Voices From The Past 2010
400th Anniversary History Lecture Series
In Honor of All Who Have Made This Place Their Home Before and After 1607


                                              Monday Evenings at 6 p.m. at Hotel Santa Fe

                                                     1501 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501   
                                                                 Call (505)-466-2775 for Information

May 24		Cordelia ‘Dedie’ Snow
		Historical Archaeologist, ARMS (Archaeological Research Management System)
		New Mexico Historic Preservation Division, Office of Cultural Affairs
		Matchlocks, Muskets, and a Headdress of Pearls: More Luxury Goods Transported on the Camino Real
		
May 31		Dr. Tara Plewa, GISP
		Geomorphologist 
		Columbia, South Carolina
		Revelations of the River: New Findings and Conclusions on Santa Fe River History

June 7		Dr. Louis Ray Sadler 
		Professor Emeritus of History, New Mexico State University and Author, 
		The Archaeologist Was a Spy: Sylvanus Morley and the Office of Naval Intelligence; 
		The Secret War in El Paso: Mexican Revolutionary Intrigue, 1906-1920; 
		The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution: The Bloodiest Decade, 1910-1920; 
                             Border and the Revolution: Clandestine Activities of the Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920;   
		The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo,1848: Papers of the Sesquicentennial Symposium, 1848-1998
		Sylvanus Morley (Archaeologist and Spy) in Santa Fe

June 14		David Grant Noble
		Author, Editor, Fine Art Photographer 
		The Mesa Verde World: Explorations in Ancestral Pueblo Archaeology; Ancient Ruins of the Southwest:
                            Archaeological Guide; In Search of Chaco: New Perspectives on an Archaeological Enigma; 
                            Santa Fe: Histoty of an Ancient City;   In the Places of the Spirits
		Teenage Diarists on the Santa Fe Trail: Susan Shelby Magoffin & Lewis Garrard  
		
June 21		Jeff Hengesbaugh
		Fur Trapper and Mountain Man
	 	The Fur Trade and Mountain Men of the Rocky Mountain West	
	
June 28		Dr. Adrian Bustamante
		Historian and Professor of History (ret.), Ft. Lewis College and Author,
		‘Espanoles, Castasm y Labradores: Santa Fe Society in the 18th Century’, 
                            (Chapter in David Grant Noble, Ed. Santa Fe: History of an Ancient City)			
		The Storm Before the Calm: Anxiety in Santa Fe Over General Kearney’s Approach

July 5		Dr. John L. Kessell
		Professor Emeritus of History, University of New Mexico;
		Author, Kiva, Cross, and Crown: The Pecos Indians and New Mexico, 1540-1840; Spain 	in the Southwest:
                             A Narrative History of Colonial New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, and California; 
                              Pueblos and Spaniards in the Kingdom of New Mexico; 
		Editor, Remote Beyond Compare: Letters of Don Diego de Vargas to His Family from New Spain and 
                             Mexico, 1675-1706; Co-Editor, with Rick Hendricks, Meredith D. Dodge, and Larry D. Miller,
                             A Settling of Accounts: The Journals of Don Diego de Vargas, l700-1704; Co-editor, (with Hendricks and Hodge): 
                            That Disturbances Cease: The Journals of Don Diego de Vargas, 1697-1700; Blood on the Boulders: The Journals  
		of Don Diego de Vargas, 1694-1697; and To The Royal Crown Restored: The Journals of Don Diego 
                            de Vargas, 1692-94
		A Long Time Coming: The 17th Century Pueblo-Spanish War

July 12		Dr. Richard and Shirley Cushing Flint
		Historians, Spanish Paleographers and Research Associates in History, 
		Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson, Arizona and 
                            Authors: The Coronado Expedition: From the Distance of 460     Years; Documents of the Coronado Expedition,
                            1539-1542: “They Were Not Familiar With His Majesty Nor Did They Wish to Be
                            His Subjects”; The Coronado Expedition to Tierra Nueva: The 1540-1542 Route Across the Southwest; 		No Conquest No Settlement: A History of the Coronado Entrada	
		Surprise in the Coronado Archive: Guido de Lavezariis, Genoese Merchant-Banker & More!		

July19		Malcolm Ebright, J.D. 
		Historian, Lawyer, and Author, Land Grants and Lawsuits in Northern New 
		Mexico; Spanish and Mexican Land Grants and the Law	
		A City Different Than We Thought: Land Grants in Early Santa Fe

July 26		David Snow
		Historian and Archaeologist; former Curator, Palace of the Governors, New Mexico History Museum; 
                            And Editor, The Native American and Spanish Colonial Experience in the  Greater Southwest, Vol. Vol. II and I
		Down at the Shell-bead Water

Aug 2		Dr. Michael Brescia 
		Associate Curator of Ethno history, Arizona State Museum
		Associate Professor of History, Department of History, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
		And Co-Author, (with W. Dirk Raat), Mexico and the United States: Ambivalent Vistas
		Spanish Water Rights and Bounty of the Common Lands: Change, Continuity  & Clashing Legal Regimes
                             in New Mexico History		
 
Aug 9		Dr. Paul Zolbrod
		Professor of English Literature, New Mexico Highlands University, Las Vegas and Dine College-Crownpoint
    		Professor Emeritus of English Literature, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania,
                             Research Associate, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
		Author, Dine Behane: The Navajo Creation Story; Sacred Texts;  
		Reading the Voice: Native American Oral Poetry on the Page;	
                            Weaving a World: Textiles and the Navajo Way of Seeing
		Intersection of Myth and the Recorded Past in Navajo History 

$12 at the Door or $96 for the series of 12 lectures

             A Public Program Graciously Assisted by Hotel Santa Fe, a Picuris Pueblo Enterprise

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