Celebrate
Hispanic Heritage Month - Sept. 15-Oct. 15:
Discover Hispanic
Heritage in our National Parks and along our National Historic
Trails in the Southwest USA.
Explore National Parks,
Memorials, Monuments and Recreation Areas:
- Cabrillo National Monument,
CA: Climbing out of his boat and onto shore in 1542, Juan
Rodriguez Cabrillo stepped into history as the first European to set
foot on what is now the West Coast of the United States. Cabrillo
departed from the port of Navidad, Mexico, on June 27, 1542. Three
months later he arrived at "a very good enclosed port," which is known
today as San Diego Bay. Historians believe he anchored his flagship, the
San Salvador, on Point Loma's east shore near Cabrillo National
Monument. Cabrillo later died during the expedition, but his crew
pushed on, possibly as far north as Oregon, before thrashing winter
storms forced them to back to Mexico. Cabrillo National Monument,
established in 1913, commemorates Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo's voyage of
discovery. A heroic statue of Cabrillo looks out over the bay that he
first sailed into on September 28, 1542. At the Visitor Center, the
film "In Search of Cabrillo" and an exhibit hall present Cabrillo's life
and times. Ranger-led programs about Cabrillo are usually available on
weekends and on many weekdays during summer months. In addition to
telling the story of 16th century exploration, the park is home to a
wealth of cultural and natural resources.
www.nps.gov/cabr/
-
Coronado National
Memorial, AZ: Coronado National Memorial is the only unit
in the National Park System that commemorates the Francisco Vásquez de
Coronado Expedition of 1540-1542. When reporting to Congress in 1940 on
the establishment of the Memorial, the Committee on Public Lands and
Surveys noted that: “Coronado’s expedition was one of the outstanding
achievements of a period marked by notable explorations. It made known
the vast extent and the nature of the country that lay north of central
Mexico, and from the time of Coronado, Spaniards never lost interest in
the country. In no small measure their subsequent occupation of it was
due to the curiosity so created.”The Memorial preserves and interprets
the natural and human history of the area for the benefit and enjoyment
of present and future generations." The creation of the Memorial
provides visitors with an opportunity to reflect upon the impact the
Coronado Entrada had in shaping the history, culture, and environment of
the southwestern United States and its lasting ties to Mexico and Spain.
The Memorial has two sister parks in Mexico. The location was chosen for
the panoramic views of the US-Mexico border and the San Pedro River
Valley, the route believed to have been taken by Coronado. It was hoped
that this proximity to the border would strengthen bi-national amity and
the bonds, both geographical and cultural, which continue to link the
two countries. The Memorial, located near the center of the Sky Island
bioregion (the juncture of four major biogeographic provinces: Madrean,
Sonoran, Chihuahuan, and Southern Rockies/Mogollon), preserves a rich
biological and geological diversity. Visitors are able to enjoy
recreational opportunities that foster a better understanding and
appreciation of the natural and human history of the area.
www.nps.gov/coro/
- El Morro National Monument, NM: A reliable
waterhole hidden at the base of a massive sandstone bluff made El Morro
(the bluff) a popular campsite. Ancestral Puebloans settled on
the mesa top over 700 years ago. Spanish and American travelers rested,
drank from the pool and carved their signatures, dates and messages for
hundreds of years. Today, El Morro National Monument protects over 2,000
inscriptions and petroglyphs, as well as Ancestral Puebloan ruins. 2006
is El Morro's 100-year anniversary as a National Monument—the nation’s
second. We invite you to make El Morro a stopping point during your
travels. www.nps.gov/elmo/
- Golden Gate National Recreation Area, CA (Photo at top,
courtesy of National Park Service): Golden Gate
National Parks chronicle two hundred years of history, from the Native
American culture, the Spanish Empire frontier and the Mexican Republic,
to maritime history, the California Gold Rush, the evolution of American
coastal fortifications, and the growth of urban San Francisco. The park
also includes the largest and most complete collection of military
installations and fortifications in the country, dating from Spanish
settlement in 1776 though the Nike missiles of the Cold War.
www.nps.gov/goga/
- Pecos National Historical Park, NM: Pecos
preserves 12,000 years of history including the ancient pueblo of Pecos,
Colonial Missions, Santa Fe Trail sites, 20th century ranch history of
Forked Lightning Ranch, and the site of the Civil War Battle of Glorieta
Pass. For several centuries the Upper Pecos Valley, is one of those rare
places where the impact of geography on human experience is strikingly
clear. www.nps.gov/peco
- Salinas Pueblo Missions, NM: Once, thriving
American Indian trade communities of Tiwa and Tompiro speaking Puebloans
inhabited this remote area of central New Mexico. Early in the
17th-century Spanish Franciscans visited the area and found it ripe for
their missionary efforts. However by 1677 the entire Salinas District,
was depopulated of both Indian and Spaniard alike. What remains today
are austere yet beautiful reminders of the early contact between Pueblo
Indians and Spanish Colonials. The ruins of four mission churches, at
Quarai, Abó, and Gran Quivira and the partially excavated pueblo of Las
Humanas or, as it is known today, Gran Quivira. Established in 1980
through the combination of two New Mexico State Monuments and the former
Gran Quivira National Monument, the present Monument comprises a total
of 1,100 acres. www.nps.gov/sapu/
-
Tumacácori National Historical Park, AZ, (Photo courtesy of the National
Park Service: Tumacácori NHP protects three Spanish
colonial mission ruins in the upper Santa Cruz River Valley in southern
Arizona: Tumacácori, Guevavi, and Calabazas. The adobe structures are on
three sites, with a visitor center at Tumacácori. These missions are
among more than twenty established in the Pimería Alta by Father Kino
and other Jesuits, and later expanded upon by Franciscan missionaries.
Tumacácori NHP is part of the Juan Bautista De Anza National Historic
Trail. The Park represents Spanish mission frontier history, the impact
of European colonization upon the Native American peoples, and the
contributions of Spanish, Mexican, and Indian cultures to the heritage
of the Southwest. www.nps.gov/tuma/
Explore our National Historic Trails:-
Juan Bautista De Anza National Trail: ¡Vayan
subiendo!¨"Everyone mount up!" This became a familiar call from
Spanish Captain Juan Bautista de Anza. In 1776, as Americans fought
for their independence in the East, Juan Bautista De Anza led almost
300 people over 1200 miles to settle Alta California. It was the first
overland route established to connect New Spain with San Francisco.
Walk in their footsteps from Nogales, Arizona to San Francisco,
California. The route passes through 19 counties, connects with seven
National Park Service sites, and tells the Anza story through
countless federal, state, regional, and local agencies, organizations
and communities. www.nps.gov/juba
- Santa Fe National Historic Trail: Between
1821 and 1880, the Santa Fe Trail was primarily a commercial highway
connecting Missouri and Santa Fe, New Mexico. From 1821 until 1846, it
was an international commercial highway used by Mexican and American
traders. In 1846, the Mexican-American War began. The Army of the West
followed the Santa Fe Trail to invade New Mexico. When the Treaty of
Guadalupe ended the war in 1848, the Santa Fe Trail became a national
road connecting the United States to the new southwest territories.
Commercial freighting along the trail continued, including
considerable military freight hauling to supply the southwestern
forts. The trail was also used by stagecoach lines, thousands of gold
seekers heading to the California and Colorado gold fields,
adventurers, fur trappers, and emigrants. In 1880 the railroad reached
Santa Fe and the trail faded into history. The Santa Fe National
Historic Trail crosses the five states of Missouri, Kansas, Colorado,
Oklahoma, and New Mexico.
www.nps.gov/safe
Hispanic Heritage Guide:
Hispanic Heritage Month
Mexico's Independence Day
Hispanic Heritage in our
National Parks & along our National Historic Trails
in the Southwest
Hispanic and Mexican
Food Guide & Glossary
How to Handle those
HOT!! Chilies AND a great
Chili con Queso Recipe
Hispanic and Mexican Recipes
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