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Articles 1 - 30 of 30
Full-Text Articles in Cultural History
Issue No. 119: Fall 2023, Historical Society Of New Mexico
Issue No. 119: Fall 2023, Historical Society Of New Mexico
La Crónica de Nuevo México
Table of Contents
2 A Letter from the President
3 Tom Ying: The Hard Life of an Early Chinese Immigrant in New Mexico by Garland D. Bills
9 When the “Bunion Derby” Ran Through New Mexico, March 23-April 4, 1928 by Richard Melzer
15 Manifest Destiny and New Mexicans by Doyle Daves
22 New Mexico History Museum Offers New Ways To Explore The Past by New Mexico History Museum Staff
26 HSNM Remembers
30 2023 Book and Service Award Winners
31 New Books
32 Submission Guideline
Issue No. 118: Spring 2023
La Crónica de Nuevo México
Table of Contents
2 A Letter from the President
3 The Development of Political Jurisdictions in New Mexico, 1823 – 1846 by Robert J. Tórrez
12 Gallup’s Grocer by John Lewis Taylor
21 Focus on Diaspora Casts Apache Histories in New Light by Paul Conrad
26 The Spirit of Lucy – Its Cemetery by Denise Tessier
29 CSWR has historic Blackdom town plat by Nancy Brown-Martinez
31 New Books
32 HSNM remembers John Ramsay and J. Paul Taylor
Issue No. 117: Fall 2022
La Crónica de Nuevo México
TABLE OF CONTENTS
2 A Letter From the President
3 Bosque Redondo Memorial by Heidi Toth
11 Naal Tsoos Saní by Makayla Martinez
16 The Albuquerque Eight by Herbert D. Teel Jr. and Deborah C. Slaney
23 The Edgar Sisters of Missouri and Santa Fe by Doyle Daves
27 National History Day: Developing Young Historians by Heather McClenahan
31 Nina Otero-Warren honored by Judy and Dennis Reinhartz
33 2022 book and service award winners
34 HSNM remembers Dave Townsend, Marilyn Pope, Fred Nolan
35 New Books
36 Call for presentations
Issue No. 116: Spring 2022
La Crónica de Nuevo México
2 A Letter from the President
3 White Sands Missile Range Museum evolves by Darren Court
7 Creating a Historic Site: Fort Selden by Alexandra McKinney
12 A Man for his Time: James Silas Calhoun by Sherry Robinson
18 Nancy Owen Lewis: A loss to HSNM by Susan M. Berry
19 New Books
Julian Gunther Interview About Pandemic Life 2021, Kendra Chavez-Murphy
Julian Gunther Interview About Pandemic Life 2021, Kendra Chavez-Murphy
Oral Histories HIST300, Spring 2021
In this interview, Kendra Chavez-Murphy interviews classmate Julian Gunther about pandemic life. Topics range from: online school, music, and family health.
Ella Anagick Oral History Interview Feb 2021, Holly Guise
Ella Anagick Oral History Interview Feb 2021, Holly Guise
Oral Histories HIST300, Spring 2021
Oral History interview with Ella Anagick about the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) school Mt. Edgecumbe High School in Alaska in the late 1960s.
Issue No. 115: Fall 2021
La Crónica de Nuevo México
2 A Letter From the President
3 Clyde Tingley and the Rerouting of Route 66 by Roger M. Zimmerman
7 Navajo Indian Scouts and Veterans' Pensions by John Lewis Taylor
13 The HSNM Symbols And Capt. Robert Wainwright by John B Ramsay and Michael Stevenson
17 Rudy Laumbach at 90, A Quintessential New Mexican by Doyle Daves
24 Juan Bautista Vigil y Alarid and the Occupation of New Mexico, 1846 by Robert J. Torrez
Issue No. 114: Spring 2021
La Crónica de Nuevo México
2 A Letter From the President
3 The Memory of their Magic: Dance Halls of the Rio Abajo and Beyond by Richard Melzer and Matt Baca
11 The 1899 Attempt to Form the New State of El Paso, USA by John E. Ramsay
18 Despedidas del Mundo: Death Songs by Robert J. Tórrez
30 HSNM Award Winners
32 New Books
Issue No. 113: Autumn 2020
La Crónica de Nuevo México
ii President’s Message
1 New Mexico’s Path to Women’s Suffrage, 1910-1920 by Doyle Daves
7 Seven New Mexico Suffragists by Sylvia Ramos Cruz, M.D.
11 New Mexico in the Time of Influenza: A Brief Tale of Two Pandemics by Nancy Owen Lewis
13 Historical Society of New Mexico News
15 New Books for Your New Mexico Bookshelf compiled by Richard Melzer
15 Book Reviews
17 Historic Photographs
Issue No. 112: Spring 2020
La Crónica de Nuevo México
ii President’s Message
1 A Captive of the Apaches by Mark Santiago
7 Meet the Officers and Board of the Historical Society of New Mexico—Nancy Owen Lewis, HSNM Vice President
9 Historical Society of New Mexico News
11 New Books for Your New Mexico Bookshelf compiled by Richard Melzer
13 Book Review
14 Chronicling America—Historic American Newspapers
Seventeenth-Century Spanish Colonial Identity In New Mexico: A Study Of Identity Practices Through Material Culture, Caroline M. Gabe
Seventeenth-Century Spanish Colonial Identity In New Mexico: A Study Of Identity Practices Through Material Culture, Caroline M. Gabe
Anthropology ETDs
This dissertation explores how seventeenth-century Spanish colonial households expressed their group identity at a regional level in New Mexico. Through the material remains of daily practice and repetitive actions, identity markers tied to adornment, technological traditions, and culinary practices are compared between 14 assemblages to test four identity models. Seventeenth-century colonists were eating a combination of Old World domesticates and wild game on colonoware and majolica serving vessels, cooking using Indigenous pottery, grinding with Puebloan style tools, and conducting household scale production and prospecting. While assemblages are consistent in basic composition, variations are present tied to socioeconomic status. This blending …
Recovering Abiquiú’S Lost Church Records, Samuel E. Sisneros
Recovering Abiquiú’S Lost Church Records, Samuel E. Sisneros
University Libraries & Learning Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications
In early 2016, an elderly couple came into UNM’s Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections determined to donate six hide-covered books to the archives. They confessed they did not know their contents and that even though the books were in the care of the family for many years, they thought UNM would be a suitable place for them to be preserved and studied. I immediately realized that these antique books were the long lost baptismal, marriage and burial registers (1777-1861) from the Mission Church of Santo Tomás Apóstol de Abiquiú and that the rightful repository for them was the …
Beach Bodies: Gender And The Beach In American Culture, 1880-1940, Margaret Elena Depond
Beach Bodies: Gender And The Beach In American Culture, 1880-1940, Margaret Elena Depond
History ETDs
This dissertation argues that American beaches, within the world of leisure and pleasure, were significant contested spaces of social change and debate. Overtime, from about 1880 to 1940, social restrictions loosened at the beach, allowing men, women, and people of color to express themselves in ways that had been previously controlled, curtailed, or proscribed. The emergence of mass popular amusements at the beach attracted a wide array of the American population. Both working-class and middle-class Americans absorbed the culture of new beach attractions, such as amusement parks, piers, boardwalks, and bathhouses. In doing so, they interacted more with each other …
Decolonizing Playwriting Through Indigenous Ceremonial Performances, Jay B. Muskett
Decolonizing Playwriting Through Indigenous Ceremonial Performances, Jay B. Muskett
Theatre & Dance ETDs
This dissertation attempts to express the importance of storytelling within the Indigenous Theater framework. It does so by first analyzing the progression of the writer’s unique upbringing and analyzing the influences of story upon an indigenous identity. I will also attempt to describe the aesthetics of Native Theater along two lines of methodology which includes praxis described and developed by Hanay Geiogamah and Rolland Meinholtz. I will also explain how the script 1n2ian tries to follow those concepts of Native Theater to create a ceremonial performance that uses a blending of both methodologies.
Issue No. 111: Spring 2019
La Crónica de Nuevo México
ii President’s Message
1 World War I and the Spanish Flu Pandemic in New Mexico by Rick Hendricks
6 Interview with David Holtby—A Preview of His Plenary Session of the 2019 New Mexico History Conference, “Conflicted Legacy: New Mexico and World War I”
10 Mock Peace Conference to Commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the World War I Armistice, by Judy Reinhartz
11 Book Reviews and Notes, compiled by Richard Melzer
12 HSNM News—Calls for Applications for 2019 HSNM Grant Programs
13 Anna’s Warning, edited by John Ramsay
Issue No. 110: Autumn 2018
La Crónica de Nuevo México
ii President's Message
1 The Cartographic Legacy of the Spanish Royal Corps of Military Engineers for the Greater Southwest by Dennis Reinhartz
8 Help Commemorate the Centennial of the End of World War I
9 Book Reviews and Notes
11 The Historical Society of New Mexico -- Who We Are Part II
12 In Memoriam
13 Historical Society of New Mexico News
Issue No. 109: Spring 2018
La Crónica de Nuevo México
ii President’s Message
1 First Overland Submarine Cruise: Japanese Submarine Visits 12 New Mexico Communities in 12 Days by Dick Brown & Roland Penttila
7 Book Reviews and Notes
11 The Historical Society of New Mexico--Who We Are Part I
13 Conserving a Piece of the Works Progress Administration by Donna Milburn
Bloody Bay: Grassroots Policeways, Community Control, And Power In San Francisco And Its Hinterlands, 1846-1915, Darren A. Raspa
Bloody Bay: Grassroots Policeways, Community Control, And Power In San Francisco And Its Hinterlands, 1846-1915, Darren A. Raspa
History ETDs
“Bloody Bay: Grassroots Policeways, Community Control, and Power in San Francisco and its Hinterlands, 1846–1915” follows the history of San Francisco’s spectrum of formal and informal policing from the American takeover of California in 1846 during the U.S.–Mexico War to Police Commissioner Jesse B. Cook’s nationwide law enforcement advisory team tour in 1912 and San Francisco’s debut as the Jewel of a new American Pacific world during the Panama Pacific International Exposition in 1915. These six decades functioned as a unique period wherein a culture of popular justice and grassroots community peacekeeping were fostered. This policing environment was forged in …
Diversas De Sí, Entre El Hoy Y El Ayer: Rememoria De Tres Íconos Femeninos Espirituales, La Condesa De Malibrán, Sor Juana Inés De La Cruz Y La Falsa Teresa De Jesús, Ana Gabriela Hernandez Gonzalez 5059749397
Diversas De Sí, Entre El Hoy Y El Ayer: Rememoria De Tres Íconos Femeninos Espirituales, La Condesa De Malibrán, Sor Juana Inés De La Cruz Y La Falsa Teresa De Jesús, Ana Gabriela Hernandez Gonzalez 5059749397
Spanish and Portuguese ETDs
This dissertation traces the cultural memory of three magical/religious women of the colonial period: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, La Condesa de Malibrán and La Falsa Teresa de Jesús. It studies these icons specifically in three different discourses that construct cultural identities in Mexico: colonial discourse (XVI-XVII Centuries), the discourse of national consolidation (XIX-XX centuries) and postcolonial discourse (XX-XIX Centuries). First I describe how the narratives of the colonial period and of national consolidation employ an official lens to place magical/religious women within traditional gender roles. Then I delineate how historical novels in the 21st century employ a postcolonial …
"There Was Nothing There For Us”: Environment And The People At Bosque Redondo, Kaveh K. Mowahed
"There Was Nothing There For Us”: Environment And The People At Bosque Redondo, Kaveh K. Mowahed
History ETDs
The Bosque Redondo Indian reservation held nearly 10,000 Native prisoners through much of the 1860s. Navajo captives outnumbered the Mescalero Apaches who were imprisoned there by about ten to one, until the Mescaleros escaped in November, 1865. Americans interned the Navajo at Bosque Redondo for another three years before negotiating a treaty that allowed for their release and return to their homeland, Dinétah.
The physical environment’s role was seemingly all encompassing for Natives confined on the Bosque Redondo reservation. However, the environments in their homelands were different; they were distinct landscapes that illustrated the intimate connections people have with place. …
Issue No. 106: Winter 2017
La Crónica de Nuevo México
1 Arizona-New Mexico History Conference Set for April 20-22, 2017
1 Little Known Bankhead Highway Linked Two Coasts, Delivered Commerce and Tourists to New Mexico
2 Chautaqua Performance
3 Research Grants Made to Individuals, Institutions
4 HSNM, Jewish Historical Society Partner in Speakers Bureau
5 Presidents Message, Winter 2017
5 A Look at Two Member Organizations of HSNM
5 Book Review - Jack M. Campbell: The Autobiography of New Mexico's First Modern Governor
Issue No. 107: Summer 2017
La Crónica de Nuevo México
1 The Abreu Family: Movers and Shakers in Nineteenth Century New Mexico
1 Treasures Hidden in County Records: The Unveiling of the 1908 Coroner's Reports on the Death of Pat Garrett
2 A "Railroad Town" is Getting More Books While Recognizing Its History: Carrizozo and Educator and Historian Bill Thorpe Celebrates the Local Heritage
3 Meet the Officers and Board of the Historical Society of New Mexico
3 President's Message
3 2017 Annual Meeting of the Historical Society of New Mexico
4 Remarks by Dr. Robert J. Stahl at the Doña Ana County Clerk's Office Unveiling of the Pat Garret …
Issue No. 104: Winter 2016
La Crónica de Nuevo México
1 Conference comments and a few other remarks
1 Cura Jose Francisco Leyva, Activist Priest and the Founding of Las Vegas by Doyle Davis
2 Santa Fe Trail Travelers and Their Descendants Conference
2 Changes to HSNM Grant Program
2 Care in Using History Photographs by B.G. Burr
3 New Books for Your New Mexico History Bookshelf
3 The Four Corners, Centennials, New Groups and Much More!
3 Was Milton Yarberry "Jerked to Jesus"? by Robert J. Torrez
4 Historical Society of New Mexico Speaker Bureau Speakers
5 Ruperto Gonzales - The Robin Hood of the Rio Puerco Valley by …
Issue No. 105: Summer 2016
La Crónica de Nuevo México
1 The Historical Society of New Mexico Annual 2016 Awards Ceremony
2 Preparing for the First Stained Glass Windows of the Santa Fe Cathedral by Claude Fouillade Ph.D. and Rick Hendricks Ph.D.
3 Kraemer Will Be Missed By Us All by Michael Stevenson
4 Alcalde Juan de Dios Maese of Las Vegas: Leadership in Times of Civic Tumult by Doyle Daves
4 Arizona-New Mexico Joint History Conference
5 Rupert Lopez by Dirk Van Hart
5 New Mexico's Cattle Mutilations by Nancy Owen Lewis
6 Did you know?
7 William F. M. Arny: Indian Agent by Don Bullis
Issue No. 103: Fall 2015
La Crónica de Nuevo México
1 Hillerman to Open Historical Society of New Mexico 2016 Conference in Farmington
1 Conference Planning Well Underway
2 Book Review: A Civil War History of the New Mexico Volunteers and Militia
2 Croquet in New Mexico
3 Historical Society of New Mexico Speakers Bureau a Benefit of Membership for Organizational Members
3 José Ynez Perea: World Traveler, Las Vegas Religious Leader
4 "Into Lands Totally Unknown" Spanish Expeditions into the Sacramento Mountains
The Armendárizes: A Transnational Family In New Mexico And Mexico, Samuel E. Sisneros
The Armendárizes: A Transnational Family In New Mexico And Mexico, Samuel E. Sisneros
University Libraries & Learning Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications
Although the Armendáriz surname is uncommon in New Mexico today,
the Armendáriz family was important in New Mexico during the early
to mid-1800s, with key political, diplomatic, and social links to Texas; California;
Washington, D.C.; and Mexico. The lives of the Armendárizes attest
to the long and constant movement of people, trade, and politics along El
Camino Real de Tierra Adentro (the Royal Road of the Interior) and to the
formation of a binational region. From Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the El Paso/
Ciudad Juárez border and Chihuahua City to Mexico City, the Armendáriz
family legacy demonstrates that New …
The Casasola Legacy In El Paso, Samuel E. Sisneros
The Casasola Legacy In El Paso, Samuel E. Sisneros
University Libraries & Learning Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications
This article brings to light the historical context of El Paso’s unknown and uncelebrated connection to the legendary Casasola family photo dynasty in Mexico. The local El Paso Casasola portrait studio photographer and owner did not capture iconic Mexican Revolutionary images like those of his contemporary famed photographer family members in Mexico City, but instead he recorded the visual memory of ordinary individuals and families residing in the US/Mexico border region.
A Collection Of Book Reviews And Essays, Samuel E. Sisneros
A Collection Of Book Reviews And Essays, Samuel E. Sisneros
University Libraries & Learning Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications
Contains selected papers written by Samuel Sisneros, Masters Degree program in Borderlands History, University of Texas at El Paso. See cover page for index of papers.
Rio Mimbres Acequia Systems: An Oral History, Neal W. Ackerly
Rio Mimbres Acequia Systems: An Oral History, Neal W. Ackerly
Books
This volume contains transcripts of interviews with various residents collected during the 1993 field phase of the survey of acequia systems in the Mimbres Valley. As noted in Volume 1, additional interviews were conducted with other residents, but were not recorded. Accordingly, no transcript of these interview sessions cannot be included here.
The individuals interviewed, as well as the abbreviated names appearing in these transcripts, included John VonTress (JVT, age 57), Regis McSherry (RM, age 67), Sam Grijalva (age 73), Charles Disert (age 84), and Horace Bounds (HB, age 90). Vesta McSherry, appearing as VM in transcripts, provided additional information …
New Mexico Roots Ltd : A Demographic Perspective From Genealogical, Historical And Geographic Data Found In The Diligencias Matrimoniales Or Pre-Nuptial Investigations (1678-1869) Of The Archives Of The Archdiocese Of Santa Fe : Multiple Data Extracted And Here Edited In A Uniform Presentation By Years And Family Surnames, Angelico Chavez
CSWR Reference Tools
No abstract provided.