Tag Archives: New Mexico

Owl Rock, Albuquerque, New Mexico

This image shows a rock formation along the historic U.S. Route 66 west of New Mexico, which with some imagination has come to be called Owl Rock.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
116–OWL ROCK ON HIGHWAY U. S. 66 ABOUT 40 MILES WEST OF ALBUQUERQUE, N. MEX.
–This formation is still visible from the roadway that now passes by it, which has been upgraded and slightly relocated over the intervening decades.
This card likely dates from the 1940s.

Continental Divide Vista, New Mexico

This card has a view of the Great Basin and Range at the point where the water flows either east to the Gulf of Mexico, or west to the Pacific Ocean, known as the Continental Divide.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
10 — CONTINENTAL DIVIDE
The Great Continental Divide extends from Alaska through the Western United States, Mexico, Central America and South America to Patagonia. From this “Divide” the water (streams) run definitely east or west.
We cross this Highway “66” just about 115 miles west of Albuquerque and 30 miles east of Gallup, N. M. This spectacular view of the Red Rocks is from the village at the Divide.
–Highway 66 is a reference to the legendary U.S. Route 66 which originally ran from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California, but it has been replaced almost entirely by the later Interstate Highway System roads.
This card likely dates from the 1940s.

Volcanic Lava, New Mexico

This image shows a deposit of volcanic lava, known locally as malpais, which was formed from the now extinct volcanoes in the San Francisco Peaks region of New Mexico.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
No. 21 — VOLCANIC LAVA
In some remote period Mt. Taylor, the San Francisco Peaks, and other mountains in the Southwest were volcanic and belched forth great masses of black lava and cinder which still remain in its hardened state as it was after calling off ages ago.
Great areas, locally called Malpais (lava) may be seen from the highway near Tularosa and Carrizozo or as we pass Grants and Ice Caves, also near Flagstaff, Arizona.
–The lava is found throughout the Arizona and New Mexico desert regions. Because it is extremely irregular and poor soil, it is considered useless badlands. There is a national monument by a similar name, the El Malpais National Monument, which features extensive examples of this formation located in New Mexico.
This postcard likely dates from the 1940s.

Ocotillo Cactus, New Mexico

This is an image of a type of plant native to the Sonora and Chihuahua Deserts. The Ocotillo cactus is not a true cactus.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description on the back states:
277–OCOTILLO CACTUS
Forqueiria Splendens, also called Candlewood, Coach-whip Vine Cactus and Jacob’s Staff, at time appears as dry sticks only. The rainy season causes it to flame with slender, brilliant red panicles of bloom. Many Southwestern hillsides are literally covered with this spiny shrub.
–The stems are hard enough to provide a kind of living fence when planted or grown in sufficient density, and are also harvested for walking sticks.
This image likely dates from the 1940s.

Rock Cliffs, Laguna, New Mexico

This is a vista of the Acoma rock cliffs and the foot trail that winds among them. The Acoma  Pueblo is a mesa community, accessible only by the foot trail.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
148 – ROCK CLIFFS AND FOOT TRAIL AT
ACOMA, “THE SKY CITY”
SOUTH OF HIGHWAY U.S. 66,
NEAR LAGUNA, N. M.
Coma Pueblo, a seventy acre Mesa, 350 feet above the Plains is the oldest continuously inhabited place in the United States. This view shows the foot trail ascending to the village, the only access to the Plateau and gives an idea of the steep formation of the Gibraltar Rock.
–This image likely dates from the 1940s.

Maisel’s Indian Trading Post, Albuquerque, New Mexico

This image shows Maisel’s Indian Trading Post in Albuquerque, New Mexico as it existed shortly after its founding in 1939.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
SHOW WINDOWS
of the most picturesque store in the Southwest.
MAISEL’S INDIAN TRADING POST
400 West Central Ave.
ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO
A large and complete collection of Indian and Mexican handicraft.
MAKERS OF GENUINE STERLING SILVER AND TURQUOISE JEWELRY.
–The trading post still stands, and has been registered as a National Historic Place. It closed for about 20 years after the founder died, and has been reopened by a grandson.
This postcard likely dates from the 1940s.

Continental Divide Trading Post, Gage, New Mexico

This image shows an early incarnation of the trading post built in Gage, New Mexico where it straddles the Continental Divide, a geological boundary which determines if water flows to the Pacific Ocean or the Gulf of Mexico.

M.W.M Color-Litho “Bursheen” Finished, Made Only by MWM – Aurora, Mo.


The description states:
THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE
TRADING POST
CONTINENTAL DIVIDE
Rainfall Divides at this Point. To the West it Drains into the Pacific Ocean – to the East into the Atlantic
–This Divide is a line that passes through the entire Western Hemisphere, marking the direction of water flow in both North and South America. The trading post still exists in a new incarnation and is still owned by Bowlin.
This postcard likely dates from the 1940s.

Navajo Girls and Hogan, New Mexico

This image shows two Navajo girls and an infant swaddled on a papoose board, standing in front of a substantial hogan.

Kodachrome Reproduction by Mike Roberts


The description states:
K103–NAVAJO INDIANS AND THEIR HOGAN
These Indians and their Hogan are very typical of those seen on the Reservation today. They derive their living from cattle and sheep. Their Navajo Rugs and Navajo Silver Jewelry is very much in demand. The Hogans, the Navajo’s homes, are made either of wood or rocks in aboriginal style.
–The older style of hogan construction was essentially extinct by this time, having been replaced by significantly more substantial and geometric structures like the one shown here.
This postcard likely dates from the 1950s.

Coronado State Monument, New Mexico

This image shows a portion of the ruins that make up the Coronado State Monument, located a mile west of Bernalillo, New Mexico. It was excavated in the 1930s and opened to the public in 1940.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
A-43 — CORONADO STATE MONUMENT
WEST OF HIGHWAY U.S. 85,
BETWEEN SANTA FE AND ALBUQUERQUE,
N. M.
These ruins of ancient Kuala Pueblo, on the west bank of the Rio Grande, are said to have been the village chosen by Coronado for his headquarters from 1540 to 1542.
East, beyond the valley tower the Sandia Mts., with the summit 10,000 feet above sea level.
–This is the site of many of the best pre-Columbian murals found in the United States. This postcard dates from the 1940s.

Navajo Family and Home, New Mexico

This image shows a Navajo family posing in front of their traditional domestic building, called a hogan. They started as simple mud and stick structures and evolved in the last century into much more formal and geometric buildings.

Genuine Curteich-Chicago “C.T. Art Colortone”


The description states:
26 — NAVAJO INDIANS ON RESRVATION
There are approximately 40,000 Navajo Indians occupying a Reservation of about 9,000,000 acres in No. Arizona and New Mexico. They are self supporting and derive their living from marketing cattle, sheep, wool and hides.
Navajo rugs woven by the squaws are famed for their beauty and durability. Silver jewelry hand hammered from Mexican pesos by Navajo silversmiths is very much in demand an highly prized.
–The reuse of Mexican coinage for the silver it contained has been abandoned with the debasement of the coinage during the 20th century. Silver and turquoise jewelry is still widely produced along with the hand woven rugs.
This card likely dates from the 1940s.