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The Governor's Residence, located at 1 Mansion Drive in Santa Fe. The Governor's Residence from 1870 to 1940. The New Mexico Governor's Residence is the official residence of the governor of New Mexico and their family. The current structure, located at 1 Mansion Drive in Santa Fe, New Mexico, has served as the Governor's official residence ...
The Palace of the Governors (Spanish: Palacio de los Gobernadores) is an adobe structure built in the Territorial Style of Pueblo architecture on Palace Avenue in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Located within the Santa Fe Historic District along the Santa Fe Plaza between Lincoln and Washington avenues, it served as the seat of government for New Mexico ...
The governor's mansion — New Mexico's version of the White House — is located on a 31-acre hilltop parcel off Bishops Lodge Road just north of the Santa Fe Plaza.
Apr. 29—From photographs of a boy and his dog in an old mining camp, to illustrations from a 1970s Volkswagen manual, the Palace of the Governors captures the past and the present of New Mexico ...
New Mexico: Governor's Mansion* 1 Mansion Drive, Santa Fe: 1954–present Modified Territorial: Previous mansion 1909?–1954 Palace of the Governors: 105 W Palace Ave, Santa Fe 1610–1909 New York: State Executive Mansion*† 138 Eagle Street, Albany
Built in 1610 by the Spanish, the Palace of the Governors is located on the Santa Fe Plaza. It was the house of government in Santa Fe for nearly three centuries, during periods of Spanish and Mexican rule. When New Mexico was annexed by the United States in 1846, it became the first territorial capitol and was used as such for forty years.
Palace of the Governors: Santa Fe: NM 1610 Government Oldest seat of colonial government (Spanish). Building has been within the United States since the Mexican Cession of 1848. [3] San Miguel Chapel: Santa Fe NM 1610 Religious/Community The oldest church or religious structure in the continental US built by indigenous Mexicans with Spanish ...
Apr. 5—New Mexico has a ton of renewable energy opportunities, and even more are coming. That's what Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said at Electrify New Mexico, an inaugural electrification ...