100 Years Ago: New Mexico's Early Film History



Maps of New Mexico



The Palace of the Governors: A Witness to History



Your Obedient Servant, W. H. Bonney



Remembering the Santa Fe Japanese Internment Camp



Through the Lens - Imaging Santa Fe



Buffalo Soldiers in New Mexico



The Last Hurdle:
El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro



Rough Riders



Doña Teresa



USS New Mexico BB40:
The Drinan Diary



Tesoros De Devoción



New Mexico's Segesser
Hide Paintings



The Estancia Press



Fashioning New Mexico:
Victorian Secrets



Buffalo Soldiers in New Mexico
8 minutes and 38 seconds

Members of the Buffalo Soldiers Society of New Mexico share insights into the history of the Buffalo soldiers and how they contributed to New Mexico achieving statehood in 1912. They tell us of the challenges these soldier's faced, their hard work, and particularly of their bravery during the battle with Apache Chief Victorio at the isolated Massacre Canyon in the Black Range Mountains of southern New Mexico.

The Buffalo Soldiers primary duties during the post civil war were to protect isolated settlements and to establish towns throughout the southwest. The soldiers established mail and stage routes across the west and maintained law and order throughout the southwest region. They guarded important mountain passes, water holes, isolated settlements and many other tasks. The Buffalo Soldiers got their name from the plains Indians not only because of their wooly-like hair but also because of their unmatched courage and their superior fighting skills.
 
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