts an immigration of artists that continues today.

1917: Socialite Mabel Dodge Luhan arrives and eventually brings to Taos creative luminaries such as Ansel Adams, Willa Cather, Aldous Huxley, Carl Jung, D.H. Lawrence, Georgia O'Keeffe, Thornton Wilder and Thomas Wolfe.

1955: Ernie and Rhoda Blake open Taos Ski Valley. The first lift goes up Al's Run for 300 vertical feet and is 1,000 feet long.

1965: The second highest suspension bridge in the U.S. highway system is built spanning the Rio Grande Gorge. It is called the "bridge to nowhere" while it is being built, because the funding does not exist to continue the road on the other side.

1960s & 1970s: Taos is quite the hippie hang out. Many of the hippies stay and become part of the lively modern cultural scene of Taos.
Only a 100 mile return trip from Santa Fe, Taos is a wonderful experience in history and scenery.
A mission village on route.

A beautifull chapel.
The gathering site.
Devotions

Landscape and skies were terrific..
Village (pubelo) mission.
Great Views
 Taos Mural
 Rio Grande Gorge Bridge
Rio Grande Gorge
 Views over 600ft into the Gorge. Note: Big horn sheep are roaming
in the clearing at the bottom beside the river.
 Elk Crossing
 Great Landscape
 Ski resort area.
 Local ranch entrance.
 A rainbow near the end of our trip.
Trip back to Santa Fe followed the Rio Grande.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not only gorgeous pics, but a history lesson as well..thanks so much.
Jim & Linda

Anonymous said...

Love the rainbow
Snow here yesterday
Love you
Paul
Happy birthday mom,thanks for the gift of life