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Bibframe Work

Title
Voices from the past
Other Titles (e.g. Variant)
Comanche Raid of 1776 and other true stories of New Mexico history
Type
Text
Monograph
Subject
New Mexico--History (LCSH)
New Mexico--Biography (LCSH)
Frontier and pioneer life--New Mexico--Anecdotes (LCSH)
Outlaws--New Mexico--History--Anecdotes (LCSH)
Language
English
Geographic Coverage
New Mexico
Classification
LCC: F796 .T67 2017
DDC: 978.9 full
Could not render: bf:status
Content
text
Summary
"Voices From The Past" is presented in three parts. The first is a series of columns that tell of places, people and events during the Spanish (1598-1821) and Mexican (1821-1846) eras of New Mexico history. These stories range from the mundane, such as the formal contract for a horse race held in 1846 (the results of which remain unknown); the building of a bridge over the Rio Grande and the regulations for branding livestock, to the serious business of the orderly succession of the Office of Governor during the Mexican era and the unknown fate of six Apache captives in the early 18th century. Part two extends the theme of people, places and events into our Territorial period (1846-1912), although a few expend that time line beyond 1912, into early statehood. Part three covers a wide variety of stories about the men and women we learn about because they got into trouble with the law. These stories are taken from a broad variety of archival sources found at the state archives, including the extensive penal papers found in the records of New Mexico's territorial-era governors and the district courts, as well as reports of crime and punishment found in period newspapers. It is great fun to come across a newspaper story on a crime, be it a robbery or murder, and then find an associated record of indictment, trail, and sentence (as well as acquittals) in the archives' district court records, and subsequently, as in the 1893 case of José D. Gallegos, the subject of the Penitentiary of New Mexico's first "mug shot," records of incarceration in the territorial penitentiary. The fifty-four columns in this volume are but a small sample of those stories that we hope will not only entertain, but enhance the reader's knowledge and appreciation of New Mexico's extraordinary past."--Provided by publisher.
Authorized Access Point
Tórrez, Robert J. Voices from the past