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[edit] History Located in Taos, New Mexico. Spanish settlers began their colonization of the Taos Valley in 1616, but the Plaza dates to the late 1700s when the Don Fernando de Taos Land Grant was ceded to the settlers from the Taos Pueblo in 1796 by Don Fernando de Chacon, Governor of New Mexico. Taos (IPA: ) is a city in Taos County in the north-central region of New Mexico. ...
Taos Pueblo, circa 1920 Taos Pueblo (or Pueblo de Taos), continuously inhabited for over 1000 years, is the ancient town of the Northern Tiwa speaking tribe of Pueblo people, Native Americans. ...
Taos Plaza served for decades as the central meeting place in the valley and survived numerous fires that destroyed several older buildings. Nearby is the home of Charles Bent, who was appointed Governor of New Mexico when it became an American Territory during the Mexican-American War. He was killed by Indian rebels during the Taos Revolt. Combatants United States Mexico Commanders Zachary Taylor Winfield Scott Stephen W. Kearney Antonio López de Santa Anna Mariano Arista Pedro de Ampudia Strength 7,000 - 43,000 18,000 - 40,000 Casualties KIA: 1,733 Total dead: 13,283 Wounded: 4,152 25,000 killed or wounded (Mexican government...
The Taos Revolt was a popular insurrection against the United States occupation of New Mexico during the Mexican-American War. ...
[edit] The American Flag and Taos Plaza Taos Plaza has the distinction of being the first place in the United States, by tradition, to fly the United States Flag both day and night. In 1861, Southern sympathizers repeatedly tore down the flag flying over the Plaza. Captain Smith Simpson with the help of Kit Carson, Ceran St. Vrain, and others nailed the flag to a tall cottonwood pole and raised it over the Plaza, with the threat that anyone who molested the flag would be shot. To assure it was not torn down, the group went to St. Vrain's nearby store and took turns standing guard over the flag day and night. Since the flag was nailed to the cottonwood, it could not be lowered at dark. When military officials in Santa Fe learned of the incident, they permitted Taos to fly the flag twenty-four hours a day. Congress later granted official permission to fly the flag at Taos Plaza round-the-clock, only one of a few places in the country to do so. Kit Carson Kit Carson (December 24, 1809 â May 23, 1868), born Christopher Houston Carson, was an American frontiersman. ...
Ceran St. ...
[edit] Tourism The Taos Plaza is now a popular tourist destination in Taos with many galleries and shops displaying Northern New Mexico cultural foods and items. Northern New Mexico may simply mean the northern part of New Mexico, but in cultural terms it usually means the area of heavy Spanish settlement in the north-central part. ...
The last week of every July brings the Fiestas de Santa Ana y Santiago, a weekend long celebration where the plaza is filled with music, food, and dance. Taos Website [1] This article, image, template or category belongs in one or more categories. Please categorize it so it may be associated with related articles, images, templates or categories. Thank you. Please remove this template after categorizing. This article has been tagged since September 2006. |