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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100513T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100513T193000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175335Z
CREATED:20100429T211829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175335Z
UID:10001714-1273773600-1273779000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe A Santa Fe 400th Anniversary lecture
DESCRIPTION:Pedro de Peralta’s conflicted legacy in the founding of Santa Fe will be discussed by Dr. Joseph Sánchez at 6 p.m.\, Thursday\, May 13\, in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. Enter through the Washington Avenue doors for this event\, part of the Santa Fe 400th lecture series. \nWhether Santa Fe was in fact established in 1610 or earlier is a fine point to be argued by purists\, Sánchez says. Regardless of the date\, Gov. Peralta oversaw the early history of Santa Fe – and set in motion a struggle for power between successive governors and church officials. \n“In that context\,” Sánchez says\, “was Peralta a scoundrel\, as churchmen made him out to be? Or was he a man of his convictions who would unjustly be excommunicated from Santa  Fe’s Catholic congregation\, arrested for the accidental shooting of a Franciscan missionary\, sent in shackles to a jail at Santo Domingo Pueblo\, condemned by his successor\, and exiled from New Mexico?” \nIn the end\, Peralta was exonerated by officials in Mexico City\, but 400 years later\, scholars still discuss the history that unfolded because of what he did – or didn’t – do. \nThe Santa  Fe 400th lecture series builds on Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, an exhibition at the Palace of the Governors that explores the first 100 years of Santa Fe following its colonization.  \nSánchez is director of the University of New Mexico’s Spanish Colonial Research Center and superintendent of the Petroglyph  National Monument. Throughout his career\, he has researched archives in Spain\, Mexico\, France\, Italy and England and has published several studies on the Spanish frontiers in California\, Arizona\, New Mexico\, Texas\, and Alaska. Internationally recognized\, in May 2000\, he was awarded the Medalla de Acero al Mérito Histórico Capitán Alonso de León by the Sociedad Nuevoleonesa de Historia\, Geografía y Estadística\, Monterrey\,  Mexico\, for his lifelong work in Colonial Mexican history. In April 2005\, he was inducted into the prestigious knighthood order of the Orden de Isabel la Católica by King don Juan Carlos of Spain. \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series comes from the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico  Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico   Foundation. \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/504-peralta-and-the-founding-of-santa-fe-a-santa-fe-400th-anniversary-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/504_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100502T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100502T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175338Z
CREATED:20100421T220843Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175338Z
UID:10001734-1272808800-1272814200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:New Mexico’s Civilian Conservation Corps Experience The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series
DESCRIPTION:Noted author and  historian Richard Melzer will speak on the “The Civilian Conservation Corps  Experience in New Mexico\,” the next talk in the Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture  Series\, at 2 p.m.\, Sunday\, May 2\, in the History Museum Auditorium. The event  costs $10. Tickets are available at the museum shops and at www.museumfoundation.org/tellingnm. \nNote:  This event was originally scheduled for a lecture on World War II by Ferenc Szasz\, who has since encountered  a health issue. Richard Melzer has graciously agreed to speak in his  place. \nThe Civilian Conservation Corps was the most popular and successful program of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal during the Great Depression of the 1930s. For more than 3 million young men across the United States\, the CCC often made the difference between starvation and survival – not only for the enrollees\, but also their families back home. The men learned skills\, improved their education\, got healthy\, prepared themselves for service in World War II\, and\, most importantly\, came of age during hard economic times. Melzer has documented the CCC experience in New   Mexico\, describing how this highly effective program benefited more than 50\,000 enrollees in the state and became\, for most men\, the turning points in their lives. \nToday\, their legacies still stand in projects at Elephant Butte Lake\, Rattlesnake Springs near Carlsbad Caverns\, and Bandelier  National Monument. \nMelzer\, originally from Teddy Roosevelt's hometown of Oyster Bay\, N.Y.\, has lived in New Mexico since 1973 and has taught history at the University  of New Mexico's Valencia Campus since 1979. He is the author of more than 100 articles about New Mexico history and the author\, co-author\, or editor of 12 books\, including Coming of Age in the Great Depression: The Civilian Conservation Corps Experience in New Mexico\, 1933-1942 (Las Cruces: Yucca Tree Press\, 2000). Melzer is a past president the Historical Society of New Mexico and current president of the Valencia County Historical Society. \nAmong the many honors he has received for writing\, teaching and service to his profession\, he is most proud of receiving the UNM’s 1995 Teacher of the Year award. \nThe History Museum includes exhibits dedicated to the Depression and the “alphabet soup” of programs that built roads and schoolhouses and nurtured a generation of artists\, writers and musicians.  \nThe lecture series continues on Sunday\, Aug. 22\, when Jennifer Nez   Denetdale\, Northern Arizona University associate history professor\, speaks on "Dine'/Navajo Women: At the Intersection of Nation\, Gender\, and Tradition." \n  \n  \n    \n  \n \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/546-new-mexicos-civilian-conservation-corps-experience-the-telling-new-mexico-inaugural-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/546_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100417T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100417T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175336Z
CREATED:20100406T023120Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175336Z
UID:10001724-1271512800-1271518200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Journey of Mayolica Pottery A Santa Fe Found lecture
DESCRIPTION:Learn about the risky “Journey of Mayólica” pottery up El Camino Real to Santa Fe in a lecture by Robin Farwell Gavin at 2 pm Saturday\, April 17\, in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. The event is free with museum admission. \nThe lecture is part of the Santa Fe Found lecture series that supports Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, an exhibit at the Palace of the Governors exploring the roots of Santa Fe\, this year celebrating its 400th anniversary. The exhibit uses historic documents\, period paintings and archaeological artifacts to detail life in colonial Mexico and Spain’s far northern frontier. It includes sherds of blue-and-white mayólica pottery that once made up objects like an ink well\, also on display. From its origins in medieval Spain\, it endured first an ocean journey then an overland caravan to Santa Fe. \nBesides tracing that journey\, Gavin will look at the materials\, techniques and styles of mayólica\, as well as artists who still produce such work. Various styles of pottery from France\, Italy\, England and China influenced one another as well as the design and production of Pueblo pottery. \n“Through one single sherd\,” Gavin said\, “we can explore the colonial world – the lives of the potters who made them\, the places in which they were created\, their uses in churches\, conventos and homes\, the importance they lent to social occasions. \n“We can see the influence of Muslim art\, of Italian Renaissance art\, of Chinese porcelains brought to the Americas on the Manila galleons\, and of the French rococo style\, as well as Indian chintz fabrics and Staffordshire pottery. We can reconstruct the table settings of the 18th century from Spain to Mexico to New Mexico\, and we can imagine the social situations in which these vessels were a symbol as well as a necessity.” \nGavin is chief curator for the Museum of Spanish Colonial   Art and consulting curator of collections for El Rancho de las Golondrinas.  A Chicago native\, she has been the lead curator for more than 20 exhibitions at the Museum of Spanish Colonial Art and Museum of International Folk Art concerning the Spanish colonial arts of Mexico and New Mexico\, and has written several articles\, gallery guides\, and books on the subject.  \nThe next lecture supporting the Santa Fe Found exhibition will be at 6 pm\, May 13\, when Joseph Sánchez\, director of UNM’s Spanish Colonial Research Center and director of the Petroglyph  National Monument\, speaks on “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe. \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico  Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of  New Mexico Foundation.  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/536-the-journey-of-mayolica-pottery-a-santa-fe-found-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/536_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100411T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100411T200000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175344Z
CREATED:20100410T052129Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175344Z
UID:10001763-1271001600-1271016000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:A Fred Harvey Dinner Party Lecture\, book launch and Harvey House dinner
DESCRIPTION:THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT \nThe New Mexico History Museum and La Fonda Hotel\, a former Harvey House\, host the launch of award-winning journalist Stephen Fried’s book\, Appetite for America\, with a lecture and historic dinner  on Sunday\, April 11\, 2010. The event begins in the History Museum Auditorium with a 4 p.m. lecture by Fried\, followed by a 6 p.m. dinner at La Fonda\, which will whip up “Chicken Lucrecio\,” among other delicacies from Harvey menus. \n         \nSeating is limited for both events. Tickets include a signed copy of Appetite for America (Bantam/Random House\, 2010). The cost for the lecture is $50; the lecture with the dinner costs $95. Sponsorship tickets cost $200 and include preference seating at the lecture and dinner\, as well as a listing on the event poster. A limited number of a reduced-cost rooms at La Fonda are also available the evening of the event. \nTo purchase tickets to the event\, go to either of the History  Museum’s shops\, call (505) 982-9543\, or log onto https://www.museumfoundation.org/HarveyHouse. \nFor La Fonda’s room reservations\, call (800) 523-5002\, ext. 1\, or send an e-mail to www.lafondasantafe.com/email-group.html; mention the “Harvey/NM History Museum event” in the subject line. \nAppetite for America is the story of Fred Harvey\, who came to the United States from England in the 1850s as a penniless teenager\, worked for saloons and the railroads and\, at the age of 40\, had a brilliant idea that changed America. His trackside eatery in Topeka\, Kansas\, grew into a powerful family business that forever changed the way Americans eat\, drink\, sleep\, travel and spend leisure time.  \n  \n       \nFred Harvey ended up building a revolutionary company feeding train passengers along the upstart Santa Fe railroad. With his son\, he expanded into the first national chain of restaurants\, hotels and bookstores from Chicago to California – even into the Grand  Canyon. His beloved “Harvey Girls” were some of the first working women in America\, later inspiring an Oscar-winning movie starring Judy Garland. His firm introduced the country to Native American arts and culture and “Santa Fe Style.” \nStephen Fried brings a fresh eye to America’s expansion into the Wild West of Bat Masterson and Billy the Kid\, following the country and the company as they grew up together through the early days of trains\, autos and planes. The restaurant/hotels that Harvey and his equally brilliant son\, Ford\, built would be enjoyed by princes and presidents\, as well as countless ordinary travelers who simply wanted a travel experience grand enough to match the scenery.  \nIn 1881\, Fred Harvey began arranging for tourists to visit Santa Fe from his eating house at the depot in Lamy. In the late 1890s\, his company began displaying and selling Native arts and crafts\, starting with its restaurant in Gallup\, but most visibly in Albuquerque’s Alvarado Hotel\, built in 1902. The hotel’s sales area\, designed by a young architect named Mary Colter\, had a look that came to be known as “Santa Fe Style.” Colter worked with famed architect John Gaw Meem on expanding La Fonda from 1924-30 and\, in 1949\, designed the hotel’s lounge\, using Spanish and Indian designs.  \nIn 1915\, Harvey worked with the Santa Fe community\, including Museum of New Mexico founder Edgar Hewett and his protégé\, Jesse Nusbaum\, to create a 10-acre\, full-scale Pueblo for the Panama-California Exposition in San Diego. Among those who lived at the exhibit was a young Maria Martinez\, who would later gain fame for her San Ildefonso pottery.  \nHistoric documents show that an inn\, or fonda\, has long stood on the southeastern corner of the Santa Fe Plaza. During the 19th century\, La Fonda became the preferred destination of trappers\, soldiers\, gold seekers\, gamblers and politicians. Through the Civil War\, railroad expansion and New Mexico statehood in 1912\, the old adobe structure changed hands and names several times but remained a Santa Fe landmark. The Harvey company purchased it 1926. Debuting in 1929\, it offered the nation’s first version of cultural tourism: “Indian Detours” that carried tourists to nearby pueblos in touring vehicles. An exhibit on the History Museum’s mezzanine level pays homage to the Harvey era.  \nBusinessman Sam Ballen purchased La Fonda in 1968; his family has continued his legacy of combining historic preservation with modern amenities.  \nFried’s insights into the Harvey empire include how the company managed to foster an early “foodie” generation in some of the most remote locales; how Harvey’s granddaughter saw and nurtured the talents of a 9-year-old Hopi named Fred Kabotie\, who became a premier Native artist; how pre-publication orders for his newsstands and bookshops affected national bestseller lists.  \n  For more on Fred Harvey’s impact on New Mexico and the American West\, go to http://media.museumofnewmexico.org/press_releases.php?action=detail&releaseID=71. For more on La Fonda’s history\, go to http://www.lafondasantafe.com/about/history.html  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/611-a-fred-harvey-dinner-party-lecture-book-launch-and-harvey-house-dinner/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/611_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100410T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100410T163000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175350Z
CREATED:20100323T022442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175350Z
UID:10001794-1270893600-1270917000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Fray Angélico Chávez 100th Birthday Symposium A free public event
DESCRIPTION:Fray Angélico Chávez was born on April 10\, 1910\, and to mark what would have been his 100th birthday\, the New Mexico History Museum’s library\, which carries his name\, will hold a daylong symposium. "My Penitente Land\," a free\, public event\, takes place from 10 am to 4:30 pm on Saturday\, April 10\, in the museum auditorium (enter from Washington   Avenue). \nThe symposium will gather the general public and scholars to exchange thoughts on Fray Angélico’s influence on New Mexico and share their stories about him. \n“Fray Angélico’s love was New Mexico\, its history and culture\,” said Tomas Jaehn\, director of the Fray Angélico Chávez History Library. “Interested in the people who settled New Mexico\, he is well-know for his work in genealogy.  At least once a month\, a patron visiting the Library tells me\, `I knew Fray Angélico personally.’” \nSpeakers at the symposium will include Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan\, poet Jimmy Santiago Baca\, authors Nasario Garcia\, Ellen McCracken\, whose biography of Fray Angélico was just published by the University of New Mexcio   Press\, and Thomas Chávez\, former director of the Palace of the Governors and a nephew of Fray Angélico  (See the full schedule below.) \nBorn Manuel Ezequiel Chávez in Wagon Mound\, N.M.\, Fray Angélico was a noted priest\, writer\, painter and historian. Ordained as a Franciscan friar\, he served several parishes in New Mexico and was instrumental in renovating the church in Peña Blanca – a true hands-on effort. The murals he painted of the Stations of the Cross used images of himself\, his family and parishioners. He also renovated churches in Domingo Station\, Golden and Cerrillos. \nAs an Army chaplain\, he was present for the World War II beach landings at Guam and Leyte and\, during the Korean War\, was stationed at Fort Bliss\, Texas\, and Kaiserslautern\, Germany. \nUpon his return\, Chávez was appointed archivist of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe\, where he catalogued and translated the Church’s Spanish archives. As noted in a biography on the Web site of the New Mexico Office of the State Historian: \n"While digging for the golden nuggets of Franciscan history in the archdiocesan archives\, he instead came across baptismal\, marriage\, and death records that revealed much about the families who had settled the region. He wrote: “It was like the case of a miner who sifted a hill of ore for gold\, setting aside any silver he encountered; in the end the silver far outweighed the gold. The only thing to do was to render the silver useful.” He compiled the silver and published the Origins of New Mexico Families: A Genealogy of the Spanish Colonial Period in 1954. Genealogists searching for their familial roots have found the book invaluable." \nChávez is perhaps best known for writing La Conquistadora\, the Autobiography of an Ancient Statue about the figure of the Virgin Mary revered by parishioners of St. Francis Cathedral in Santa Fe. He also wrote short stories\, novels and poetry. T.S. Eliot called his poem\, The Virgin of Port Lligat in 1959 a “very commendable achievement.” \nAfter his death in 1996\, the History Library was named in his honor\, and a bronze statue of him graces its entrance. A self-portrait is on display in the Palace of the Governors’ Portrait Gallery\, and it carries an interesting tale. Painted in 1939 as an “idle sketch” on a board by Fray Angélico in 1939\, it was later trimmed down to repair a drawer in the convent at Peña Blanca. \nIn 1970\, someone cleaning out the drawers happened upon it. Fray Angélico donated it to the museum\, writing: “I thought you might display it more as a curiosity than a work of art.” \nA finely rendered sketch of the young friar\, the portrait is\, contrary to his recommendation\, displayed as a work of art. \nThe symposium schedule: \n10-10:25 am: Frances Levine\, director of the New   Mexico History Museum; Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan\, Archdiocese of Santa Fe \n10:30-10:40: Jimmy Santiago Baca\, poet \n10:40-10:55: Fabian Chávez\, former legislative leader\, longtime public servant and brother of Fray Angélico \n11-11:30: Nasario Garcia\, professor emeritus of Hispanic Languages and Literatures \n11:35-12:05: Thomas E. Chávez\, former director\, Palace of the Governors \n1:30-2 pm: Melina Vizcaino\, doctoral candidate\, American Studies Department\, University of New Mexico \n2:05-2:35 pm: Jack Clark Robinson\, O.F.M.\, Ph.D.\, History\, University of California-Santa Barbara \n2:40-3:10: Ellen McCracken\, professor of Spanish\, University of California-Santa Barbara and author of The Life and Writing of Fray Angelico Chavez: A New Mexico Renaissance Man (UNM Press\, 2009) \n3:30-4:30 pm: Questions and testimonials \n  \nFunding for the event was made possible by the New Mexico Humanities Council. The event is also supported by the Center for Southwest Research\, University of New Mexico\, and has been designated a We the People project by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the New Mexico Humanities Council. \n  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/651-fray-angelico-chavez-100th-birthday-symposium-a-free-public-event/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/651_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100403T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100403T170000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175351Z
CREATED:20100313T070840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175351Z
UID:10001801-1270288800-1270314000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Palace Press Closed Today Re-opening April 6
DESCRIPTION:The Press at the Palace of the Governors will be closed on Saturday\,  April 3. We apologize   for the inconvenience\, but invite you to drop in again on Tuesday\, April 6\, from 10 am to 5 pm. Note: The rest of the New Mexico History  Museum  complex will be open on April 3. \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/669-palace-press-closed-today-re-opening-april-6/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/669_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100402
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100407
DTSTAMP:20230614T175351Z
CREATED:20100313T071551Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175351Z
UID:10001802-1270166400-1270598399@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Weekend Closings and Openings Furlough day Friday\, holiday Sunday
DESCRIPTION:The New Mexico History Museum will have the following schedule April  2-6: \nClosed Friday\, April 2\, for the state government  furlough day \nOpen Saturday\, April 3\, 10 am-5pm  \nClosed  Sunday\, April 4\, for Easter \nClosed Monday\, April 5 (usual  closed day) \nOpen and back to our regular schedule on  Tuesday\, April 6 \nWe apologize for any inconvenience.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/670-weekend-closings-and-openings-furlough-day-friday-holiday-sunday/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/670_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100331T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100331T114500
DTSTAMP:20230614T175351Z
CREATED:20100225T053307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175351Z
UID:10001799-1270033200-1270035900@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Bill Mauldin Postage Stamp Unveiling A free public event
DESCRIPTION:The History Museum welcomes the U.S. Postal Service to its auditorium for an unveiling of the new postage stamp honoring beloved editorial cartoonist and New Mexico native Bill Mauldin. Philatelists will surely flock to this onetime event\, where first-day cancellations will be available on site. Seating is limited at this free\, public event. \n     \nDuring World War II\, military readers got a knowing laugh from Mauldin’s characters Willie and Joe\, who gave their civilian audience an idea of what life was like for soldiers. After the war\, Mauldin became a popular and influential editorial cartoonist. \nThe History Museum's core exhibition\, Telling New Mexico: Stories from Then and Now\, includes a section on World War II that attendees will be able to tour after the unveiling. \nWilliam Henry Mauldin was born on October 29\, 1921\, in Mountain Park\, New Mexico\, where his family had a farm with apple orchards. He is said to have made impressive drawings before he could talk\, and his mother kept him supplied with paper and pencils. Though thin\, sickly\, and given to daydreams\, he was tough and scrappy. When a teacher scolded him for doodling in class\, he replied that he couldn’t think without drawing. \nWhile leafing through a magazine in 1935\, Mauldin saw an advertisement for a correspondence course in cartooning. The ad suggested that cartoonists could make a good living; seeing this as a way to capitalize on his natural ability\, Mauldin enrolled in the course. He began offering his services as a freelance artist to the community at large\, and was hired to create various forms of advertising. \nIn 1936\, Mauldin moved with his older brother to Phoenix\, Arizona\, and went to high school while continuing to do freelance work. He also worked as an editorial cartoonist for the school newspaper. At the age of 17\, Mauldin went to Chicago\, where he enrolled in the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. He diligently sent work to prospective buyers\, with discouraging results. Unemployment was high\, and war was beginning in Europe. \nAfter returning to Phoenix in 1940\, Mauldin enlisted in the Arizona National Guard. Days later\, the Arizona Guard was federalized and Mauldin found himself in the United States Army. His first Army cartoons were published that year in 45th Division News. The war took Mauldin to North Africa and then to Europe; he was in Italy in 1943\, when his work began appearing in Stars and Stripes\, a large daily newspaper then published by an independent unit of the headquarters of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower\, the Allied commander. \nIn Stars and Stripes\, Mauldin’s cartoons first appeared under the title “Up Front … with Mauldin.” He subsequently changed the name to “Up Front … by Mauldin” because\, though he was at the front—and received the Purple Heart after being struck by a fragment of mortar—he never drew in a foxhole and was strictly rear-echelon. Commenting later on his injury\, he said\, “I had been cut worse sneaking through barbed-wire fences in New Mexico.” \nMauldin’s work made him a hero to many military men\, who could tell he was on the side of the lowly soldier in a time when glamorous fighter pilots got more attention. His sympathy for “dogfaces” (the slang term for soldiers in the infantry) was clearly expressed in his presentation of his unshaven protagonists\, Willie and Joe. The celebrated war correspondent Ernie Pyle touched off wider interest in Mauldin’s work when he wrote admiringly\, “Bill Mauldin appears to us over here to be the finest cartoonist the war has produced. And that’s not merely because his cartoons are funny\, but because they are also terribly grim and real.” \nFor civilian readers back home\, Mauldin’s syndicated cartoons offered an eye-opening look at the experience—sleeping in barns\, dodging bullets in foxholes\, and so on—of American soldiers in Europe. Above all\, his cartoons show the tedium of war; when there is heroism\, it’s understated. With humor or small acts of kindness\, Willie and Joe support each other in grim circumstances. \nSome of Mauldin’s cartoons touched on relations between officers and enlisted men. In one panel\, two officers admire the scenery from a mountaintop\, with one exclaiming\, “Beautiful view! Is there one for the enlisted men?” Gen. George S. Patton publicly questioned Mauldin’s patriotism—among other things\, he objected to the bedraggled appearance of Willie and Joe—but Mauldin’s success and growing fame protected him from serious repercussions. \nAnother iconic cartoon depicted a cavalryman shooting his disabled jeep. Mauldin later commented proudly on this effort: “It is one of those cartoon ideas you think up rarely; it has simplicity\, it tells a story\, it doesn’t need words. It is\, I believe\, the very best kind of cartoon.” \nBy the time Mauldin came home to the United States in 1945\, he was famous. He won a Pulitzer Prize “for distinguished service as a cartoonist” and the Allied high command awarded him its Legion of Merit. His illustrated memoir\, Up Front\, was a bestseller. That same year\, his “dogface” Willie appeared on the cover of Time. \nAfter the war\, Mauldin grew tired of censorship battles with editors and temporarily retired from cartooning to try his hand at a variety of freelance endeavors. He acted in two films (Teresa and The Red Badge of Courage)\, covered the Korean War for Collier’s\, and made an unsuccessful run for Congress in New York’s 28th Congressional district\, losing narrowly to the Republican incumbent. In 1958\, he took a job as a cartoonist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The following year\, he won a second Pulitzer Prize for his cartoon portraying Boris Pasternak\, author of Doctor Zhivago\, as a Soviet prisoner: “I won the Nobel Prize for Literature. What was your crime?” \nSome of Mauldin’s other targets during these years were segregationists and red-baiters. In 1962\, he joined the staff of the Chicago Sun-Times\, where one of his most famous cartoons\, drawn on tight deadline after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy\, expressed the nation’s grief by showing a monumental Abraham Lincoln burying his head in his hands. The Sun-Times later sent Mauldin to Vietnam to observe the war there firsthand. An irreverent memoir\, The Brass Ring\, was published in 1971. \nSuffering from Alzheimer’s disease and other complications\, Bill Mauldin died at age 81 on January 22\, 2003\, at a nursing home in Newport   Beach\, California. He had received mail and visits there from many combat veterans hoping to lift his spirits much as Willie and Joe had lifted theirs during the war nearly 60 years earlier. He is buried in Arlington  National Cemetery. \nU.S. Postal Service art director Terry McCaffrey chose to honor Mauldin through a combination of photography and an example of Mauldin’s art. The photo of Bill Mauldin is by John Phillips\, a photographer for Life magazine; it was taken in Italy on December 31\, 1943. Mauldin’s cartoon\, showing his characters Willie and Joe\, is used courtesy of the 45th Infantry Division Museum in Oklahoma City\, Oklahoma. \n  \n    \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/667-bill-mauldin-postage-stamp-unveiling-a-free-public-event/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/667_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100328T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100328T160000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175338Z
CREATED:20100302T034430Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175338Z
UID:10001733-1269784800-1269792000@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Exile from Paradise\, Internment in New Mexico: My Grandfather’s Journey The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series
DESCRIPTION:Gail Y. Okawa\, professor of English at Youngstown State University in Ohio\, delivers the next talk in the Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series at 2 pm Sunday\, March 28\, in the History Museum Auditorium\, 113 Lincoln Ave. “Exile from Paradise\, Internment in New Mexico: My Grandfather’s Journey\,” recounts Okawa’s search for a family story that had lived in silence – and that carries lessons for today. \n  \nThe lecture costs $10. Tickets can be purchased at any of the Museum of New Mexico shops or online at http://www.museumfoundation.org/tellingnm. The lecture series supports the History Museum's core exhibition as well as the book Telling New Mexico: A New History (Museum of New Mexico Press\, 2009). \nA granite boulder at Frank S. Ortiz Park looking down into Santa Fe’s Casa Solana neighborhood marks the World War II site of an internment camp that held 4\,555 Japanese and Japanese-American internees from 1942-46. In all\, the United States imprisoned 17\,477 people of Japanese ancestry and relocated 120\,000 American-born Japanese and their parents into wartime camps. The U.S. Department of Justice oversaw the camp in Santa   Fe; the U.S. Army maintained others. \nThe History  Museum’s core exhibition\, Telling New Mexico: Stories from Then and Now includes illustrations of camp life done by one of the guards\, Hal West. \nOkawa’s maternal grandfather was moved from his home in Hawaii to Lordsburg\, N.M.\, and then Santa   Fe. The late Tamasaku Watanabe was an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church of the U.S.A. Okawa’s chapter in Telling New Mexico includes portions of a letter she wrote to him after his death\, when she had begun piecing together the scraps of his history: \nThe legacy of your experience and that of others like you who endured internment must be in what we who follow can learn from your political misfortune and your personal fortitude. We must be vigilant to the acts and words today echoing those that surrounded your unjust and unwarranted imprisonment. And we must understand that though you were silent\, like so many others\, about this difficult time in your life\, you were no less affected by the degradation\, no less courageous for bearing it. \nIn 1988\, the United   States officially apologized for the internments\, saying the actions were the result of "race prejudice\, war hysteria\, and a failure of political leadership." \nAs a scholar-in-residence at the Smithsonian Institution in 2002\, Okawa began a study of U.S. language history through ethnic language artifacts in the Smithsonian collections. Since 2003\, she has been engaged in research on the politics of language/literacy\, identity\, and culture among Japanese immigrants\, including her maternal grandfather. An advisory board member of the New Mexico Digital History Project\, she has published numerous articles in national journals and anthologies and has presented papers and lectures locally in Santa Fe and Albuquerque\, as well as nationally and internationally. She is working on a book-length study\, More Than A Mugshot: Hawai`i Japanese Immigrants in World War II U.S. Department of Justice Internment. \nTwo other lectures remain in the Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series. Each will be held at 2 pm in the Museum Auditorium: \nMay 2: UNM Regents’ Professor of History Ferenc Szasz on “New Mexico in the Era of the Second World War.” Szasz has written several books on the early history of the Atomic Age; his latest is Larger Than Life: New Mexico in the Twentieth Century. \nAug. 22: Diné author and Northern Arizona University Associate Professor of History Jennifer Nez Denetdale on " Dine'/Navajo Women: At the Intersection of Nation\, Gender\, and Tradition\," from her current book project. Denetdale has also written Reclaiming Diné History: The Legacies of Chief Manuelito and Juanita and a book for young adults\, The Long Walk: The Forced Navajo Exile. \n  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/545-exile-from-paradise-internment-in-new-mexico-my-grandfathers-journey-the-telling-new-mexico-inaugural-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/545_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100327T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100327T170000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175350Z
CREATED:20100318T220659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175350Z
UID:10001797-1269694800-1269709200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Beneath the City Different: The Archaeology of Santa Fe Second chance to catch this sell-out event
DESCRIPTION:THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT \nDeepen your understanding of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary\, as well as the new exhibit\, Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, at this special symposium\, 1-5 pm\, Saturday\, March 27\, at the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium\, 113 Lincoln Ave. Admission is $10; call 505-954-7200 for tickets. \nThis is the repeat of an event held last November. Tickets for that one sold out within weeks\, so call soon.  \n"Beneath the City Different: The Archaeology of Santa Fe" is sponsored by the Friends of Archaeology (a support group within the Museum of New Mexico Foundation) and the School for Advanced Research — two institutions founded by Edgar L. Hewett\, a leading archaeologist and anthropologist and the first director of the Museum of New Mexico. The event features seven archaeologists speaking on different periods of Santa Fe's history\, from ancient to modern times. \nThrough recent archaeological excavations in the downtown Santa Fe area\, these researchers have given us new information about a recently discovered past — a past not yet covered in history books. The archaeologists will begin with a look at Santa Fe’s first seasonal residents\, nomadic hunters and gatherers who came to pick wild plants and piñon nuts. Then they will talk about the later Pueblo people who built several large villages and survived by farming. The severity and luxury of Spanish Colonial life will also be discussed\, as well as the economic and social changes brought by the Santa Fe Trail. Finally\, the archaeologists will examine the agricultural and later industrial use of the recently developed Santa Fe Railyard area. \n     \nTickets cost $10 and seating is limited. To purchase a ticket\, call 505-954-7200 or mail your name\, mailing address\, phone number\, email address\, and payment to: \nBeneath the City Different  School for Advanced Research  P.O. Box 2188  Santa Fe\, NM 87504 \nFor a complete schedule\, go to http://sarweb.org/index.php?symposium_santa_fe_archaeology \nThe scheduled speakers: \nStephen Post\, deputy director of the Office of Archaeological Studies\,"6\,500 Years of Living Light on the Landscape: Archaic Hunter-Gatherers and the Dawn of Agriculture in the Santa Fe Area" \nCheri Scheick\, program director and owner of Southwest Archaeological Consultants and president of the nonprofit Rio Grande Foundation for Communities and Cultural Landscapes\, "The City Different: Variety and Change in the 12th and 13th Centuries" \nDouglas Schwartz\, former SAR president\, on the development and nature of Arroyo Hondo Pueblo \nJason Shapiro\, member and chair of the city of Santa Fe's Archaeological Review Committee\, "Chain of Cultural Custody: The IDentifiers\, Promoters\, and Keepers of Santa Fe Archaeology" \nCordelia Thomas Snow\, historic sites archaeologist and historian\, "The Archaeology of Early Colonial Santa Fe" \nRon Winters\, independent contract archaeologist\, "The Santa Fe Trail" \nJessica Badner\, Office of Archaeological Studies\, on what excavations at the Santa Fe Railyard revealed about foundations and infrastructure built by the Atchison\, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway in the early 1880s \n     \nSanta Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, on view at the Palace of the Governors\, explores the lives of the colonists and Native peoples who lived in and around Santa Fe 400 years ago.  \n Prior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was. \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe Community Convention Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots.   \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/664-beneath-the-city-different-the-archaeology-of-santa-fe-second-chance-to-catch-this-sell-out-event/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/664_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100319T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100320T170000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175351Z
CREATED:20100318T221324Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175351Z
UID:10001803-1268992800-1269104400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Palace Press Closed Re-opening March 21
DESCRIPTION:The Press at the Palace of the Governors will be closed on Friday and  Saturday\, March 19 and 20. We apologize  for the inconvenience\, but invite you to drop in again on Sunday\, March  21\, from 10 am to 5 pm. Note: The New Mexico History  Museum will remain open on these days.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/671-palace-press-closed-re-opening-march-21/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/671_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100316T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100316T170000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175351Z
CREATED:20100313T045236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175351Z
UID:10001800-1268733600-1268758800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Palace Press Closed Today Exhibit re-opens Wednesday
DESCRIPTION:The Press at the Palace of the Governors will be closed on Tuesday\,  March 16\, while its staff attends a professional workshop. We apologize  for the inconvenience\, but invite you to drop in again on Wednesday\, March  17\, from 10 am to 5 pm. Note: The rest of the New Mexico History Museum  complex will be open on March 16.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/668-palace-press-closed-today-exhibit-re-opens-wednesday/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/668_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100314T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100314T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175350Z
CREATED:20100210T031907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175350Z
UID:10001793-1268575200-1268580600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Victorian Dressing from the Inside Out A free public event
DESCRIPTION:– In Victorian times\, you didn’t change your clothes to fit your body; you changed your body to fit your clothes. What all those hoop skirts\, bustles\, corsets and slips added up to will be revealed in a special presentation by “Miss Tabitha” (aka Sharon Guli) at a New Mexico History  Museum event\, 2 p.m.\, Sunday\, March 14. The event is free with Museum admission (attendance is free on Sundays to NM residents). \n     \nAs an added treat\, Rene Harris\, assistant museum director\, will give a free guided tour of the Fashioning New Mexico exhibit from 3:30-4 p.m.\, with a special focus on (ahem!) underwear through the decades. \nIn “Victorian Dressing from the Inside Out\,” Guli begins in a chemise and drawers\, adds a corset\, petticoat\, bustle and more\, offering historical anecdotes about each item as she goes. By the end\, she’s “properly and decently” attired\, behatted and accessorized for greeting the public. \nGuli’s presentation augments Fashioning New Mexico\, now showing in the Museum’s Albert and Ethel Herzstein Changing Exhibitions Gallery. Featuring a taste of the Museum’s collection of nearly 4\,000 costumes and accessories\, Fashioning includes a glimpse at underwear through the decades and offers visitors a chance to try their hand at tying a corset. \nWith her husband\, Mike Guli\, Sharon Guli offers a variety of programs that bring to life the Victorian era and the Wild West. The Bellvue\, Colo.-based couple have drawn kudos for the period fashion design and artwork. For more\, log onto http://rivercrossinginc.tripod.com/present.html \nFashioning New Mexico is on display through April 11. A variety of high-resolution photographs from the exhibit are available upon request.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/646-victorian-dressing-from-the-inside-out-a-free-public-event/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/646_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100313T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100313T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175336Z
CREATED:20100305T042025Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175336Z
UID:10001723-1268488800-1268494200@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Just How Old Is Santa Fe? A  Santa Fe Found lecture
DESCRIPTION:Is Santa Fe really 400 years old? Join Thomas Chávez\, former director of the Palace of the Governors\, for a lecture on the "first" founder of Santa Fe\, Juan Martínez de Montoya. This latest lecture in support of the exhibit Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time is free with museum admission. The lecture series also supports the city of Santa Fe’s 400th anniversary. \nThe precise date of the city's anniversary has entangled historians\, politicians and others attempting to pinpoint the birthdate of what was then Spain’s far northern frontier. Chávez will talk about that controversy\, as well as the story behind Martínez de Montoya\, sometimes regarded as the “first” founder of Santa Fe. \nSanta Fe Found\, which details the city’s origins through documents and archaeological evidence\, tells of the soldiers who left the Spanish colony of San Gabriel to settle a new colony away from occupied Pueblo colonies. Martínez de Montoya\, a Castilian-born captain who opposed then leader Don Juan de Oñate\, left family papers that show he and a small group of soldiers settled Santa Fe between 1604 and 1608. \nAppointed governor by the viceroy in June 1608\, Martínez de Montoya was rejected as a leader by Oñate loyalists\, who installed his son\, Cristóbal\, instead. Martínez de Montoya persuaded the viceroy to send Pedro de Peralta to Santa Fe to establish a permanent villa and\, in 1610\, Peralta did so\, naming the new capital La Villa Real de la Santa Fe de San Francisco de Asís. \nChávez is former director of the Palace of the Governors and former executive director of the National  Hispanic Cultural  Center. An active scholar\, he contributed to the book Telling New Mexico: A New History that supports the core exhibition of the New   Mexico History Museum. \nUpcoming lectures in the series: \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2 pm: Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator\, Museum of Spanish Colonial   Art\, “The Journey of Mayólica.” Free with museum admission. \nThursday\, May 13\, 6 pm: Joseph Sánchez\, director\, University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center\, and director\, Petroglyph National Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe.” Free. \nFunding for the exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.  \n \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/535-just-how-old-is-santa-fe-a-santa-fe-found-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/535_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100305
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100306
DTSTAMP:20230614T175350Z
CREATED:20100213T012533Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175350Z
UID:10001796-1267747200-1267833599@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Closed - state government furlough day
DESCRIPTION:The New Mexico History Museum will be closed on Friday\, March 5\, for the state government furlough day. We regret the inconvenience\, but invite you to join us when we resume regular hours at 10 a.m.\, Saturday\, March 6.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/659-closed-state-government-furlough-day/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/659_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100220T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100220T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175334Z
CREATED:20100130T032103Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175334Z
UID:10001713-1266674400-1266679800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:In Her own Voice: Dona Teresa and Intrigue in the Palace A Santa Fe Found lecture
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Frances Levine will speak on “In Her Own Voice: Doña Teresa Aguilera y Roche and Intrigue in the Palace of the Governors\, 1659-1662\,” at 2 pm Saturday\, Feb. 20\, in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. The event is free with museum admission. \nThe latest lecture in support of the exhibit Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time\, it focuses on the gripping tale of Doña Teresa\, wife of colonial Governor Bernardo López de Mendizábel\, whose brief tenure was colored by turmoil and ended with the arrests of him\, his wife and key aides. In Mexico City\, the couple faced the Inquisition against a battery of 200 accusations – unbridled greed\, blasphemy and hostility toward the Catholic Church\, and the suspicion that Mendizábel and his wife were secret Jews. \nAt trial – a lengthy process made notable by the secret identities of the accusers – Doña Teresa\, the only woman from New Mexico ever tried before the Inquisition\, shot back with accusations of her own. With her defense\, she not only damaged the credibility of her accusers but managed to paint a picture of a 17th-century Santa Fe marked by clannish behaviors\, conspiracies\, adultery and thievery (including thefts of the household chocolate). \nHer husband died in prison and was buried in unconsecrated ground\, but Doña Teresa was freed after her case was suspended in 1664. She pressed for exoneration of her husband and\, in 1671\,the Holy Office decided to drop its case. His body was exhumed and reburied at Santo Domingo Church\, not far from the Zocalo in Mexico City. \nDr. Levine\, director of the New Mexico History Museum\, has worked with historian Gerald González in researching Doña Teresa. Besides his explorations into Southwest history and culture\, González\, an attorney\, has worked on issues of Hispanic land grants and tribal sovereignty. His poetry has been published in New Mexico Magazine and La Luz.  \nLevine’s lecture is part of a series supporting the exhibit Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time. The exhibit uses historical documents and archaeological evidence to tell the story of Santa Fe’s founding\, 400 years old this year. The artifacts include items that were dug up during the excavation that preceded the History Museum’s construction just north of the Palace of the Governors. \nUpcoming lectures:  \nSaturday\, March 13\, 2 pm: Thomas E. Chávez\, retired executive director\, National  Hispanic Culture  Center\, and former director\, Palace of the Governors\, “Juan Martínez de Montoya and the Establishment of Santa Fe.” Free with museum admission. \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2 pm: Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator\, Museum of Spanish Colonial Art\, The Journey of Mayólica.” Free with museum admission. \nThursday\, May 13\, 6 pm: Joseph Sánchez\, director\, University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center\, and director\, Petroglyph National   Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe.” Free. \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico  Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico   Foundation.  \n  \n    \n  \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/503-in-her-own-voice-dona-teresa-and-intrigue-in-the-palace-a-santa-fe-found-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/503_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100207T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100207T150000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175350Z
CREATED:20100202T062903Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175350Z
UID:10001792-1265551200-1265554800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Fighting poverty with photography The Fotokids project
DESCRIPTION:Join former Reuters photojournalist Nancy McGirr for a free talk on the Guatemalan-based nonprofit\, Fotokids\, in the museum's John Gaw Meem Room. Fotokids began in 1991 when McGirr taught a small group of children who lived in a Guatemala City dump to document their lives in black-and-white photography. \nNow in its 19th year\, Fotokids has served hundreds of children\, charting a story of how the visual arts can alter even the most profoundly troubled lives. McGirr's talk includes a documentary film and question-and-answer session. \nMcGirr\, an award-winning photojournalist\, covered the wars and political unrest in Central America in the 1980s. Since she began working with children there\, they have won scholarships to school and college\, as well as opportunities to travel\, and have had their work exhibited throughout the world.    By tapping into each child's creativity\, Fotokids helps break the cycle of poverty and lack of opportunity. Some of the children who began photography in a city dump are now university graduates.  \nFor more information go to McGirr's Web site: http://www.fotokids.org. You can also see a short video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azpveltkU3U. \nOn Friday morning\, Feb. 5\, you can catch an interview with McGirr on Mary Charlotte’s show on KSFR (101.1-FM).
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/645-fighting-poverty-with-photography-the-fotokids-project/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/645_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100131T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100131T160000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175338Z
CREATED:20100112T032609Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175338Z
UID:10001732-1264946400-1264953600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Blackdom and the African-American Experience in New Mexico The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series
DESCRIPTION:Join us for lectures on the pioneers of the Blackdom community and the African-American experience in New Mexico at 2 p.m. on Sunday\, Jan. 31\, in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. As a special treat\, the Afro-Gospel Praise Experience will rock the house with a mixture of Afro-Latin rhythms and traditional gospel music throughout the program. \nSeating is limited. Tickets to the event\, part of the Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series\, cost $10 and can be obtained at the shops in the History Museum and Palace of the Governors. You can also purchase tickets online at http://www.museumfoundation.org/tellingnm \n     \nThe speakers: \nLandjur Abukusumo\, pastor of Roswell’s Washington       Chapel Christian       Worship Center      and founder and chairman of the Blackdom Memorial Foundation\, which      oversees development of the proposed four-acre memorial\, museum\,      restaurant and import shop.  \nThomas Lark\, curator for the African American      Performing Arts      Center and Exhibit Hall at Expo      New Mexico.       \nGregory Allen Waits\, project      designer of the Blackdom Memorial Gardens      with Lloyd and Associates Architects from Santa Fe. \nLark will focus on the African-American roots of New   Mexico\, which date back to early Spanish exploration. The earliest among them include Esteban\, an African slave who was killed during Fray Marcos de Niza’s ill-fated expedition for the Seven Cities of Cibola in 1539. After Mexican independence from Spain in 1828 and the abolishment of slavery in the Southwest\, black fur trappers arrived. In the 1870s\, the town of Dora was settled in the Cimarron Valley by freed slaves. Black cowboys and the fabled Buffalo Soldiers were some of the late 19th-century African-Americans who called New   Mexico home. \nAbukusumo will tell of the founding of Blackdom\, a dream that began with Henry Boyer. In 1846\, Boyer came to New Mexico as a U.S. Army wagoneer in one of Gen. Stephen Watts Kearny’s units. He was awed by its wide-open spaces and dreamed of a self-sustaining community – a dream shared by other African-Americans who likewise pursued the establishment of towns throughout the nation during Reconstruction. Henry Boyer’s son\, Frank Boyer\, educated at Morehouse and Fiske  Colleges\, decided to take advantage of the 1893 Homestead Act to pursue his own version of that dream. He and a student\, Daniel Keyes\, walked from Pellam\, Ga.\, to New   Mexico\, settling near modern-day Dexter\, in October 1900. \nAfter working on ranches\, the two were able to send for their wives and children and began marketing the town to African-American families in Oklahoma and Texas. Families from Mississippi and Ohio soon followed\, and at one point\, the town claimed 20 families of settlers. Besides the hardships of homesteading\, residents faced racial discrimination\, and Blackdom declined. The town was abandoned\, leaving little physical evidence\, but Boyer recreated the experiment south of Las Cruces in a town named Vado\, which survives today. \nWaits will talk about Blackdom Memorial Gardens\, which commemorates the town’s role in shaping the African-American experience in the United States. The Memorial relocates the townsite plat into downtown Roswell as a gathering space with seating areas\, water features\, landscaping and open-air auditorium. \nThe lecture series supports the History Museum's core exhibition as well as the book Telling New Mexico: A New History (Museum of New Mexico Press\, 2009). \nThe full series of lectures\, which is held at 2 p.m. each of the Sundays\, in the History Museum Auditorium: \nNov. 22: Tom Chavez\, former director of the Palace of the Governors and the National Hispanic Cultural Center\, on his current book project\, a history of the Palace of the Governors. \nJan. 31: Thomas Lark\, curator of   Expo New Mexico’s African-American Performing Arts Center\, on the history of African-Americans in New Mexico; and the Rev. Landjur Abukusumo\, president of the Blackdom Memorial Foundation\, on the pioneers of the Blackdom community in Roswell. Special treat: The Afro-Gospel Praise Experience will perform a mixture of Afro-Latin rhythms and traditional gospel.     \nMarch 28: Gail Y. Okawa\, professor of English at Youngstown State University in Ohio\, on   "Exile from Paradise\, Internment in New Mexico: My Grandfather's Journey\,”  regarding Santa Fe’s WWII Japanese internment camp. \nMay 2: UNM History Professor Ferenc Szasz on New Mexico’s role in developing the atomic bomb. \nAug. 22: Diné author Jennifer Nez Denetdale on "  Dine'/Navajo Women: At the Intersection of Nation\, Gender\, and Tradition\," from her current book project. \nTelling New Mexico: A New History features a collection of essays by a variety of historians who cover everything with a new vision — from both scholarly and pop-culture viewpoints. Destined to be a resource for both classroom and armchair historians\, the book presents New Mexico history from its prehistoric beginnings to the present in essays and articles by fifty prominent historians and scholars representing various disciplines including history\, anthropology\, Native American and Chicano studies. The writing comprises an eclectic mix of styles and intention in presenting both a historical narrative and multiple views of the people\, places\, and events that have shaped New Mexico.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/544-blackdom-and-the-african-american-experience-in-new-mexico-the-telling-new-mexico-inaugural-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/544_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100129
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100210
DTSTAMP:20230614T175346Z
CREATED:20100130T005623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175346Z
UID:10001774-1264723200-1265759999@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Closed: Photo Archives and History Library Re-opening Feb. 9
DESCRIPTION:Renovations will temporarily close the Palace of the Governors Photo Archives and the Fray Angelico Chavez History Library on Friday through Feb. 9. We apologize for the inconvenience.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/625-closed-photo-archives-and-history-library-re-opening-feb-9/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100116T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100116T160000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175339Z
CREATED:20091222T054730Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175339Z
UID:10001736-1263650400-1263657600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Preserving Your Family’s Heirloom Textiles A Do’s & Don’ts Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Worried about how well you’re safeguarding that family finery tucked into a closet or stuffed into a cedar chest? Learn how professionals care for heirloom textiles at a New Mexico History  Museum workshop from 2-4 pm on Saturday\, Jan. 16. The Museum is at 113 Lincoln Avenue in downtown Santa Fe. \nThe workshop costs $12\, which includes a tour of the Fashioning New Mexico exhibit in the Museum’s Albert and Ethel Herzstein Changing Exhibitions Gallery. To reserve a spot\, call Inessa Williams at (505) 476-5106. Payment will be taken at the workshop; cash or checks only. \nLearn from Textile Conservator Rebecca Tinkham of the Museum of New Mexico’s Conservation Department\, and Pennie McBride\, assistant collections manager for the History Museum. Topics include warding off the pests\, light\, heat\, humidity and dust that can damage costumes\, uniforms\, accessories\, weavings and more. \n"There are some very simple steps that can be taken at home to help people preserve their textiles for years to come\," Tinkham said. \nShe and McBride worked extensively with the clothing now on display in Fashioning New Mexico. The work involved everything from de-bugging long-stored garments to repairing rips and planning ways to properly store the finished products. Fashioning\, open through April 14\, 2010\, cuts a swath across 150 years of New Mexico costumes and clothing – from weddings to operas\, fiestas to inaugurations\, baptisms to an ooh-la-la interactive exhibit on underwear. \nWith the opening of the History Museum\, the collections staff had an unprecedented opportunity to upgrade its textiles storage to state-of-the-art\, museum-quality conditions. \n“Caring for your clothes requires more than knowing which wash cycle to use\,” McBride said. “Your clothing spends more time in the closet than on you\, so why not learn how to create your own padded hangers for support\, or a cover to protect against light and dust?” \nFrom picking the proper hanger to controlling a garment’s exposure to light\, the workshop will bring museum-caliber knowledge to everyday wardrobes. Space is limited; reserve your spot today.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/549-preserving-your-familys-heirloom-textiles-a-dos-donts-workshop/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/549_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20100114T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20100114T193000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175334Z
CREATED:20091217T014209Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175334Z
UID:10001712-1263492000-1263497400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Luxury Goods Transported Over the Camino Real A Santa Fe 400th Anniversary lecture
DESCRIPTION:Ming Dynasty china. Pearls. Gold. Travelers surely found El Camino Real a rugged way to go\, but the items they carried with them included some of the finest luxuries of the day. Cordelia Thomas Snow\, a historic-sites archaeologist explores those goods in a free\, public presentation at 6 p.m.\, Thursday\, Jan. 14\, in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. \n"Luxury Goods Transported Over the Camino Real"  is part of the Santa Fe 400th Committee's celebration of the City Different's 400th anniversary. \nSnow is an expert on New Mexico's Spanish missions and has conducted significant archaeological research in the downtown area of Santa Fe\, including at the Palace of the Governors\, where the exhibit Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time explores the founding of Santa Fe and its first 100 years. \nThe full lecture-series schedule: \n  \n         \nThursday\, Nov. 12\, 6 pm: José Esquibel\, historian and genealogist\, “The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Oñate” \nSaturday\, Nov. 21\, 2 pm: Steve Post\, assistant director\, New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\,  “The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down.” Free with museum admission \nThursday\, Jan. 14\, 6 pm: Cordelia Snow\, archaeologist\, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division\, “Luxury Goods Transported over the Camino Real.” Free. \nSaturday\, Feb. 20\, 2 pm: Frances Levine\, director of the New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors\,”In Her Own Voice: Doña Teresa Aguilera y Roche and Intrigue in the Palace of the Governors.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, March 13\, 2 pm: Thomas E. Chávez\, retired executive director\, National Hispanic Culture Center\, and former director\, Palace of the Governors\, “Juan Martínez de Montoya and the Establishment of Santa Fe.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2 pm: Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator\, Museum  of Spanish Colonial Art\, he Journey of Mayólica.” Free with museum admission. \n     \nThursday\, May 13\, 6 pm: Joseph Sánchez\, director\, University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center\, and director\, Petroglyph National Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe” \nPrior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was.   \n“Surprising to some and not to others\, the New Mexico History Museum was complex and rich in the information it yielded on 300 years of people living and working behind the Palace of the Governors\,” Post said. “Combined with Dedie Snow’s 1974-1975 excavations within the Palace\, our work gives a unique inside-outside look at a central place in New Mexico history." \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe Community Convention Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots. \nSpain's far northern colony of Santa   Fe was reached by a six-month journey up El Camino Real\, a barely mapped and uncertain route that held only hazy promises of water and shelter. Holding together a caravan of 700 people – soldiers\, friars\, men and a few women and children – and the tools and livestock it would take to build a new colony tested the explorers’ abilities and\, sometimes\, their humanity. \nSome of the artifacts show that\, despite the frontier conditions\, fine goods had managed to travel up El Camino Real to homes and missions in the colony. A sampling of the pottery that was found on the digs includes Spanish majolica\, blue-and-white Mexican pottery modeled on examples from the Ming Dynasty in China\, colorful Mexican pottery and Pueblo pottery. Also found were tobacco pipes\, gold earrings\, gunflints and arrowheads. \nA few shards of the pottery found by archaeologists speak to a monumental expedition. Centuries past\, they were parts of delicate Ming vases loaded onto a Spanish galleon at a Chinese port for an ocean journey then a bumpy trip up El Camino Real to the young colony. \n“Considering the Chinese pottery traveled across the ocean and then 1\,600 miles up the Camino Real\, it’s not surprising – and it’s even amazing – that we found only one or two pieces of these vessels\,” Post said. \nFrom these roots grew La Villa Real de Santa Fe\, the Royal City of Santa Fe\, now 400 years old. What do the historical accounts say of the homes they built and the crops they grew? What has the soil yielded of their lives\, the fragile beginnings of a young Spanish colony? \n     \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.  \n     \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/502-luxury-goods-transported-over-the-camino-real-a-santa-fe-400th-anniversary-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/502_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091224
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091226
DTSTAMP:20230614T175343Z
CREATED:20091222T060902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175343Z
UID:10001758-1261612800-1261785599@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Museum Closed on Christmas Eve and Day
DESCRIPTION:Besides Christmas Day\, the New Mexico History Museum will be closed on Christmas Eve in compliance with the state government furlough day. Doors will reopen at 10 a.m.\, Saturday\, Dec. 26.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/606-museum-closed-on-christmas-eve-and-day/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/606_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091213
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091214
DTSTAMP:20230614T175339Z
CREATED:20091124T010700Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175339Z
UID:10001740-1260662400-1260748799@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Young Native Artists Show and Sale See the next generation of portal artists
DESCRIPTION:It’s a New Mexico icon: Native American vendors at the Palace of the Governors. See what the future of their creations holds at the Portal Children's Christmas Exhibit and Sale Dec. 12 and 13\, 10 am to 4 pm.  \nChildren and grandchildren from 6-17 years old\, following in the footsteps of the families who create traditional jewelry\, pottery\, sand paintings and baskets\, will show off their talents – and sell some handy Christmas presents. \nThe event is free and open to the public.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/555-young-native-artists-show-and-sale-see-the-next-generation-of-portal-artists/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/555_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091211T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091211T200000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175327Z
CREATED:20091210T042039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175327Z
UID:10001673-1260552600-1260561600@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Christmas at the Palace An Annual Favorite!
DESCRIPTION:Get a dose of old-fashioned charm at the 25th anniversary of the annual Christmas at the Palace — a must-do event for a proper\, Santa Fe-style holiday. Held in the 400-year-old Palace of the Governors\, a National Historic Landmark\, the evening is a popular community gathering with Santa\, music and more. \nChildren visit with Santa\, families tour the Palace of the Governors' exhibits (including the new Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time)\, and everyone enjoys hot cider in the courtyard.  \nThe re-opened Palace Press will once again give visitors a chance to print their own Christmas cards using a historic\, hand-operated letterpress. Farolitos\, bonfires and musical performances by local groups complete the evening. Free and open to the public. \n  The History  Museum and Palace will close at 3 p.m. to prepare for this event. Enter through the Palace at 105 W. Palace Ave. The History  Museum will remain closed during the event.  \nPerformers: \n4:45-5:15 pm: Portal drumming\, Lawrence Toya \n5:30-7 pm: EPIK Artists Erick Illick (violin)\, Sarah Rogowsey (violin)\,Pecos Singer (cello)\, and Maya Rose Tweten (voice) \n5:30-6:30 pm: Chuscales\, flamenco guitar \n6:30-7:30 pm: Schola Cantorum\, choral music \nRoaming throughout the event will be Mrs. Claus and her helpful elves\, as well as the Christmas Angel\, played by Betsy Robinson.  \nOther holiday festivities at the museum include: \n     \nMUSICAL PERFORMANCES \nCome to the History Museum to enjoy local musicians performing holiday classics in the second-floor Frost Foundation Gathering Space. All of these performances are free with museum admission: \nTuesday\, Dec. 8\, 1:30-2:30 pm: EPIK Artists\, youth musicians of the Santa Fe Concert Association \nWednesday\, Dec. 9\, 1:30-2:30 pm: EPIK Artists\, youth musicians of the Santa Fe Concert Association \nThursday\, Dec. 10\, 1:30-2:30 pm: Ana Maria Cardinalli-Padilla\, classical guitar \n  \nYOUNG NATIVE ARTISTS SHOW AND SALE \nChildren and grandchildren of artisans who belong to the Palace of the Governors' Portal Program show off their creations Saturday and Sunday\, Dec. 12 and 13\, from 10 am to 4 pm. Pick up some nifty Christmas presents. Come to the John Gaw Meem Room at 110 Washington Avenue for this free event. \n  \nLAS POSADAS \nThe annual Las Posadas re-enactment of Mary and Joseph’s journey to Bethlehem (in this case\, the Santa Fe Plaza)\, takes places from 5-7 pm on Sunday\, Dec. 13. The procession begins at the east end of the Palace Portal\, makes its way around the Plaza and concludes in the Palace Courtyard with hot cider and carols.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/433-christmas-at-the-palace-an-annual-favorite/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/433_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091211T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091211T143000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175340Z
CREATED:20091212T012847Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175340Z
UID:10001745-1260538200-1260541800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Holiday Music in the Lobby Classical guitarist Ana Maria Cardinalli-Padilla
DESCRIPTION:Take a break from the hustle-and-bustle to hear classical guitarist Ana Maria Cardinalli-Padilla   perform holiday classics in the main lobby of the History Museum. Her performance is free with museum admission.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/561-holiday-music-in-the-lobby-classical-guitarist-ana-maria-cardinalli-padilla/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/561_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091210T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091210T143000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175340Z
CREATED:20091210T041524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175340Z
UID:10001744-1260451800-1260455400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Music for the holidays Classical guitarist Ana Maria Cardinalli-Padilla
DESCRIPTION:Take a break from the hustle-and-bustle to hear classical guitarist Ana Maria Cardinalli-Padilla   perform holiday classics in the second-floor Frost Foundation Gathering Space. Her performance is free with museum admission.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/560-music-for-the-holidays-classical-guitarist-ana-maria-cardinalli-padilla/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/560_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091209T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091209T210000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175340Z
CREATED:20091126T054555Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175340Z
UID:10001742-1260383400-1260392400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Slideluck Potshow A Global Photography Phenomenon
DESCRIPTION:Center\, Santa Fe’s internationally recognized\, nonprofit\, service organization for gifted and committed photographers\, will bring Slideluck Potshow to Santa Fe for the first time on Wednesday\, December 9\, 2009\, from 6:30-9 pm at the New Mexico History Museum located at 113 Lincoln Ave in Santa Fe\, NM.  \nThe event is free\, and the public is invited. \nSlideluck Potshow (SLPS) was founded in 2000 by editorial and advertising photographer Casey Kelbaugh who\, “wanted to foster a sense of community within the industry while presenting the work in a egalitarian fashion.” Since then\, it has grown from a tiny backyard affair in Seattle\, to a global phenomenon that has brought together members of the photography\, art and media communities for an evening of eating\, drinking\, and sharing work in 40 cities globally. \nThe concept is simple and fun: The evening begins with mingling\, eating and drinking for about an hour. Then the lights are dimmed\, the crowd is hushed\, and a spectacular slideshow of the work of anywhere from 15 to 50 photographers begins. A typical show consists of documentary\, still-life\, architecture\, portrait and fine-art photography\, all presented in a congenial\, non-competitive atmosphere\, accompanied by music\, audio recordings\, interviews and/or live performances. \nAttendees are encouraged to bring light fare or a dessert dish to share and enjoy. In the United States\, Slideluck Potshow has been presented to rave reviews in New York and Los Angeles—and now it is coming to Santa Fe\, thanks to Center. “We wanted to create an environment for the talented and diverse group of photographers working in New Mexico to showcase their work—and have fun while doing it\,” said Laura Wzorek Pressley\, Executive Director of Center. Co-sponsored by the New Mexico History Museum\, home of the Palace of the Governors Photo Archive. For more information\, including how to submit your work for inclusion in Slideluck Potshow\, please visit www.visitcenter.org.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/557-slideluck-potshow-a-global-photography-phenomenon/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/557_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20091203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20091207
DTSTAMP:20230614T175339Z
CREATED:20091126T053442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175339Z
UID:10001741-1259798400-1260143999@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Santa Fe Film Festival at the Museum Selected screenings
DESCRIPTION:The Santa Fe Film Festival returns for its 10th seasons Dec. 2-6\, with selected showings in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. For ticket info and a full schedule of films\, go to the festival web site: http://santafefilmfestival.com. \nFilm-goers: Enter through the Museum's Washington Avenue entrance.  \nHere's a schedule of screenings at the museum: \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 10 am: World premiere of "Dream" (documentary\, 120 minutes). Follow the journeys of six ordinary Americans from six very different backgrounds as they attempt to achieve a lifelong dream. \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 12:45 pm: "The Nature of Existence" (documentary\, 94 minutes). Filmmaker Roger Nygard interviews spiritual leaders\, scholars\, scientists\, artists\, pizza chefs\, and others who have influenced\, inspired\, or freaked out humanity. \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 3 pm: "Unconquered: Alan Houser and the Legacy of One Apache Family" (short documentary\, 33 minutes); and "More From Life" (animation\, 9 minutes). Spanning from the 1860’s through today\, the Houser / Haozous story is a journey exploring the incarceration of a people\, growth brought on by freedom\, and a family’s personal expression of these experiences through art.  \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 5 pm: "The Heretics" (documentary\, 95 minutes); with "Words" (animation\, 2 minutes). "The Heretics" uncovers the inside story of the Second Wave of the Women’s Movement through the eyes of Joan Braderman who arrives in NYC in 1971 to become a filmmaker. \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 7:15 pm: World premiere of "Char.ac.ter" (documentary\, 88 minutes). A raw and candid dialogue about the art and craft of acting between longtime colleagues and friends Dabney Coleman\, Peter Falk\, Charles Grodin\, Mark Rydell\, Harry Dean Stanton and including a very special interview with Sydney Pollack – the last he would do in his life.  \nThursday\, Dec. 3\, 9:30 pm: World premiere of "The Invocation" (documentary\, 90 minutes); with "A Thousand Suns" (documentary short\, 27 minutes). "The Invocation" is a worldwide exploration of the notion of 'God' and Peace through religion\, spirituality\, science\, history\, politics and arts\, from India to Japan to South America to South Africa to Europe to across the USA. "A Thousand Suns" tells the story of the Gamo Highlands of the African Rift Valley and the unique worldview held by the people of the region.  \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 10:15 am: "Food Fight" (documentary\, 83 minutes). A fascinating look at how American agricultural policy and food culture developed in the 20th century\, and how the California food movement has created a counter-revolution against big agribusiness. \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 12:30 pm: "El Corazon de Santa Fe (The Heart of Santa Fe)" (documentary\, 92 minutes). In the context of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary\, the film explores the city's fascinating treasures of art\, history\, faith\, lore\, and legend.  \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 2:45 pm: "Mythic Journeys" (documentary\, 94 minutes). A unique fusion of documentary\, animation and story\, starring Tim Curry\, Mark Hamill and Lance Henriksen. Documentary-style interviews are interwoven with a Hi-Def stop-motion animated adaptation of an ancient myth where a noble king is charged with the grim task of delivering a corpse to a mysterious sorcerer. \nFriday\, 5:15 pm: "Cowtown Ballroom: Sweet Jesus" (documentary\, 85 minutes). A documentary film about Cowtown Ballroom\, a legendary concert venue in Kansas City\, Missouri\, that featured an eclectic mix of musicians including Frank Zappa\, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band\, Van Morrison\, B. B. King and Linda Ronstadt. \nFriday\, Dec. 4\, 7:30 pm: "The Red Machine (documentary\, 84 minutes); with "Gandhi at the Bat" (short narrative\, 11 minutes). Full of crackling dialogue\, eye-catching visuals and unpredictable twists\, co-directors Stephanie Argy's and Alec Boehm's "The Red Machine" is a charming throwback to the great espionage capers of the 1930s. "Gandhi at the Bat" is a newsreel-style account of the little-known (and totally fictional) incident when Mohandas K. Gandhi pinch-hit for the New York Yankees in 1933. Based on a short story by Chet Williamson that originally appeared in the New Yorker. \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 10 am to noon: Kids First! Awards Ceremony \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 1 pm: "Something Unknown is Doing We Don't Know What" (documentary\, 105 minutes). Filmmaker Renée Scheltema sets out across the US to meet prominent scientists with solid credentials who are doing research into psychic phenomena\, to see if there is any scientific evidence. \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 3:30 pm: "El Corazon de Santa Fe (The Heart of Santa Fe)" (documentary\, 92 minutes). In the context of Santa Fe's 400th anniversary\, the film explores the city's fascinating treasures of art\, history\, faith\, lore\, and legend.  \nSaturday\, Dec. 5\, 5:45 pm: "Split Estate" (documentary\, 76 minutes). Split Estate maps a tragedy in the making\, as citizens in the path of a new drilling boom in the Rocky Mountain West struggle against the erosion of their civil liberties\, their communities and their health.  \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 10 am: "Jesus in India (documentary\, 97 minutes). Author Edward T. Martin undertakes a seeker’s quest across 4\,000 miles of India in search of answers and clues about where Jesus was during the “hidden years” from ages 12 to 30\, looking for evidence that has long been reported as existing in India. \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 12:25 pm: World premiere of "The New Sudan" (documentary\, 84 minutes); with "Chasing KEINO" (documentary short\, 28 minutes). The long war is over. Southern Sudan becomes New Sudan. Peace treaties are inked and enemies shake hands. But other wars still rage. The war of awakening hope against the habit of despair. The war of new alliances against decades of mistrust. The war of joyful homecoming against the lack of homes remaining. Above all\, it is a war for the human heart against the heart of darkness. In "Chasing KEINO\," follow six Kenyan nationals\, members of the AmeriKenyan Running Club\, as they train in Santa Fe\, New Mexico in preparation for US marathon racing. \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 2:45 pm: "Made in Pakistan" (documentary\, 56 minutes); with "'48 Generations" (documentary\, 48 minutes). "Made in Pakistan" tells the story of four Pakistani individuals who defy the prevailing stereotype of Pakistanis prevalent in the western media today and put their energies towards the progress of Pakistan. Collecting the family narratives of Jews and Arabs who experienced the West Bank events of 1948 first-hand\, "’48 Generations" represents a street-level effort to document the lived realities and human consequences of the ongoing regional conflict.  \nSunday\, Dec. 6\, 5:15 pm: "Girls On the Wall" (documentary\, 61 minutes). When the girls of this Illinois' Warrenville Prison are given a most likely shot at redemption – the chance to write and stage a musical based on their lives – they’re challenged to re-live the events that led up to their crimes\, reclaim their humanity\, and find their own exuberant voices in a first step toward breaking free from the prison system.
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/556-santa-fe-film-festival-at-the-museum-selected-screenings/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/556_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091122T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091122T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175335Z
CREATED:20091117T042640Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175335Z
UID:10001715-1258894800-1258903800@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:Chasing History: The quest for art\, artifacts and heritage The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series
DESCRIPTION:The Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series kicks off at 1 pm on Sunday\, Nov. 22\, with a special reception followed by former Palace of the Governors Director Thomas E. Chávez\, speaking on Chasing History: Quixotic Quests for Arts\, Artifacts and Heritage. \nTickets cost $10. Until Nov. 20\, subscribers to all five lectures in the series can get a reduced price of $40. \nChávez\, a contributor to the book Telling New Mexico: A New History\, and a former director of the Palace and of the National Hispanic  Cultural Center\, will draw on stories from his career and his forthcoming book for the lecture. \n “Life working in the humanities and museums can sometimes feel like chasing windmills\,” Chávez said. “History\, the arts and culture are not political priorities – yet they can be a societal priority\, because the benefits exceed our collective imagination. I plan to share some tales that\, now\, have become history.” \nChávez oversaw the Palace for 21 years\, a period when the eventual New Mexico History Museum was conceived and when the state acquired the famed Segesser Hides. The hide paintings\, which illustrate the 1720 Segesser expedition\, were then in Swiss hands. Each of those “quests” involved a mixture of political intrigue\, international diplomacy\, business acumen and dogged work by volunteers and staff. \n“My own career and those with whom I have had the pleasure of working are perfect cases in that sense of chasing windmills\,” Chávez said. “This lecture will be fun\, true and thought-provoking." \nPrior to Chávez’s lecture\, a 1 p.m. reception will honor Marianne O’Shaughnessy and her late husband\, Michael O’Shaughnessy\, who provided funding for the series. Also to be honored are Marta Weigle and Louise Stiver\, editors of Telling New Mexico: A New History. To attend the reception\, come to the John Gaw Meem Community Room via the museum’s Washington   Avenue entrance. \nThe five-part Telling New Mexico Inaugural Lecture Series accompanies the book as well as the History Museum’s core exhibition\, Telling New Mexico: Stories from Then and Now. The series will be held in the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium. Each lecture costs $10. For $100\, participants will be named “event sponsors” and receive a paperback version of Telling New Mexico: A New History\, autographed by the volume editors. \n  To purchase tickets: \nGo to http://www.museumfoundation.org/tellingnm until 4 pm the Friday before each lecture \nVisit the Museum Shops in the Palace and the New Mexico History Museum.    \nOther lectures in the series are at 2 p.m. on the following Sundays: \nJan. 31: Thomas Lark\, curator of Expo New Mexico’s African-American Performing Arts Center\, on the history of African-Americans in New Mexico; and the Rev. Landjur Abukusumo\, president of the Blackdom Memorial Foundation\, on the pioneers of the Blackdom community in Roswell. Special treat: The Afro-Gospel Praise Experience will perform a mixture of Afro-Latin rhythms and traditional gospel. \nMarch 28: Gail Y. Okawa\, professor of English at Youngstown State University in Ohio\, on "Exile from Paradise\, Internment in New Mexico: My Grandfather's Journey\,” an exploration of Santa Fe’s World War II Japanese-American internment camp. \nMay 2: UNM History Professor Ferenc Szasz on New Mexico’s role in developing the atomic bomb. \nAug. 22: Jennifer Nez Denetdale\, associate professor of history at Northern  Arizona University\, on "Din'e/Navajo Women: At the Intersection of Nation\, Gender\, and Tradition\," part of her current book project recounting the stories of Navajo women. \n \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/505-chasing-history-the-quest-for-art-artifacts-and-heritage-the-telling-new-mexico-inaugural-lecture-series/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/505_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20091121T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20091121T153000
DTSTAMP:20230614T175334Z
CREATED:20091217T013121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230614T175334Z
UID:10001711-1258812000-1258817400@test-dca-mc.nmdca.net
SUMMARY:The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down A Santa Fe Found lecture
DESCRIPTION:Join Stephen Post\, assistant director of the New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\, for a lecture on the new exhibition\, Santa Fe Found: Fragments of Time. This event\, free with museum admission\, will be at 2 pm\, Saturday\, Nov. 21\, at the New Mexico History Museum Auditorium\, 113 Lincoln Ave. \nPost is a co-curator of the exhibition at the Palace of the Governors\, which explores the lives of the colonists and Native peoples who lived in and around Santa Fe 400 years ago.  \nThe full lecture-series schedule: \n         \nThursday\, Nov. 12\, 6 pm: José Esquibel\, historian and genealogist\, “The Jewish-Converso Lineage of Don Juan de Oñate” \nSaturday\, Nov. 21\, 2 pm: Steve Post\, assistant director\, New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies\,  “The Founding of Santa Fe from the Ground Down.” Free with museum admission \nThursday\, Jan. 14\, 6 pm: Cordelia Snow\, archaeologist\, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division\, “Luxury Goods Transported over the Camino Real.” Free. \nSaturday\, Feb. 20\, 2 pm: Frances Levine\, director of the New Mexico History Museum/Palace of the Governors\,”In Her Own Voice: Doña Teresa Aguilera y Roche and Intrigue in the Palace of the Governors.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, March 13\, 2 pm: Thomas E. Chávez\, retired executive director\, National Hispanic Culture Center\, and former director\, Palace of the Governors\, “Juan Martínez de Montoya and the Establishment of Santa Fe.” Free with museum admission \nSaturday\, April 17\, 2 pm: Robin Farwell Gavin\, senior curator\, Museum  of Spanish Colonial Art\, he Journey of Mayólica.” Free with museum admission. \n     \nThursday\, May 13\, 6 pm: Joseph Sánchez\, director\, University of New Mexico Spanish Colonial Research Center\, and director\, Petroglyph National Monument\, “Peralta and the Founding of Santa Fe” \n“This exhibition will give visitors a broad perspective of the settling of Santa Fe and the web of cultural influences the Spanish brought with them\,” said co-curator Josef Diaz of the New Mexico History Museum. “The founding of Santa Fe is a big and complex story to tell\, and this show will offer a glimpse of different aspects of Spanish colonial life\, from the domestic to the economic to the political and religious.”   \nPrior to the construction of the New Mexico History Museum\, which opened in May 2009\, Post and his fellow archaeologists conducted a two-year dig to investigate the archaeology of the site at 113 Lincoln Ave.\, just off the Santa Fe  Plaza. More than 90\,000 artifacts were unearthed from the 17th-century\, revealing tales of life as it once was.   \n“Surprising to some and not to others\, the New Mexico  History Museum was complex and rich in the information it yielded on 300 years of people living and working behind the Palace of the Governors\,” Post said. “Combined with Dedie Snow’s 1974-1975 excavations within the Palace\, our work gives a unique inside-outside look at a central place in New Mexico history." \nOther featured archaeological sites add to the story. The Baca-Garvisu site was the home of a prominent Santa Fe family in the 1700s\, located where the Santa Fe  Community Convention   Center now stands. The Sanchez Site\, an early Spanish estancia\, or rural settlement\, was partly excavated in the 1980s and is now managed by El Rancho de los Golondrinas. Also prominent in the exhibition is San Gabriel del Yungue at the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh\, where the first Spanish colonists briefly set their roots. \nSpain's far northern colony of Santa   Fe was reached by a six-month journey up El Camino Real\, a barely mapped and uncertain route that held only hazy promises of water and shelter. Holding together a caravan of 700 people – soldiers\, friars\, men and a few women and children – and the tools and livestock it would take to build a new colony tested the explorers’ abilities and\, sometimes\, their humanity. \nSome of the artifacts show that\, despite the frontier conditions\, fine goods had managed to travel up El Camino Real to homes and missions in the colony. A sampling of the pottery that was found on the digs includes Spanish majolica\, blue-and-white Mexican pottery modeled on examples from the Ming Dynasty in China\, colorful Mexican pottery and Pueblo pottery. Also found were tobacco pipes\, gold earrings\, gunflints and arrowheads. \nA few shards of the pottery found by archaeologists speak to a monumental expedition. Centuries past\, they were parts of delicate Ming vases loaded onto a Spanish galleon at a Chinese port for an ocean journey then a bumpy trip up El Camino Real to the young colony. \n“Considering the Chinese pottery traveled across the ocean and then 1\,600 miles up the Camino Real\, it’s not surprising – and it’s even amazing – that we found only one or two pieces of these vessels\,” Post said. \nFrom these roots grew La Villa Real de Santa Fe\, the Royal City of Santa Fe\, now 400 years old. What do the historical accounts say of the homes they built and the crops they grew? What has the soil yielded of their lives\, the fragile beginnings of a young Spanish colony? \n     \nFunding for the Santa Fe Found exhibition and lecture series was made possible by the Palace Guard\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Gala Opening Committee; Friends of Archaeology\, a support group of the Museum of New Mexico Foundation; the Santa Fe 400th; and the Museum of New Mexico Foundation.  \n      \n 
URL:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/dca-event/501-the-founding-of-santa-fe-from-the-ground-down-a-santa-fe-found-lecture/
LOCATION:New Mexico History Museum\, 113 Lincoln Avenue\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://test-dca-mc.nmdca.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/501_thumb.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Marlon Magdalena":MAILTO:marlon.magdalena
GEO:35.6883465;-105.9381345
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Avenue Santa Fe NM 87501 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=113 Lincoln Avenue:geo:-105.9381345,35.6883465
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR