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Posi-ouinge is an archeological site in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico and Taos County, New Mexico near Ojo Caliente. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993 for its information potential. [1] The Bureau of Land Management reports:
In 1793, the Ojo Caliente Land Grant was signed by Governor Fernando de la Concha; the document approved settlers including Luis Duran and José Antonio Espinosa and 52 other settlers. [5] In 1807, Duran traveled with Spanish soldiers during the colonial period where he encountered Zebulon Pike who referred to the springs as a "natural ...
Ojo Caliente lies along U.S. Route 285 near the Rio Grande between Española and Taos, approximately 50 miles (80 km) north of Santa Fe, the state capital.The community consist mainly of small farms irrigated by acequias fed by water from the Rio Ojo Caliente.
Note 1 The Ojo Caliente hot springs, an uninhabited area at the upstream entrance to the Canada Alamosa on Alamosa Creek in southwest Socorro County, New Mexico (33.570084°-107.595117°), should not be confused with Ojo Caliente, New Mexico, a small unincorporated community in Taos County, New Mexico (36.304545° -106.051235°), on the Ojo ...
Down home restaurant Bob Evans is open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Thanksgiving for dine-in and takeout meals, including breakfast. andipantz/istockphoto Restaurants That May Be Open
Later, the Spanish called the hot springs Ojo Caliente de Las Palomas (hot springs of the doves). [5] The first adobe bath house was built in the 1880s over what was called Geronimo's Spring. It was built for use by the cowboys of the John Cross Cattle Company. In the early 1900s, hot spring hotels began to be built in the area. [4]
El Rito is located on NM 554, 18 miles (29 km) northwest of Española and 15 miles (24 km) northwest of Ojo Caliente. El Rito was one of the first Spanish settlements in the Jicarilla Apache lands [3] north of Santa Fe, being settled about 1807. [1] San Juan Nepomuceno Catholic Church is in the town, built between 1827 and 1832. [4]
View of the Rio Ojo Caliente looking upstream from the bridge on the Ojo Caliente Mineral Springs Resort and Spa's bosque loop trail. The Rio Ojo Caliente (or Ojo Caliente River) is a tributary of the Rio Chama mostly in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, with a small part near Ojo Caliente in Taos County. [1] [2]