New Mexico ( ) is a state located in the southwestern region of the
United
States
. Inhabited by Native American
populations for many centuries, it has also been part of the
Imperial Spanish viceroyalty of New
Spain, part of Mexico
, and a
U.S. territory. Among U.S.
states, New Mexico has the highest percentage of
Hispanics at 45% (2008 estimate), being descendants
of Spanish
colonists and recent immigrants
from Latin America.
It also has the third-highest percentage of
Native Americans after Alaska
and Oklahoma
, and the
fifth-highest total number of Native Americans after California
, Oklahoma
, Arizona
, and
Texas
. The tribes represented in the state consist
of mostly
Navajo and
Pueblo peoples. As a result, the demographics
and culture of the state are unique for their strong Hispanic,
Mexican, and Native American cultural influences. At a
population density of 16 per square mile,
New Mexico is the sixth most sparsely inhabited U.S. state.
Geography

Digitally colored elevation map of New
Mexico.
The state's total area is .
The eastern border of New Mexico lies along
103° W longitude with the state of
Oklahoma
, and three
miles (5 km) west of 103.5° W longitude with Texas
.
On the
southern border, Texas
makes up the
eastern two-thirds, while the Mexican
states of
Chihuahua
and Sonora
make up the
western third, with Chihuahua making up about 90% of that.
The
western border with Arizona
runs along
the 109° 03' W
longitude. The 37° N
latitude parallel forms the northern
boundary with Colorado
. The states New Mexico, Colorado
, Arizona
, and
Utah
come together at the Four Corners in the
northwestern corner of New Mexico. New Mexico, although a
large state, has little water. Its surface water area is only about
. New Mexico's average precipitation rate is only a year.
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Northern New Mexico Landscape, Near Youngsville.
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The
landscape ranges from wide,
rose-colored deserts to broken
mesas to high,
snow-capped peaks. Despite New Mexico's arid image, heavily
forested mountain wildernesses cover a
significant portion of the state, especially towards the north.
The
Sangre de Cristo
Mountains, the southernmost part of the Rocky Mountains, run roughly north-south
along the east side of the Rio Grande
in the rugged, pastoral north. The most important of
New Mexico's rivers are the Rio Grande
, Pecos, Canadian, San Juan, and Gila. The Rio Grande is the eighth longest
river in the U.S.
Creosote bush,
mesquite,
cacti,
yucca, and desert grasses, including
black grama,
purple
three-awn, tobosa, and
burrograss,
cover the broad, semiarid plains that cover the southern portion of
the state.
The Federal government protects millions of acres of New Mexico as
national forests including:
Areas managed by the
National Park
Service include:
Visitors also frequent the surviving native pueblos of New Mexico.
Tourists visiting these sites bring significant monies to the
state.
Other areas of geographical and scenic
interest include Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National
Monument
and the Valles Caldera National
Preserve
. The Gila Wilderness
lies in the southwest of the state.
Climate
The climate of New Mexico is highly arid and its territory is
mostly covered by
mountains, high plains,
and
desert.
Flora and fauna
New Mexico offers habitat for occurrence of many plant and animal
species, with emphasis upon many desert areas and large amounts of
pinon-juniper woodland. Native birds include the
Road-runner,
Geococcyx californianus and
Wild turkey,
Meleagris gallopavo subspecies
mexicana.
History
The first known inhabitants of New Mexico were members of the
Clovis culture of
Paleo-Indians.Later inhabitants include
Native
American of the
Mogollon and
the
Anasazi cultures.By the time of
European contact in the 1500s, the region was settled by the
villages of the
Pueblo peoples and
groups of
Navajo,
Apache and
Ute.
Francisco Vázquez de
Coronado assembled an enormous expedition at Compostela
in 1540–1542 to explore and find the mystical
Seven Golden Cities of
Cibola as described by Fray Marcos de
Niza. The name
Nuevo México was first used by a
seeker of gold mines named
Francisco
de Ibarra who explored far to the north of Mexico in 1563 and
reported his findings as being in "a New Mexico".
Juan de Oñate officially established the
name when was appointed the first governor of the new
Province of New Mexico in 1598. In
1598 he founded the San Juan de los Caballeros colony, the first
permanent European settlement in the future state of New
Mexico,
on
the Rio Grande near Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo
. Oñate extended El Camino Real de Tierra
Adentro, "Royal Road of the Interior," by from Santa
Bárbara, Chihuahua
to his remote colony.
The
settlement of Santa Fe
was established at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains around
1608. The city, along with most of the settled areas of the
state, was abandoned by the Spanish for 12 years (1680–1692) as a
result of the successful
Pueblo
Revolt. After the death of the Pueblo leader
Popé,
Diego de
Vargas restored the area to Spanish rule.
While developing
Santa Fe as a trade center, the returning settlers founded Albuquerque
in 1706 from existing surrounding communities,
naming it for the viceroy of New Spain, Francisco
Fernández de la Cueva, 10th Duke of Alburquerque.
As a part
of New Spain, the claims for the province
of New Mexico passed to independent Mexico
in 1821
following the Mexican War of
Independence. The Republic of
Texas claimed the portion east of the Rio Grande
when it seceded from Mexico in 1836. Texas
was separated from New Mexico by the
Comancheria and its only attempt to establish a
presence or control in the claimed territory was the failed
Texas Santa Fe Expedition.
The
extreme northeastern part of New Mexico was originally ruled by
France
, and sold
to the United States as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. The
Spanish population increased rapidly,
possibly to 25,000 by 1800. The
Apache and
Comanche raids on Hispanic settlers were
common until well into the period of U.S. occupation.
Following
the Mexican-American War, from
1846-1848 and the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, Mexico ceded its mostly unsettled
northern holdings, today known as the American Southwest and California
, to the United States of America. In the
Compromise of 1850 Texas ceded
its claims to the area lying east of the Rio Grande in exchange for
ten million dollars.
The United States acquired the southwestern
boot heel of the state and southern Arizona
below the
Gila river in the mostly desert Gadsden Purchase of 1853.
Congress admitted New Mexico
as the 47th state in the Union on January 6, 1912.
During
World War II, the first atomic bombs were designed and manufactured at
Los
Alamos
and the first was tested at Trinity site
in the desert on the White Sands
Proving Grounds
between Socorro
and Alamogordo
.
New Mexico has benefited from federal government spending.
It is
home to three Air Force bases, White Sands Missile Range
, and the federal research laboratories Los Alamos
National Laboratory
and Sandia National Laboratories
. The state's population grew rapidly after
World War II, going from 531,818 in
1940 to 1,819,046 in 2000. Employment growth areas in New Mexico
include
microelectronics,
call centers, and
Indian casinos.
Demographics
Population

New Mexico Population Density
Map.
The
United States Census
Bureau, as of July 1, 2008, estimated New Mexico's population
at 1,984,356, which represents an increase of 165,315, or 9.1%,
since the last census in 2000. This includes a natural increase
since the last census of 114,583 people (that is 235,551 births
minus 120,968 deaths) and an increase due to net migration of
59,499 people into the state.
Immigration from outside
the United States resulted in a net increase of 34,375 people, and
migration within the country produced a net gain of 25,124
people.
The
center of population of New
Mexico is located in Torrance County
, in the town of Manzano
.
7.2% of New Mexico's population was reported as under 5 years of
age, 28% under 18, and 11.7% were 65 or older. Females make up
approximately 50.8% of the population.
As of 2006, 8.2% of the residents of the state were
foreign-born.
Important cities and counties
The 10 Most Populous New Mexico Cities and Towns
2008 Census Bureau estimates
| Rank |
City |
County |
Population |
| 1 |
Albuquerque |
Bernalillo County |
521,999 |
| 2 |
Las Cruces |
Dona Ana County |
91,865 |
| 3 |
Rio Rancho |
Sandoval County |
79,655 |
| 4 |
Santa Fe |
Santa Fe County |
71,831 |
| 5 |
Roswell |
Chaves County |
46,198 |
| 6 |
Farmington |
San Juan County |
42,637 |
| 7 |
Alamogordo |
Otero County |
35,757 |
| 8 |
Clovis |
Curry County |
32,352 |
| 9 |
Hobbs |
Lea County |
30,476 |
| 10 |
Carlsbad |
Eddy County |
25,629 |
The 5 Most Populous New Mexico Counties
2008 Census Bureau estimates
| Rank |
County |
Population
within
county limits |
Land Area
sq. miles |
Population
Density
per sq mi |
Largest city |
| 1 |
Bernalillo County |
635,139 |
1,166 |
540 |
Albuquerque |
| 2 |
Doña Ana County |
201,603 |
3,807 |
52 |
Las Cruces |
| 3 |
Santa Fe County |
143,937 |
1,909 |
75 |
Santa Fe |
| 4 |
San Juan County |
122,500 |
5,514 |
22 |
Farmington |
| 5 |
Sandoval County |
122,298 |
3,710 |
32 |
Rio Rancho |
Race and ancestry
According to the Census Bureau, 1.5% of the population is
Multiracial/Mixed-Race, a population larger than both the Asian and
NHPI population groups. In 2008 New Mexico had the highest
percentage (45%) of
Hispanics of any
state,with 83% of these native-born and 17% foreign-born.
The state
also has a large Native American
population, third, in percentage, behind Alaska
and
Oklahoma.
According to estimates from the
United States Census Bureau's
Population Estimate Program,on July 1, 2007 the population of New
Mexico was 1,969,915, and the number of New Mexicans of these
single races were:
White, 1,663,821
(84.46%);
Black, 56,083 (2.85%);
American
Indian or Alaskan Native, 186,256 (9.46%); Asian, 27,722
(1.41%); and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, 2,787 (0.14%).
There were 33,246 (1.69%) of two or more races. Whites are broken
into Hispanic and non-Hispanic. There were 874,688 (44.40%)
Hispanics. White
persons not Hispanic 833,274 (42.3%).
According to the
2000 United
States Census,the most commonly claimed ancestry groups in New
Mexico were:
Mexican (16.3%),
American Indian (10.3%),
German
(9.8%), Hispanic (9.4%), and
Spanish (9.3%).
Languages
According the
2000 U.S. Census, 28.76% of the population aged 5 and
older speak
Spanish at home, while
4.07% speak
Navajo. Speakers of
New Mexican Spanish dialect are
mainly descendants of
Spanish
colonist who arrived in New Mexico in the
17th and 18th centuries.
New Mexico is commonly thought to have Spanish as an official
language alongside
English, due to
the widespread usage of Spanish in the state. Although the original
state constitution of 1912 provided for a temporarily bilingual
government, New Mexico has no official language. Nevertheless, the
state government publishes a driver's manual as well as ballots in
both languages (they are required to publish ballots in Spanish by
federal law).
The constitution provided that, for the following twenty years, all
laws passed by the legislature be published in both Spanish and
English, and thereafter as the legislature should provide.
Prior to 1967, notices of statewide and county elections were
required to be printed in English and "may be printed in
Spanish."Additionally, many legal notices today are required to be
published in both English and Spanish.
In 1995, New Mexico adopted a State Bilingual Song,
New Mexico - Mi Lindo
Nuevo México.
Religion
Religious affiliations
According to a report compiled by the Association of Statisticians
of American Religious Bodies, the largest denominations in 2000
were the
Catholic Church with
670,511; the
Southern
Baptist Convention with 132,675;
the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with 42,261 (63,987 year-end
2007) ; and the
United Methodist
Church with 41,597 adherents. According to a 2008 survey by the
Pew Research Center, the most
common self-reported religious affiliation of New Mexico residents
are:
Catholic Church hierarchy
Within the hierarchy of the
Catholic
Church, New Mexico belongs to the
Ecclesiastical Province of Santa Fe.
New Mexico has three
dioceses, one of which
is an
archdiocese:
Economy
Oil and gas production, tourism, and federal government spending
are important drivers of the state economy. State government has an
elaborate system of tax credits and technical assistance to promote
job growth and business investment, especially in new
technologies.
Economic indicators
In 2007 New Mexico's
Gross
Domestic Product was $76.178 billion (preliminary figure).In
2007 the
per capita personal
income was $31,474 (rank 43
rd in the nation).In 2005
the percentage of persons below the
poverty level was 18.4%.The New Mexico Tourism
Department estimates that in Fiscal Year 2006 the travel industry
in New Mexico generated expenditures of $6.5 billion.
Oil and gas production
New Mexico is a leading
crude oil and
natural gas producer in the United
States. The
Permian Basin (part of the
Mid-Continent Oil Field) and
San Juan Basin lie partly in New
Mexico. In 2006 New Mexico accounted for 3.4% of the
crude oil, 8.5% of the dry
natural gas, and 10.2% of the
natural gas liquids produced in the
United States.In 2000 the value of oil and gas produced was $8.2
billion.
Federal government
Federal government spending is a major driver of the New Mexico
economy. In 2005 the federal government spent $2.03 on New Mexico
for every dollar of tax revenue collected from the state. This rate
of return is higher than any other state in the Union.
Many of
the federal jobs relate to the military; the state hosts three air
force bases (Kirtland Air Force Base
, Holloman Air Force Base
, and Cannon Air Force Base
); a testing range (White Sands
Missile Range
); and an army proving ground and maneuver range
(Fort
Bliss
- McGregor Range). A May 2005 estimate
by New
Mexico State University
is that 11.65% of the state's total employment
arises directly or indirectly from military
spending.Other federal installations include the
technology labs of Los Alamos National
Laboratory
and Sandia National Laboratories
.
Economic incentives
New Mexico provides a number of economic incentives to businesses
operating in the state, including various types of tax credits and
tax exemptions. Most of the incentives are based on job
creation.
New Mexico law allows governments to provide land, buildings, and
infrastructure to businesses to promote job creation. Several
municipalities have imposed an Economic Development
Gross Receipts Tax (a form of Municipal
Infrastructure GRT) that is used to pay for these infrastructure
improvements and for marketing their areas.
The state provides financial incentives for film production. The
New Mexico Film Office estimated at the end of 2007 that the
incentive program had brought more than 85 film projects to the
state since 2003 and had added $1.2 billion to the economy.
State taxes
Beginning in 2008, personal
income tax
rates for New Mexico range from 1.7% to 4.9%, within four income
brackets.Beginning in 2007, active-duty military salaries are
exempt from the state income tax.
New Mexico imposes a
Gross Receipts
Tax (GRT) on many transactions, which many even include some
governmental receipts. This resembles a
sales
tax but unlike the sales taxes in many states it applies to
services as well as tangible goods. Normally, the provider or
seller passes the tax on to the purchaser, however legal incidence
and burden apply to the business, as an excise tax. GRT is imposed
by the state and there may an additional locality component to
produce a total tax rate.As of July 1, 2008 the combined tax rate
ranged from 5.125% to 8.4375%.
Property tax is imposed on real
property by the state, by counties, and by school districts. In
general, personal-use personal property is not subject to property
taxation. On the other hand, property tax is levied on most
business-use personalty. The taxable value of property is 1/3 of
the assessed value. A tax rate of about 30
mill is applied to the taxable value,
resulting in an effective tax rate of about 1%. In the 2005 tax
year the average millage was about 26.47 for residential property
and 29.80 for non-residential property. Assessed values of
residences cannot be increased by more than 3% per year unless the
residence is remodeled or sold.
Transportation
New Mexico has long been an important corridor for
trade and
migration.
The
builders of the ruins at Chaco Canyon
also created a radiating network of roads from the
mysterious settlement. Chaco Canyon's trade function shifted to
Casas
Grandes
in the present-day Mexican state of Chihuahua
, however, north-south trade continued. The
pre-
Columbian trade with
Mesoamerican cultures included
northbound exotic birds, seashells and copper.
Turquoise, pottery,
and salt were some of the goods transported south along the
Rio
Grande
. Present-day New Mexico's pre-Columbian
trade is especially remarkable for being undertaken on foot. The
north-south trade route later became a path for colonists with
horses arriving from
New Spain as well as
trade and communication. The route was called
El Camino Real de Tierra
Adentro.
The
Santa Fe Trail was the
19
th century US territory's vital commercial and
military highway link to the Eastern United States. All with
termini in Northern New Mexico, the Camino Real, the Santa Fe Trail
and the
Old Spanish
Trail are all recognized as
National Historic Trails. New
Mexico's latitude and low passes made it an attractive east-west
transportation corridor. As a territory, the
Gadsden Purchase increased New Mexico's
land area for the purpose of the construction of a southern
transcontinental railroad,
that of the
Southern Pacific
Railroad. Another transcontinental railroad was completed by
the
Atchison,
Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. The railroads essentially replaced
the earlier trails but brought on a population boom. Early
transcontinental
auto trails later
crossed the state bringing more migrants. Railroads were later
supplemented or replaced by a system of
highways and
airports. Today,
New Mexico's
Interstate Highways
approximate the earlier land routes of the Camino Real, the Santa
Fe Trail and the transcontinental railroads.
Road
The automobile changed the character of New Mexico, marking the
start of large scale immigration to the state from elsewhere in the
United States. Settlers moving West during the
Great Depression and post-
World War II American culture immortalized the
National Old Trails
Highway, later
U.S. Route 66. Today, the
automobile is heavily relied upon in New Mexico
for transportation.
New Mexico had 59,927 route miles of
highway
as of the year 2000, of which 7,037 receive federal-aid. In that
same year there were of
freeways, of which
1000 were the route miles of Interstate Highways
10,
25 and
40.
The former number has
increased with the upgrading of roads near Pojoaque
, Santa Fe
and Las Cruces
to freeways. The fatality rate, in terms
of persons killed per 100 million lane miles traveled, in the year
2000 was 1.9 percent.
This is approximately the same as Wyoming
, but higher than Massachusetts
(0.8 percent) and lower than Mississippi
(2.7 percent). Notable bridges
include the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge
near Taos. As of
2001, 703 highway bridges, or one percent, were declared
"structurally deficient" or "structurally obsolete".
Rural and intercity public transportation by road is provided by
Americanos USA, LLC,
Greyhound Lines and several government
operators.
Urban mass transit
The
New Mexico Rail Runner
Express is a commuter rail system
serving the metropolitan area of Albuquerque, New Mexico
. It began operation on July 14, 2006.
The
system runs from Belen to downtown Santa
Fe
. Larger cities in New Mexico typically have
some form of public transportation by road,
ABQ
RIDE is the largest such system in the state.
Rail
There were 2354 route miles of railroads in the year 2000, this
number increases with the opening of the
Rail Runner's extension to
Santa Fe.
In addition to local railroads and other
tourist lines, the state jointly owns and operates a heritage
narrow-gauge steam railroad, the
Cumbres
and Toltec Scenic Railway
, with the state of Colorado
. Narrow gauge railroads once connected many
communities in the northern part of the state, from Farmington
to Santa Fe. No less than one hundred
railroads of various names and lineage have operated in the
jurisdiction at some point. New Mexico's rail transportation system
reached its height in terms of length following admission as a
state; in 1914 eleven railroads operated 3124 route miles.
Railroad surveyors arrived in New Mexico in the 1850s. The first
railroads incorporated in 1869.
The first operational railroad, the Atchison, Topeka &
Santa Fe Railway (ATSF), entered the territory by way of the
lucrative and contested Raton Pass
in 1878. It eventually reached El Paso,
Texas
in 1881 and with the Southern Pacific Railroad created
the nation's second transcontinental
railroad with a junction at Deming
. The Southern Pacific Railroad entered the
territory from the
Territory of
Arizona in 1880.
The Denver & Rio Grande
Railway, who would generally only use narrow gauge equipment in New Mexico, entered
the territory from Colorado
and began service to Espanola
on December 31, 1880. These first railroads
were built as long-distance corridors, later railroad construction
also targeted resource extraction.
Freight
New Mexico is served by two
class I
railroads, the
BNSF Railway and the
Union Pacific Railroad.
Combined, they operate 2,200 route miles of railway in the
state.
Passenger
A
commuter rail operation, the
New Mexico Rail Runner
Express, connects the state's capital, its largest city and
other communities. The privately-operated state owned railroad
began operations in July 2006.
The BNSF
Railway's entire line from Belen
to Raton, New Mexico
was sold to the state, partially for the
construction of phase II of this operation, which opened in
December 2008. Phase II of Rail Runner extended the line
northward to Santa
Fe
from the Sandoval County
station, the northernmost station under Phase I
service. The service now connects Santa
Fe
, Sandoval, Bernalillo, and Valencia Counties. The trains connect
Albuquerque's population base and
central business district to
downtown Santa Fe with up to eight roundtrips in a day.
The
section of the line running south to Belen
is served less frequently. Rail Runner
operates scheduled service seven days per week.
With the rise of
rail
transportation many settlements grew or were founded and the
territory became a
tourist destination. As
early as 1878, the ATSF promoted
tourism in the
region with emphasis on
Native American
imagery.
Named trains
often reflected the territory they traveled: Super Chief, the streamlined successor to
the Chief; Navajo, an early
transcontinental tourist train; and Cavern, a through car
operation connecting Clovis
and Carlsbad
(by the early 1950s as train 23-24) , were some of
the named passenger
trains of the ATSF that connoted New Mexico.
Passenger
train service once connected nine of New Mexico's present ten most populous cities
(the exception is Rio Rancho
), while today passenger train service only
connects two: Albuquerque
and Santa Fe
. With the decline of most
intercity rail service in the United States
in the late 1960s, New Mexico was left with minimal services. No
less than six daily long-distance roundtrip trains supplemented by
many branch line and local trains served New Mexico in the early
1960s. Declines in passenger revenue, but not necessarily
ridership, prompted many railroads to turn over their passenger
services in truncated form to
Amtrak, a state
owned enterprise. Amtrak, also known as the National Passenger
Railroad Corporation, began operating the two extant long-distance
routes in May 1971.
Resurrection of passenger rail service from
Denver
to
El
Paso
, a route once plied in part by the ATSF's El
Pasoan , has been proposed over the years. As early as
the 1980s former Governor
Toney Anaya
proposed building a
high-speed rail
line connecting the two cities with New Mexico's major cities.
Front Range Commuter Rail is a
project to connect Wyoming
and New Mexico with high-speed rail.
Amtrak's
Southwest Chief passes
through daily at stations in Gallup
, Albuquerque, Lamy
, Las Vegas
, and Raton
, offering connections to Los
Angeles
, Chicago
and intermediate points. The
Southwest
Chief is the fastest Amtrak long distance train, being
permitted a maximum speed of 90 mph in various places on the
tracks of the
BNSF Railway. It also
operates on
New Mexico
Rail Runner Express trackage. The
Southwest Chief is
the successor to the
Super Chief and
El Capitan. The
streamliner Super Chief, a favorite of
early Hollywood stars, was one of the most famous named trains in
the United States and one of the most esteemed for its luxury and
exoticness—train cars were named for regional Native American
tribes and outfitted with the artwork of many local artists—but
also for its speed: as few as 39 hours 45 minutes westbound.
The
Sunset Limited makes stops
three times a week in both directions at Lordsburg
, and Deming
, serving Los Angeles, New Orleans
and intermediate points. The
Sunset
Limited is the successor to the
Southern Pacific Railroad's train
of the same name and operates exclusively on
Union Pacific trackage in New Mexico.
Aerospace
The
Albuquerque International
Sunport
is the state's primary port of entry for air
transportation.
Upham
, near Truth or
Consequences
is the location of the world's first operational
and purpose-built commercial spaceport,
Spaceport America
. Rocket
launches began in April, 2007. It is undeveloped and has one
tenant,
UP Aerospace, launching small
payloads.
Virgin Galactic, a space
tourism company, plans to make this their primary operating
base.
Law and government
The Constitution of 1912, as amended, dictates the form of
government in the state.
On March 18, 2009, the Governor signed the law abolishing the
death penalty in New Mexico after the
assembly and senate vote the week before, thus becoming the 15th
U.S. state to abolish the penalty.
Governor
Bill Richardson and
Lieutenant Governor
Diane Denish, both
Democrats, won re-election in 2006. Their terms expire in January
2011. Governors serve a term of four years and may seek reelection
for one additional term (limit of two terms). For a list of past
governors, see
List of New
Mexico Governors.
Other constitutional officers, all of whose terms also expire in
January 2011, include Secretary of State
Mary Herrera, Attorney General
Gary King, State Auditor
Hector Balderas, State Land Commissioner
Patrick H. Lyons, and State Treasurer
James B. Lewis.
Herrera, King, Balderas and Lewis are Democrats. Lyons is a
Republican.

The Capitol of New Mexico in 1900, It
was later set on fire.
Today the building is the Bataan Memorial Building.
The
New Mexico State
Legislature consists of a 70-seat
House of Representatives
and a 42-seat
Senate.
New Mexico sent Democrat
Jeff Bingaman
to the
United States Senate
until January 2013 and Democrat
Tom Udall
until January 2015. Democrats
Martin
Heinrich,
Harry Teague and
Ben R. Luján represent the state in the
United States House of
Representatives. See
New
Mexico congressional map.
Education
Due to the state's various research facilities, New Mexico had the
highest concentration of
Ph.D
holders of any state in 2000.
Primary and secondary education
The
New Mexico
Public Education Department oversees the operation of primary
and secondary schools.
Colleges and universities
Culture
With a
Native
American population of 134,000 in 1990, New Mexico still ranks
as an important center of Native American culture. Both the
Navajo and
Apache share
Athabaskan origin. The Apache and some
Ute live on federal reservations within the state.
With 16
million acres (6,500,000 ha), mostly in
neighboring Arizona
, the reservation of the Navajo Nation ranks as the largest in the
United States. The prehistorically agricultural
Pueblo Indians live in pueblos scattered
throughout the state, many older than any European
settlement.
More than one-third of New Mexicans claim Hispanic origin, the
descendants of the Spanish colonists in the northern portion of the
state. Most of the Mexican immigrants reside in the southern part
of the state.
There are many New Mexicans who also speak a unique dialect of
Spanish.
New Mexican Spanish has
vocabulary often unknown to other Spanish speakers. Because of the
historical isolation of New Mexico from other speakers of the
Spanish language, the local dialect preserves some late medieval
Castilian vocabulary considered
archaic elsewhere, adopts numerous Native American words for local
features, and contains much Anglicized vocabulary for American
concepts and modern inventions.
The presence of various indigenous Native American communities, the
long-established Spanish and Mexican influence, and the diversity
of Anglo-American settlement in the region, ranging from pioneer
farmers and ranchers in the territorial period to military families
in later decades, make New Mexico a particularly heterogeneous
state.
There are natural history and atomic museums in Albuquerque, which
also hosts the famed
Albuquerque
International Balloon Fiesta.
Art and literature
A large
artistic community thrives in Santa Fe
, and has included such people as Bruce Nauman, Richard
Tuttle, John Connell and Steina Vasulka. The capital city has
museums of Spanish colonial, international folk, Navajo ceremonial,
modern Native American, and other modern art. Another museum honors
late resident
Georgia O'Keeffe.
Colonies for artists and writers thrive, and the small city teems
with art galleries. In August, the city hosts the annual
Santa Fe Indian Market, which is the
oldest and largest juried Native American art showcase in the
world.
Performing arts include the renowned
Santa Fe Opera which presents five operas in
repertory each July to August, the
Santa Fe Chamber Music
Festival held each summer, and the restored
Lensic Theater a principal venue for many
kinds of performances. The weekend after Labor Day boasts the
burning of
Zozobra, a 50 ft (15 m)
marionette, during
Fiestas de Santa
Fe.
In the mid-20th century there was a thriving
Hispano school of literature and scholarship being
produced in both English and Spanish. Among the more notable
authors were:
Angélico
Chávez,
Nina Otero-Warren,
Fabiola Cabeza de Baca,
Aurelio Espinosa,
Cleofas Jaramillo,
Juan Bautista Rael, and
Aurora Lucero-White Lea.
As well, writer
D. H. Lawrence
lived near Taos
in the 1920s at the D.
H.
Lawrence Ranch
where there is a shrine said to contain his
ashes.
Silver City in the southwestern mountains of the state, was
originally a mining town, and at least one nearby mine still
operates. it is perhaps better known now as the home of and/or
exhibition center for large numbers of artists, visual and
otherwise.
Sports
Notable professional sports teams based in New Mexico include the
professional teams
Albuquerque
Isotopes, Triple A affiliate of the Los Angeles Dodgers
(baseball),
Albuquerque
Thunderbirds (basketball),
New
Mexico Scorpions (ice hockey), and the
New Mexico Wildcats (indoor football).
The
state universities field teams in many sports; teams include the
University of New Mexico
Lobos
and the New
Mexico State Aggies.
Olympic
gold medalist Tom Jager, who is an
advocate of controversial high-altitude training for swimming,
has conducted training camps in Albuquerque
(elevation 5,312 ft (1,619.1 m)) and
Los
Alamos
(7320 ft (2,231 m)).
See also
References
- Florence Merriam Bailey. 1928. Birds of New Mexico,
807 pages
- C. Michael Hogan. 2008. Wild turkey: Meleagris gallopavo,
GlobalTwitcher.com, ed. N. Stromberg
- Resistance and Accommodation in New Mexico. Source: C.
W. Hackett, ed., Historical Documents relating to New Mexico, Nueva
Vizcaya, and Approaches Thereto, to 1773, vol. III [Washington:
Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1937] pp. 327-35.
- New Mexico (state). Britannica Online
Encyclopedia.
- Demographic Profile of Hispanics in New Mexico, 2007.
Pew Hispanic Center.
- MLA Language Map Data Center: Most spoken languages
in New Mexico
- "The Spanish language in New Mexico and southern
Colorado"
- "Language Rights and New Mexico Statehood", The
Excluded Student: Educational Practices Affecting Mexican Americans
in the Southwest, Mexican American Education Study, Report
III, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972, pp.
76-82
- U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, Table 1-2: New Mexico Public Road Length, Miles by
Ownership 2000[1]
- U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, Table 1-1: New Mexico Public Road Length, by Functional
System [2]
- U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, Table 2-1: Highway Traffic Fatalities and Fatality
Rates: 2000[3]
- U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, Table 1-5: Highway Bridge Condition: 2001 [4]
- U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation
Statistics,Table 1-9: Freight Railroads in New Mexico and the
United States: 2000 [5]
- U.S. Department of Transportation Bureau of Transportation
Statistics,Table 1-9: Freight Railroads in New Mexico and the
United States: 2000[6]
- New Mexico Rail Runner Express weekday
schedule
- Rail Runner schedule page
- UP Aerospace does launches ‘quickly and cheaply’, DenverBiz
Journal, October 2008 [7]
- Le Nouveau-Mexique abolit la peine de mort [archive] in Le
Monde of March 19, 2009
- NM
Secretary of State's Office official web site
- NM
Attorney General's Office official web site
- NM State
Auditor's Office official web site
- NM State
Lands official web site
- NM State
Treasuer's Office official web site
- Venture Capitals
- "High Hopes: Altitude Training for Swimmers", by Michael Scott,
SwimmingworldMagazine.com magazine archives[8] (10-15-08)
Further reading

- Hubert Howe Bancroft. The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft,
Vol. XVII. (History of Arizona and New Mexico
1530-1888) (1889); reprint 1962. online edition
- Warren Beck. Historical Atlas of New Mexico 1969.
- Thomas E. Chavez, An Illustrated History of New
Mexico, 267 pages, University of New Mexico Press 2002, ISBN
0-8263-3051-7
- Joseph G. Dawdon III. Doniphan's Epic March; The 1st
Missouri Volunteers in the Mexican War, Kansas Press [3448]
- Richard Ellis, ed. New Mexico Past and Present: A
Historical Reader. 1971. primary sources
- Lynne Marie Getz; Schools of Their Own: The Education of
Hispanos in New Mexico, 1850-1940 (1997)
- Erlinda Gonzales-Berry, David R. Maciel, editors, The
Contested Homeland: A Chicano History of New Mexico, 314 pages
- University of New Mexico Press 2000, ISBN 0-8263-2199-2
- Nancie L. González; The Spanish-Americans of New Mexico: A
Heritage of Pride (1969)
- Ramón A. Gutiérrez; When Jesus Came, the Corn Mothers Went
Away: Marriage, Sexuality, and Power in New Mexico, 1500-1846
(1991)
- Paul L. Hain; F. Chris Garcia, Gilbert K. St. Clair; New
Mexico Government 3rd ed. (1994)
- Tony Hillerman, The Great
Taos Bank Robbery and other Indian Country Affairs, University
of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1973, trade paperback, 147 pages,
(ISBN 0-8263-0530-X), stories
- Jack E. Holmes, Politics in New Mexico (1967),
- Paul Horgan, Great River, The
Rio Grande in North American History, 1038 pages, Wesleyan
University Press 1991, 4th Reprint, ISBN 0585380147, Pulitzer Prize
1955
- Sante Fe Trail: 72 References Kansas Historical Society
[3449]
- Robert W. Kern, Labor in New Mexico: Strikes, Unions, and
Social History, 1881-1981, University of New Mexico Press
1983, ISBN 0-8263-0675-6
- Howard R. Lamar; The Far Southwest, 1846-1912: A
Territorial History (1966, repr 2000)
- Robert W. Larson, New Mexico's Quest for Statehood,
1846-1912 (1968)
- John M. Nieto-Phillips, The Language of Blood: The Making
of Spanish-American Identity in New Mexico, 1880s-1930s,
University of New Mexico Press 2004, ISBN 08236324231
- Marc Simmons, New Mexico: An Interpretive History, 221
pages, University of New Mexico Press 1988, ISBN 0-8263-1110-5
- George I. Sánchez; Forgotten People: A Study of New
Mexicans (1940; reprint 1996)
- Marc Simmons, New Mexico: An Interpretive History, 221
pages, University of New Mexico Press 1988, ISBN 0-8263-1110-5,
good introduction
- Ferenc M. Szasz; and Richard W. Etulain; Religion in Modern
New Mexico (1997)
- David J. Weber, The Mexican Frontier, 1821-1846: The
American Southwest under Mexico (1982)
- David J. Weber; Foreigners in Their Native Land: Historical
Roots of the Mexican Americans (1973), primary sources to
1912
External links
- State Government
- U.S. Government
- Directory
- Tourism