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Taos, New Mexico

City in New Mexico, United States

Taos, New Mexico

City in New Mexico, United States

FieldValue
nameTaos, New Mexico
named_forTaos Pueblo
settlement_typeTown
motto
image_skylineTaos plaza la fonda.jpg
imagesize300px
image_captionTaos Plaza and the Hotel La Fonda, within the Taos Downtown Historic District
image_sealTaos New Mexico logo.png
<!-- Maps -->image_mapTaos_County_New_Mexico_Incorporated_and_Unincorporated_areas_Taos_Highlighted.svg
mapsize250px
map_captionLocation of Taos, New Mexico
image_map1Taos-nm-map.gif
mapsize1250px
map_caption1U.S. Census map
pushpin_mapNew Mexico#USA
pushpin_map_captionLocation in New Mexico##Location in the United States
coordinates
<!-- Location -->subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1New Mexico
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Taos
government_typeMayor-Council-Manager
leader_title1Mayor
leader_name1Pascualito M. Maestas
established_titleFounded
established_date1795
established_title1Incorporated
established_date11934
established_title2• Town
<!-- Area -->unit_prefImperial
area_footnotes
area_total_km215.64
area_land_km215.64
area_water_km20.00
area_total_sq_mi6.04
area_land_sq_mi6.04
area_water_sq_mi0.00
<!-- Population -->population_as_of[2020](2020-united-states-census)
population_footnotes
population_total6474
population_density_km2413.94
population_density_sq_mi1072.03
<!-- General information -->timezoneMountain (MST)
utc_offset&minus;7
timezone_DSTMDT
utc_offset_DST&minus;6
elevation_footnotes
elevation_ft6969
postal_code_typeZIP code
postal_code87571
area_code575
blank_nameFIPS code
blank_info35-76200
blank1_nameGNIS feature ID
blank1_info2413366
website[www.taosnm.gov](https://taosnm.gov/)

"Pascualito Maestas | Taos, NM". www.taosnm.gov. Retrieved September 4, 2024.

Taos () is a town in Taos County, in the north-central region of New Mexico. Situated between the Rio Grande Gorge and the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, it is located roughly 50 miles south of the Colorado border. Taos serves as the county seat of Taos County, of which it is the largest municipality, with an estimated population of 6,567 as of 2021.

The town of Taos was incorporated in 1934, although humans have lived in the adjacent Taos Pueblo—a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the town's namesake—for roughly a millennium; the town's name derives from the native Taos language meaning "(place of) red willows". Initially founded by Spanish colonists in 1615 as Don Fernando de Taos, it was only intermittently occupied until the late 18th century, due to recurring conflict between European and indigenous peoples, most notably the Pueblo Revolt.

Taos was formally established as a permanent settlement in 1795 by Nuevo México Governor Fernando Chacón, serving as a fortified plaza and trading outpost for the neighboring Taos Pueblo and Hispano communities, including Ranchos de Taos, Cañon, Taos Canyon, Ranchitos, El Prado, and Arroyo Seco. During the Mexican–American War, the region was occupied by the United States, triggering a rebellion among Hispanics and American Indians known as the Taos Revolt.

Following U.S. annexation of Nuevo México, Taos became a stopover for American and European settlers along the vast western frontier. During this period, the town developed its existing reputation as a cultural enclave, with the first artist colony being established in 1898 by painters Ernest Blumenschein and Bert Phillips. Taos has since developed a reputation as a "counterculture mecca" and "beacon for artists", attracting the likes of painter Georgia O’Keeffe, English poet and writer D.H. Lawrence, and actor Dennis Hopper.

History

Taos Pueblo

Main article: Taos Pueblo

The Taos Pueblo, which borders the north boundary of the town of Taos, has been occupied for nearly a millennium. It is estimated that the pueblo was built between 1000 and 1450 AD, with some later expansion. The pueblo is considered to be one of the oldest continuously inhabited communities in the United States.

Located in a tributary valley off the Rio Grande, it is the most northern of the New Mexico pueblos. The pueblo, at some places five stories high, is a combination of many individual homes with common walls. There are over 1,900 Taos Puebloans living within the greater pueblo-area community. Many of them have modern homes near their fields and live there in the summer months, only staying at their homes within the main North or South pueblo buildings during cooler weather. About 150 people live within the main pueblo buildings year-round.

Spanish colonization

Old cemetery and ruins of original church, Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Fray Pedro de Miranda, the Taos mission priest, was killed in 1640.

Taos was established c.1615 as Don Fernando de Taos, following the Spanish conquest of the Indian Pueblo villages. Initially, relations of the Spanish settlers with Taos Pueblo were amicable, but resentment of meddling by missionaries, and demands by encomenderos for tribute, led to a revolt in 1640; Taos Indians killed their priest and a number of Spanish settlers and subsequently fled the pueblo, not returning until 1661.

In 1680, Taos Pueblo joined the widespread Pueblo Revolt. After the Spanish Reconquest of 1692, Taos Pueblo continued armed resistance to the Spanish until 1696, when Governor Diego de Vargas defeated the Indians at Taos Canyon.

During the 1770s, Taos was repeatedly raided by Comanches who lived on the plains of what is now eastern Colorado. Juan Bautista de Anza, governor of the Province of New Mexico, led a successful punitive expedition in 1779 against the Comanches.

Between 1780 and 1800, Don Fernando de Taos (now simply Taos) was established. It was built as a fortified plaza with adobe buildings and is now a central plaza surrounded by residential areas. Mountain men who trapped beaver nearby made Taos their home in the early 1800s.

U.S. territory and statehood

The U.S. took control of New Mexico in 1847 during the Mexican–American War. In response, Hispanics and American Indians in Taos staged a rebellion known as the Taos Revolt, in which the newly appointed U.S. Governor, Charles Bent, was killed. Mexico subsequently ceded the region to the U.S. pursuant to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. New Mexico was a territory of the United States beginning in 1850 and became a state in 1912.

For historical reasons, the American flag is displayed continuously at Taos Plaza (both day and night). This derives from the time of the American Civil War, when Confederate sympathizers in the area attempted to remove the flag. Union officer Kit Carson sought to discourage this activity by having guards surround the area and fly the flag 24 hours a day.

Anton Docher, the "Padre of Isleta", first served as a priest in Taos before leaving for Isleta in 1891.

Taos art colony

Main article: Taos Society of Artists, Taos art colony

Beginning in 1899, artists began to settle in Taos; six formed the Taos Society of Artists in 1915. In time, the Taos art colony developed. Many paintings were made of local scenes, especially of Taos Pueblo and activities there, as the artists often modelled Native Americans from the pueblo in their paintings. Some of the artists' studios have been preserved and may be viewed by visitors to Taos. These include the Ernest L. Blumenschein House, the Eanger Irving Couse House and Studio—Joseph Henry Sharp Studios, and the Nicolai Fechin house, all of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. A number of Foundations host artist residencies in Taos including the prestigious Helene Wurlitzer Foundation which began hosting painters, writers, composers, sculptors, poets and filmmakers at Casa Encantado in 1954.

Historic sites and tourism

E.L. Blumenschein House Library, National Register of Historical Places

Taos is home to more than twenty sites on the National Register of Historic Places.

Pueblos

About 3 mi north of Taos is Taos Pueblo. Picuris Pueblo is located about 25 mi south.

Taos Fiestas

The Fiestas de Taos is an annual community celebration in the Taos Plaza honoring the feast of the two patron saints of Taos, Santa Ana and Santiago. It is normally celebrated the third weekend of July. A commemorative mass and procession from Our Lady of Guadalupe Church officially opens the event on Friday evening, followed with the crowning of the Fiestas Queen. The celebration continues with musical and dance performances scheduled on the plaza every hour. Two parades are staged, a children's parade on Saturday and the larger Fiesta Parade on Sunday.

Bent Street

Located just north of the Taos Plaza, this street was the location of Governor Charles Bent's home.

Bent was scalped and killed by Pueblo warriors during the Taos Revolt on January 19, 1847. During the Taos Revolt, Bent's horses were set free from their stable.

Artists' homes and studios

Present

The Helene Wurlitzer Foundation is a non-profit organization based in Taos that provides free residency to eleven artists, with each year divided into three residency sessions of three months apiece at Casa Encantado.

Abbie Conant, former principal trombonist of the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra and seasonal Taos resident, runs a studio three blocks from the plaza. In addition to the studio having capacity to seat 60, there is also a two bedroom living space. In addition to her and her husband's own performances, the studio has hosted poetry readings, presentations and performance from local Taoseñas and fellows from the Wurlitzer Foundation.

Historic

Many of the historic sites are homes and studios of artists, including the Mabel Dodge Luhan House, Eanger Irving Couse House and Studio—Joseph Henry Sharp Studios, the Nicolai Fechin House, the Leon Gaspard House, and the Ernest Martin Hennings House.

Doc Martin's restaurant in the historic Taos Inn was previously the office of Thomas "Doc" Martin, while other parts of the inn served as his home and the birthplace of the Taos Society of Artists. On Ledoux street, just south of the Taos Plaza, is the Ernest L. Blumenschein House and Harwood House.

Other historic sites

Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish in Taos, NM
Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish in Taos, NM

The center of the Taos Downtown Historic District is the Taos Plaza. Just west of that is the Our Lady of Guadalupe Church. North of the Taos Plaza is the Governor Charles Bent House and the Taos Inn. Further north in Taos is the Bernard Beimer House. On the southwestern edge of the Taos Historic district is La Loma Plaza Historic District. East of the plaza on Kit Carson Road is the Kit Carson House.

North of Taos is the Turley Mill and Distillery Site and the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge. Just outside Taos in Ranchitos is the Martinez Hacienda, the home turned museum of the late Padre Antonio José Martínez. South of Taos is the Ranchos de Taos Plaza with the San Francisco de Asis Mission Church.

Taos Downtown Historic District

Kit Carson gravestone and burial plot

About 20 mi northwest is the D. H. Lawrence Ranch (originally known as the Kiowa Ranch and now owned by the University of New Mexico), the home of the English novelist in the 1920s. It is believed that his ashes are buried there at the D. H. Lawrence Memorial.

Arts

There are three art museums in Taos: Harwood Museum of Art, Taos Art Museum and Millicent Rogers Museum that provide art from the Pueblo Native Americans, Taos Society of Artists and modern and contemporary artists of the Taos art colony. The town has more than 80 art galleries, and there are several houses of the Taos Society of Artists.

There are several local venues for the performing arts in Taos. The Taos Center for the Arts (TCA) draws nationally renowned and local performers at the Taos Community Auditorium. They also present independent film series. Three chamber music groups perform at TCA: Taos School of Music, Taos Chamber Music Group, and Music from Angel Fire. The Harwood Museum of Art is site of other performances and lectures. The Town of Taos Convention Center offers a venue for other local performances.

The Taos Talking Pictures Film Festival was a film festival held in the town from the mid-1990s to 2003. The festival's top prize was 5 acre of land.

Recreation

The Carson National Forest and Rio Grande del Norte National Monument provide many opportunities for recreation, such as hiking, skiing, fly fishing, horseback riding, golfing, hot air ballooning, llama trekking, rafting, and mountain biking. The South Boundary National Recreation trail, east of town in Carson National Forest, is consistently ranked the best mountain bike trail in New Mexico.

There are also numerous hot springs along the Rio Grande and in the Taos Mountains. Ojo Caliente offers locations where visitors can enjoy access to mineral springs as well as massages and other spa treatments. Among hot springs in the area is a historical site called Stage Coach, which used to double as a brothel during the times of the Old West. Nearby, the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad provides a ride through the Toltec Gorge and Rocky Mountain passes in an authentic narrow-gauge steam railroad.

In the winter, many people come to Taos to ski in the mountains. Nearby Wheeler Peak, at 13161 ft, is the highest peak in New Mexico. The Taos area has four ski areas – Taos Ski Valley, Red River ski area, Sipapu (ski area) and Angel Fire ski area. Other winter activities include hot air ballooning, horseback riding, snow-shoeing, cross-country skiing, ski skating, ice skating, ice fishing and snowmobiling.

Demographics

Taos is the principal town of the Taos, NM, Micropolitan Statistical Area, which includes all of Taos County.

As of the 2010 census Taos had a population of 5,716. The median age was 44. The ethnic and racial composition of the population was 40.1% non-Hispanic white, 0.7% African American, 1% Asian, 5.3% Native American, 0.3% non-Hispanics reporting some other race, 5.4% reporting two or more races and 51.9% Hispanic or Latino of any race.

As of the census of 2000, there were 4,700 people, 2,067 households, and 1,157 families residing in the town. The population density was 874.5 PD/sqmi. There were 2,466 housing units at an average density of 458.8 /sqmi. The racial makeup of the town was 68.04% White, 0.53% African American, 4.11% Native American, 0.62% Asian, 0.11% Pacific Islander, 21.66% from other races, and 4.94% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 54.34% of the population.

There were 2,067 households, out of which 27.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 34.7% were married couples living together, 16.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 44.0% were non-families. 37.3% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.18 and the average family size was 2.87.

In the town, the population was spread out, with 23% under the age of 18, 6.6% from 18 to 24, 26.4% from 25 to 44, 27.8% from 45 to 64, and 16.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 41 years. For every 100 females, there were 85 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 81.3 males.

The median income for a household in the town was $25,016, and the median income for a family was $33,564. Males had a median income of $27,683 versus $23,326 for females. The per capita income for the town was $15,983. About 17.9% of families and 23.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 26.8% of those under age 18 and 24.4% of those age 65 or over.

Geography and climate

Taos is located at (36.393979, −105.576705).

The town has a total area of 5.4 sqmi, all land.

Taos is located within two watersheds, categorized as subwatersheds or HUC12s in the United States. The town is mostly located in the Outlet Rio Fernando del Taos Watershed, where its two waterbodies are rated as impaired. A coalition of local organizations are working to improve the watershed's health. The northern edge of town is within the Rio Fernando del Taos-Rio Pueblo del Taos Watershed.

Just to the west of Taos is the Rio Grande Gorge, cutting through the basalt flows of the Taos Plateau volcanic field and crossed by the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge, now a part of U.S. Route 64.

The elevation of the town is 6969 ft. Just north of Taos is Wheeler Peak, at 13161 ft, the highest point in New Mexico. Taos has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb), though it borders on a semi-arid climate (BSk) due to the low rainfall. The town is characterized by extreme diurnal variations of temperature. Even when summer days get extremely hot, nights cool off considerably.

|Jan record high F = 66 |Feb record high F = 73 |Mar record high F = 80 |Apr record high F = 82 |May record high F = 99 |Jun record high F = 98 |Jul record high F = 101 |Aug record high F = 99 |Sep record high F = 95 |Oct record high F = 89 |Nov record high F = 83 |Dec record high F = 67

|Jan avg record high F = 53.8 |Feb avg record high F = 59.4 |Mar avg record high F = 68.7 |Apr avg record high F = 75.6 |May avg record high F = 83.4 |Jun avg record high F = 91.5 |Jul avg record high F = 93.2 |Aug avg record high F = 90.5 |Sep avg record high F = 86.2 |Oct avg record high F = 77.8 |Nov avg record high F = 66.7 |Dec avg record high F = 56.1 |year avg record high F = 93.9

|Jan avg record low F = -3.3 |Feb avg record low F = -1.0 |Mar avg record low F = 10.5 |Apr avg record low F = 19.8 |May avg record low F = 26.6 |Jun avg record low F = 36.5 |Jul avg record low F = 45.3 |Aug avg record low F = 44.3 |Sep avg record low F = 32.1 |Oct avg record low F = 19.0 |Nov avg record low F = 6.4 |Dec avg record low F = -4.9 |year avg record low F = -9.6

|Jan record low F = -27 |Feb record low F = -27 |Mar record low F = -11 |Apr record low F = 0 |May record low F = 13 |Jun record low F = 28 |Jul record low F = 34 |Aug record low F = 36 |Sep record low F = 22 |Oct record low F = 0 |Nov record low F = -21 |Dec record low F = -27

|access-date = August 7, 2023 |access-date = August 7, 2023

Mud season

Dirt roads and driveways in Taos can experience a particularly bad mud season when winter weather is followed by unseasonably warm temperatures. This occurs because area soil is heavy with silt, which makes it vulnerable to frost heaving.

Education

The town's public schools operated by Taos Municipal Schools include Arroyos del Norte Elementary School, Enos García Elementary (also Taos Elementary School), Ranchos Elementary School, Taos Middle School, Taos High School and Taos Cyber Magnet School.

Charter schools include Anansi Charter School, Taos Academy (State Charter), Taos Municipal Charter School and Vista Grande High School. Also in the area are additional alternative and private schools: Chrysalis Alternative School, Sped Discipline, Yaxche Private School, Taos Christian Academy, and San Francisco De Asis School. The Bureau of Indian Education-operated Taos Day School is in nearby Taos Pueblo.

Dallas-based Southern Methodist University operates a 295 acre campus at Fort Burgwin in Taos.

Albuquerque-based University of New Mexico (UNM) operates a community campus in Taos, with eight affiliated buildings in Taos, such as the UNM Harwood Museum of Art and Taos High School where some classes are held.

The Earthship Academy (or Earthship Biotecture Academy) is offering training in Earthship design principles, construction methods and philosophy. Earthship is a particular type of sustainable architecture and design, based around solar power.

Government

Taos emblem
Taos Town Hall

The town of Taos is incorporated under the mayor-council form of government. The town was incorporated on May 7, 1934. The town seal is a logo of the town of Taos with the year of incorporation "1934" in the center, and on the outer edge, the words "Town of Taos, New Mexico".

The elective officers of the town include the mayor, four members of the governing body forming the town council, and a municipal judge. The town council is the board of finance of the town. The town manager and finance director serve as the nonvoting members to the board of finance. Key positions within the town government are town manager, appointed by the mayor, Town Attorney, Town Clerk, Town Engineer and Chief of Police.

the town officers were:

  • Mayor: Pascual Maestas; term from April 2022 to March 2026
  • Town council members: Nathaniel Evans, Marietta Fambro, Darian Fernandez, and Corilia Ortega.

Taos is predominantly made up of Democrats; in 2008, approximately 74% of registered Taos County voters were Democrats, 13% were Republicans, and about 13% identified with other parties or declined to affiliate with a party.

Transportation

Public

The RTD Chile Line, operated by the North Central Regional Transit District (NCRTD), is Taos' only public transportation system. It provides fare-free in-town service as well as seasonal service up to Taos Ski Valley. The transit system also provides paratransit service for citizens with special needs and ensures that all route buses are American Disability Act (ADA) equipped.

The RTD Taos Express promotes local tourism and provides weekend express service, for a nominal fee, from the Taos Plaza to the New Mexico Rail Runner, Santa Fe Municipal Airport, and Santa Fe transit.

The North Central Regional Transit District (NCRTD) has public transportation service into the Town from throughout Taos County and the Counties of Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos. The Taos region has service to Cerro, Penasco, Questa, Red River, the Rio Grande corridor and the University of New Mexico – Taos Klaur campus. At the Española Transit Center, passengers can connect to other regional routes, such as Española, Santa Fe, Los Alamos, and Northern Pueblos area. In 2003 the Regional Transit District Act was enacted, which authorized the creation of Regional Transit Districts (RTD's) in the state of New Mexico; In September 2004, the North Central Regional RTD was the first RTD to be certified by the New Mexico Transportation Commission.

Airports

Taos Regional Airport (SKX) is under the direct supervision of the Town of Taos. The airport is located just a few miles north of the Town of Taos on U.S. Route 64 towards the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge.

Other airports in New Mexico include the Santa Fe Municipal Airport and Albuquerque International Sunport.

Media

Newspapers

El Crepusculo de la Libertad was the first Taos newspaper, which began in 1834 with the first printing press west of the Mississippi. Its successor The Taos News, which also does business as El Crepusculo, is the primary printed newspaper in Taos.

  • The Taos News, a weekly online and print publication.
  • Sangre de Cristo Chronicle (inactive) served Angel Fire, New Mexico, Red River, Cimarron, Eagle Nest, Taos, Las Vegas, Questa and Sipapu.
  • The Santa Fe New Mexican
  • Albuquerque Journal North Edition.

Online

The Taos News provides weekly online publications of their newspaper.

Television

There are two local cable television stations: Taos Local Television Public Access Channel 2 and Channel 22. See also List of television stations in New Mexico.

Radio

Radio stations serving Taos include:

(Several stations are located in the adjacent unincorporated suburbs of El Prado and Arroyo Seco.)

Radio stationFrequencyFM/AMFormat
KCEI90.1FMVariety.
KNCE93.5FM"True Taos Radio", variety
KKIT95.9FMurl=http://www.ontheradio.net/cities/taos_nm.aspxtitle=Radio Stations in Taos, NMpublisher=Ontheradio.netaccess-date=June 4, 2011archive-date=December 13, 2011archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111213014139/http://ontheradio.net/cities/taos_nm.aspxurl-status=dead }}
KKTC99.9FM"True Country".
KLNN103.7FMAdult contemporary music.
KRRT90.9FMTop-40, local transmitter for the University of New Mexico's KUNM.
KTAO101.9FMSolar radio station with an adult album alternative music format.
KVOT1340AMReligious (Christian) music.
KXMT99.1FMRadio Exitos is the local 24-hour Spanish radio station serving Taos, northern New Mexico and Southern Colorado.
KYBR92.9FMEspañola]], but serves Santa Fe and Taos as well.

Sister cities

Taos has one sister city, as designated by Sister Cities International:

  • Mexico Xalisco, Nayarit, Mexico

Notable people

Artists and actors

  • Lynn Anderson, country/pop singer
  • Chiara Aurelia, actress
  • Abbie Conant, trombonist and professor
  • Oscar E. Berninghaus, artist
  • Emil Bisttram, artist
  • Larry Bell, sculptor
  • Ernest L. Blumenschein, founding member, Taos Society of Artists
  • Dorothy Brett, artist and personality
  • Ramon Brusueles, artist, SFSU Alumni, Big Brothers of San Francisco, Carpenter Local Union No. 22 San Francisco, World War II Veteran (Pacific Theatre)
  • Joshua Bryant, actor, director, author and speaker former longtime resident and founder of the Taos Talking Pictures Film Festival & Media Forum
  • Agnes Chavez, artist
  • John Cheetham, composer
  • E. Irving Couse, artist
  • Andrew Dasburg, artist
  • Ronald Davis, artist
  • W. Herbert Dunton, artist
  • Nicolai Fechin, artist
  • Eliza Gilkyson, folk musician
  • R. C. Gorman, artist
  • E. Martin Hennings, artist
  • William Victor Higgins, artist
  • Dennis Hopper, actor, director, artist
  • Gene Kloss, artist
  • Agnes Martin, artist
  • Robert Mirabal, Native American flute player and maker from Taos Pueblo
  • Bror Julius Olsson Nordfeldt, artist
  • Bert Geer Phillips, artist
  • Suzan Pitt, artist, director
  • Kenneth Price, ceramicist
  • Christian Ristow, artist
  • Julia Roberts, actress
  • Dean Stockwell, artist and actor
  • Joseph Henry Sharp, artist
  • Walter Ufer, artist
  • Kristen Vigard, actress and singer
  • Harold Joe Waldrum, artist
  • Michael Walker, custom knife maker and sculptor
  • Julius Rolshoven, artist

Sportspeople

  • Ross Anderson, skier
  • Kit Carson, frontiersman
  • Chris Del Conte, athletic director of the University of Texas at Austin
  • Dave Hahn, mountaineer
  • Danelle Umstead, Paralympic skier

Professors and medical professionals

  • Fred Wendorf, Henderson-Morrison Professor of Anthropology at Southern Methodist University
  • Thomas "Doc" Martin, physician

Authors, poets, and teachers

  • Julia Cameron, author of The Artist's Way
  • Judson Crews, poet and publisher
  • James Doss, author
  • Natalie Goldberg, writer
  • Margaret Catherine Alice Hyson, missionary and teacher in Ranchos de Taos, New Mexico
  • D. H. Lawrence, author
  • Anne MacNaughton, poet and cofounder of Taos Poetry Circus
  • John Nichols, author of The Milagro Beanfield War
  • Olivia Romo, poet, spoken word artist and water rights activist
  • Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant, journalist and writer
  • John Muir, engineer, mechanic and writer
  • Marilyn Gayle Hoff, author and activist

Businesspeople and architects

  • Marcelino Baca, 19th-century fur trader
  • Mabel Dodge Luhan, patron of the arts
  • Susan Powter, health and fitness entrepreneur
  • Mike Reynolds, Earthship architect
  • Millicent Rogers, socialite, fashion icon, and art collector
  • Maria Rosa Villalpando (1738-1830) A Hispanic woman who became a captive of the Comanche and later a businesswoman in St. Louis.

Politicians and military

  • Daniel R. Barrone, mayor of Taos and member of the New Mexico House of Representatives
  • Charles Bent, first Territorial Governor of New Mexico
  • Gary Johnson, former two-term governor of New Mexico
  • John Márquez, politician in Richmond, California
  • Joe P. Martínez, Medal of Honor recipient
  • Kristina Ortez, politician
  • Donald Rumsfeld, 13th and 21st United States Secretary of Defense, 6th White House Chief of Staff and four-term member of the United States House of Representatives for Illinois's 13th congressional district (1963-1969)
  • Rebecca Vigil-Giron, 20th and 22nd New Mexico Secretary of State

Religious figure

  • Antonio José Martínez, priest

References

References

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  2. "ArcGIS REST Services Directory". United States Census Bureau.
  3. {{GNIS. 2413366
  4. "F.A.Q".
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  7. "Taos Pueblo". UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
  8. 2007, Mapa Historico de Taos, Taos Kiwanis Club
  9. "Taos Timeline". Taos County Historical Society.
  10. "Koshare Indian Museum: Taos, New Mexico".
  11. link. (January 21, 2015 Taos Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved July 28, 2014.)
  12. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070718005828/http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/amsw/sw45.htm Taos Downtown Historic District.] National Park Service. Retrieved July 28, 2014.
  13. O'Neill, Zora. (2006). "Santa Fe, Taos, & Albuquerque". Moon Handbooks.
  14. Crane, L.. (October 2022). "Desert Drums: the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, 1540–1928". Rio Grande Press}} {{page needed.
  15. Bleiler, 75.
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  18. "¡QUE VIVAN LAS FIESTAS DE TAOS! | Fiestas de Taos | Taos, New Mexico".
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  20. "Art Today". Taos Webb Community.
  21. "Art History". Taos Webb Community.
  22. "Performing Arts". Taos Webb Community.
  23. Domrzalski, Dennis. (December 7, 2003). "Taos Talking Pictures Drops Curtain". New Mexico Business Weekly.
  24. Domrzalski, Dennis. (March 14, 2004). "Three Festivals Rise Out of Taos Talking Pictures' Ashes". New Mexico Business Weekly.
  25. "Film Festival Awards". Taos Land and Film Co..
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  27. "Ojo Caliente Mineral Springs Resort & Spa". NewMexico.org.
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  29. "Winter". Taos Webb Community.
  30. "Census of Population and Housing". Census.gov.
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