santa fe trail

baca house trinidad colorado

Baca House, Trinidad Colorado

Felipe Baca, a farmer from Northern New Mexico, settled in the area around Trinidad in 1860, drawn by the good soil and river water for irrigation.  In 1873, he purchased this house from John Hough, a Santa Fe Trail entrepreneur who had built the house just three years prior.  Hough traded the house to Baca for 22,000 pounds of wool, or $7,000.    The Bacas were not only farmers but ranchers, merchants and civic leaders.  The Santa Fe Trail’s mountain route passed through Trinidad, which became a thriving trade and cultural center.

Roses on Baca House fence are only a small part of the beautiful garden

 

Bloom Mansion

Bloom Mansion


The Bloom Mansion is also located in the El Corazon de Trinidad National Historic District

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Eric Jay Dolin Frontier TravelerEric Jay Dolin, the author of Fur, Fortune and Empire, the Epic History of the Fur Trade in America, sat down with the Frontier Traveler to discuss the impact of the fur trade on the history of America.

FT: After writing Leviathan, did you see a similarity between the plight of the whale and the plight of the beaver?

EJD: Yes, it’s fundamentally the same issue, that of humans seeking to profit from nature, and what happens when there are no restraints whatsoever on human activity. Whale and beaver populations plummeted because there was money to be made, and the way to make it was by killing the animals and rendering from them useful products – useful to humans, that is.

Making money, of course, is a great goal, but the point is that when that is the only goal, and there are many people eric dolin book covercompeting for the same resource with nothing to check or regulate their activities, then almost inevitably the “Tragedy of the Commons” ensues. The good news is that the populations of beaver and many whale species have come back from their historic lows, and are doing fairly well, and in some areas, exceptionally well.

FT:  How did you get interested in the fur trade?

EJD:  I know the exact moment the idea for this book occurred. It was in the spring of 2007, while I was reading a book about the Founding of New England. The author wrote that “The Bible and the beaver were the two mainstays of” the Plymouth Colony in its early years. I understood the reference to the Bible, but I had no idea why beavers were thrown into the mix.

Intrigued, I read more, and soon the reference to beavers made sense. For more than a decade after their arrival in America, the Pilgrims’ main source of income had come from the sale of beaver pelts. Thus, the beaver was critical to the colony’s survival. This discovery was a surprise to me. What else, I wondered, didn’t I know about the American fur trade?

My curiosity piqued, I went to my local library and started reading about the fur trade. And within a couple of days, I realized that I could use the history of the fur trade to tell the broader and equally fascinating story of how America evolved into a transcontinental nation. I was hooked. [Click to read more]

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Oil Painting of Don Diego de Vargas The doors of the newly created New Mexico History Museum in Santa Fe will open to the public for the first time May 24, 2009, during Memorial Day weekend. The state-of-the-art, immersive, interactive exhibition about New Mexico’s complex and colorful stories will forever banish the notion of history as boring and un-engaging.

The museum’s multi-media environment explores the early history of indigenous people, 400 years of Spanish colonization, the Mexican Period, and travel and commerce on the Santa Fe Trail. The exhibition also details the flourishing of New Mexico’s world-renowned arts communities and the coming of the Atomic Age.

“The New Mexico History Museum will be the starting place for the New Mexico cultural experience,” says New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson.

The new museum is located directly behind the Palace of the Governors, the oldest continuously occupied public building in the U.S., right on the Santa Fe Plaza. [Click to read more]

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