Colorado by Gerson INTRODUCTION

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Colorado by Gerson INTRODUCTION Colorado By Gerson INTRODUCTION Today I am going to talk about Colorado. My dad went there to visit several years ago. So I am going to give you lots of facts about Colorado. One fact about Colorado is the stat capital is Denver. Another fact about the state that I am researching is that the largest city is as well Denver. Another fact about Colorado is that the major cites are Colorado Springs,boulder, and Fort Collins. The population is 6,483,802 people. Another fact about our state is that the number of counties is 64. Another fact about Colorado is that the surrounding state are Utah,Wyoming,Nebraska,Oklahoma,and New Mexico. PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION Now I am going to talk about physical description Another fact about our state is that the area is 104,100 square miles Colorado is the 5th biggest state in the USA. Another fact about the state that I am researching is that the large rivers are the Colorado river,rio grande,Arkansas river, and south platte river. The large lakes are grande Lake and blue Mesa reservoir. Another fact about the state that I am researching is that the highest point is Mt Elbert at 14,433 feet above sea level. STATE SYMBOLS AND EMBLEMS Now I am going to talk about state symbols and emblems. One fact that discribe state symbols and emblems is that the state flag was adopted on June 5 1911. Another fact about Colorado is that the state nickname is centennial state,colorful Colorado. STATE HISTORY In 1706, Juan de Ulibarri and his soldiers explore the region centered around what is now the city of pueblo. Another fact about Colorado history is that p Juan Bautista de Anzac gathers Utes to fight with his army against the Comanche. Another fact about Colorado's history is that in 1806 Zebulon pick leads an expedition into Colorado and gets his first sight of the rock mountains. JOBS AND RESOURCES A fact about Colorado's job and resources is that people make many on a They grow wheat, cattle and sheep. People also make many on tourism, especially skiers, mine gold, and silver. People also drill for oil. FAMOUS PEOPLE Right now,I am going to talk to you about famous people from Colorado. Marget Tabin was a pioneer and survived the Titanic. Another famously person of Colorado was William Hnnison. He is a boxer. Another famous person is Darry f. He is a movie producer . FAMOUS PLACES TO GO Now I am going to tell you about the famous places to go . One fact about the famous places to go is to art museums. Another fact about famous places to go is that you can go to the performing arts. CONCLUSION Now I am glad that you read these paragraph and I hope you go to visit this state again thank you. .
Recommended publications
  • 1771 Urrutia Rio Abajo
    Plano de la Provincia Interna de el Nuebo Mexico 1779 4 3 2 Library of Congress Geography and Map Division - Terms of Use 1 1: San Juan 1776 Quote: (1776) The church looks like a gallery, and its furnishing is as follows: The altar screen extends from top to bottom. Governorn Vélez Cachupin paid for it and left the design up to Father Junco. The result is a great hulk like a monument in perspective, all painted yellow, blue, and red. In the center hangs and old oil painting on canvas of St. John the Baptist, 2 varas high by 1 1/2 wide, with a frame of painted wood. The king gave this. ...below the altar screen are the following: An image in the round entitled Our Lady of the Rosary. It is small, and its adornment amounts to nothing more than the following gewgaws. Dress and mantle of tatters of mother-of-pearl satin. A moth-eaten wig. Tin-plate crown. Paper pearl earrings. ...now for the altar: An ebony cross with a bronze crucifix and silver corner plates, INRI, and Dolorosa. A small St. John, old and unseemly. And two brass candlesticks given by the King. ...On the walls that face the nave are two hideous adobe tables. Hanging on the wall on the right side is a large painting on buffalo skin of Lord St. Joseph, and on the left a similar one of St. John the Baptist. On the right side of the church is another adobe table with a canopy of the same design as the altar screen..
    [Show full text]
  • Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context
    607 COLORADO SOUTHERN FRONTIER HISTORIC CONTEXT PLAINS PLATEAU COUNTRY MOUNTAINS SOUTHERN FRONTIER OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION COLORADO HISTORICAL SOCIETY COLORADO SOUTHERN FRONTIER HISTORIC CONTEXT CARROL JOE CARTER STEVEN F. MEHLS © 1984 COLORADO HISTORICAL SOCIETY FACSIMILE EDITION 2006 OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION COLORADO HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1300 BROADWAY DENVER, CO 80203 The activity which is the subject of this material has been financed in part with Federal funds from the National Historic Preservation Act, administered by the National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior and for the Colorado Historical Society. However, the contents and opinions do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of the Interior or the Society, nor does the mention of trade names or commercial products constitute an endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior or the Society. This program receives Federal funds from the National Park Service. Regulations of the U.S. Department of the Interior strictly prohibit unlawful discrimination in departmental Federally assisted programs on the basis of race, color, national origin, age or handicap. Any person who believes he or she has been discriminated against in any program, activity, or facility operated by a recipient of Federal assistance should write to: Director, Equal Opportunity Program, U.S. Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20240. This is a facsimile edition of the original 1984 publication. Text and graphics are those of the original edition. CONTENTS SOUTHERN FRONTIER Page no. 1. Spanish Dominance (1664-1822) .• II-1 2. Trading �nd Trapping (1803-1880) .
    [Show full text]
  • Everything Will Be Changed: the Horse and the Comanche Empire
    Everything Will Be Changed: The Horse and the Comanche Empire Stephen Kwas Senior Division Historical Paper Word Count: 2474 “Remember this: if you have horses everything will be changed for you forever.”1 - Attributed to Maheo, Creator God of the Cheyenne Bones of over 1,000 horses lay bleaching under a hot Texas sun, months-old remnants from the last stand of one of the greatest equestrian powers in history: the Comanche. Spanish horses allowed for the Comanche and other tribes of the Great Plains, who had lacked horses for over 15,000 years, to transform their societies. Upon its arrival, the Comanche immediately capitalized on the horse and used it to break the barrier of human physiology—the limits of human endurance which significantly restricted hunting, raiding, and trading—and created a vast trade empire. Many have romanticized this history by arguing that the horse was beneficial to all Comanches.2 This paper, however, argues that the horse brought wealth and power to some Comanches, but also brought slave markets, marginalization of women, constant warfare, and social stratification to their society. The tragic irony was that the horse, the very technology that allowed them to conquer their environment, eventually destroyed the ecological balance of the Plains and made them vulnerable to American invasions. Pedestrianism: Life before the Horse Before European contact, Plains Indians relied on farming as much as hunting and often oscillated between the two.3 Although the bison served as their main source of food, Plains 1 Alice Marriott and Carol K. Rachlin, Plains Indian Mythology (New York, NY: Meridian, 1975), 96.
    [Show full text]
  • Ute Unit: Study Guide and Follow up Activities., Stories About the Wolf and Coyotc the Race Between the Skunk And
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 249 000 RC 014 872 TITLE. Ute Unit: Study Guide and Follow Up Activities., INSTITUTION North Conejos School District, Capulin, SPONS AGENCY Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (ED), 'Washington, D.C. Ethnic Heritage Studies Program. PUB DATE 79 NOTE 22p. PUB TYPE Guides Classroom Use - Materials (For Learner) (051)' EDRS PRICE MF01/PC01 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS American Indian Culture; *American Indian History; *American Indian Literature; American Indians; *Cultural Influences; Elementary Secondary Education; Reference Materials; *Supplementary Reading Materials; Units of Study IDENTIFIERS *Colorado (San Luis Valley); *Ute (Tribe) ABSTRACT The study uide and follow-up activities were designed primarily to give studentsa feeling of Ute life in the San Luis Valley in Colorado. The unit begins' with six Southern Ute stories about the wolf and coyotC therace between the skunk and the coyote, the f -rog and the eagle, why the frog croaks, the bear (Que Ye Qat), and the two Indian brothers. A unit test consistingof listing, matching, and essay questions follows the stories.along witha student evalVation form and a reference list of titles thatare available on the Utes. The next section presentsa chronology of Ute history beginning in 1 A.D. when the Shoshonean speaking people separated from other Ute-Aztecan groups about the beginning of the Christian.era to 1972 when the Pine Nuche Purasa, motel-restaurant-community building complex, built by theSouthern Utes at Ignacio was opened. The last section acknowledges the contributions and culture of the Utahs, the people referred today as the Utes. (ERB) ***,******************************************************************** Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document.
    [Show full text]
  • El Cuartelejo Pueblo Brochure
    FloorFloor PlanPlan N Stone from the surrounding hills windows, and small paired post was used to build El Cuartelejo holes in the corners of most rooms pueblo. Walls were plastered suggested entrance by ladders EL CUARTELEJO inside and out with adobe, and the through openings in the roof. roof was made of willow poles or After 1899 much erosion and brush covered with mud. When disintegration took place. When Only Known Indian Pueblo in Kansas first excavated, abundant char- the Kansas State Historical coal, burned tools, adobe, and Society re-excavated the pueblo in quantities of the charred corn were 1970, portions of the stone found, all evidence that the pueblo hearths, two sections of the outer when occupied. El Cuartelejo pueblo as it may have appeared had been destroyed by fire. There wall and several post holes were were no indications of doors or all that remained. Equal opportunity to participate in and benefit from programs described herein is available to all individuals without regard to race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age or disability. Complaints of discrimination should be sent to Office of the Secretary, Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, 1020 S Kansas Ave. Suite 200, Topeka, KS 66612-1327 06/07 EL CUARTELEJO According to Spanish accounts, its way north to determine the loca- two groups of Pueblo Indians from tion and strength of the French to New Mexico fled into the Plains to the north and east. About 150 miles escape Spanish rule. The first were north, the Spanish were attacked the Taos Indians who settled with a and most of them killed by Pawnee band of Plains Apache about 1664 Indians said to be under French and remained for several years.
    [Show full text]
  • Genealogy Research in Colorado
    Genealogy Research in Colorado Most pre-statehood settlers of Colorado began arriving at the time of the gold rush of 1858. They came from the Northeastern and Midwestern states, especially New York, Illinois, Missouri, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Some came from the New Mexico Territory, and a few settlers came from the Southern states, the Pacific Coast, and from other countries including England, Ireland, Germany, Sweden, Scotland, and Wales. Latter-day Saint settlements were made in the San Luis Valley in the 1870s and 1880s. Most Plains Indians of Colorado, including the Arapaho, the Cheyenne, the Kiowa, and the Comanche, were removed to Indian Territory in Oklahoma by 1870. The Ute Indians living in western Colorado did not give up their lands to white settlement until after 1880, when most of them were moved to reservations in Utah. Early Colorado History 1706: Claimed for Spain by Juan de Ulibarri 1776: Father Escalante explores the western part of Colorado 1803: The United States acquired sections of Colorado north and east of the Arkansas River as part of the Louisiana Purchase. 1806: Government expeditions, including one by Zebulon Pike, were sent to map the area. Fur trappers and traders followed. 1822: First wagons cross Colorado on the Santa Fe route. 1842: Explored by John C. Fremont. 1845: Central part of Colorado acquired with the admission of Texas as a state. 1848: The United States acquired the rest of present-day Colorado from Mexico. 1851: Hispanic families from New Mexico founded San Luis, the oldest continually occupied town in Colorado. 1854: The Colorado area was divided politically among the territories of Kansas, Nebraska, Utah and New Mexico.
    [Show full text]
  • The University of Oklahoma Graduate College Spanish
    THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA GRADUATE COLLEGE SPANISH RELATIONS WITH THE INDIOS BARBAROS ON THE NORTHERN­ MOST FRONTIER OF NEW SPAIN IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY BY ELIZABETH ANN HARPER JOHN N o rman, Ok1ahoma 1957 SPANISH RELATIONS WITH THE INDIOS BARBAROS ON THE NORTHERN­ MOST FRONTIER OF NEW SPAIN IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY APPROVED BY DISSERTATION COMMTTEE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT The author gratefully acknowledges her debt to Dr, Max L. Moorhead, whose scholarly perception and standards of excellence made his direction of this dissertation a genuine privilege for her. His generous cooperation greatly smoothed the difficulties attendant upon the completion of a degree in absentia. She wishes also to thank the dissertation committee for their helpful suggestions on the preparation of the fi­ nal draft. iii TABLE OP CONTENTS Page LIST OF îtîAPS ....................... V INTRODUCTION ......................................... 1 Chapter I. SPAIN MEETS THE INDIOS BARBAROS : RELATIONS WITH THE APACHES AND NAVAJOS TÔ 1715 .... 10 II. THE COMANCHES OVERTURN THE BALANCE OP POWER ON THE NORTHERN FRONTIER, 1700-1762 ......... 39 III. THE PROVINCIAS INTERNAS UNITE TO MEET THE THREAT OP THE BARBAROS. 1762-1786 ........... 98 IV. A SUCCESSFUL INDIAN POLICY EMERGES, 1786-1800 139 BIBLIOGRAPHY ......................................... 180 IV LIST OP MAPS Page Ranges of Indian Groups on the Spanish Frontier in the Eighteenth C e n t u r y ................. 12 The Northern Frontier of New Spa i n ................. 77 SPANISH RELATIONS WITH THE INDIOS BÂRBAROS ON THE NORTHERN FRONTIER OP NEW SPAIN IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY ' INTRODUCTION The subject of Spanish Indian policies is an extra­ ordinarily intricate one, as perhaps inevitably follows from the complex nature of the forces from which they emerged.
    [Show full text]
  • 1650 Sanson New Mexico Settlements
    Nicholas Sanson: Amerique Septentrionale, La Nouveau Mexique et La Florida 1650 8 5 6 4 7 3 9 10 1 2 Library of Congress Geography and Map Division - Terms of Use 1: Fray Alonso de Benavides 1626-1629 Fray Alonso de Benavides came to New Mexico as the custos, or Father Superior, of the custody of the Conversion of St. Paul, as the Franciscan order had designated New Mexico during that time. During his three-year tenure, he enthusiastically claimed to have built 50 beautiful churches, and established missionary relationships with the Jumano, the Navajo, and the Apache. De Benavides' Relacion paints a picture of a fertile and lovely land, harmoniously populated by newly-converted Christians. The good news was welcomed in Europe, and an additional 30 friars were authorized for the New Mexico missions. [de Benavides, Alonso] Links: New Mexico State Historian: Alonso de Benavides -- http://newmexicohistory.org/filedetails.php? fileID=483 2: Santa Barbara 1630 Santa Barbara was the next nearest populated area to New Mexico. The prosperous mines in this region drove demand for food (livestock) and captives from New Mexico. Overview: Santa Barbara The boomtown around the mines of Santa Barbara, discovered in 1564 by Rodrigo del Río y Loza, was the last outpost for many Spaniards departing for New Mexico in the 16th and 17th centuries. The Chamuscado expedition, which revived interest in settling New Mexico, was launched because Fray Agustin Rodriguez was sent to minister to the miners. Quote: Nevertheless, during that time the frontier of settlement was pushed rapidly northward, and a new line of approach to New Mexico was opened by way of the great central plateau.
    [Show full text]
  • The Genizaros in Colonial New Mexico
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 2008 Into the Den of Evils: The Genizaros in Colonial New Mexico Doris Swann Avery The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Avery, Doris Swann, "Into the Den of Evils: The Genizaros in Colonial New Mexico" (2008). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 592. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/592 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INTO THE DEN OF EVILS: THE GENíZAROS IN COLONIAL NEW MEXICO By DORIS SWANN AVERY Bachelor of Arts, Duke University, Durham, NC, 1993 Thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History The University of Montana Missoula, MT May 2008 Approved by: Dr. David A. Strobel, Dean Graduate School Dr. Dan L. Flores, Committee Chair History Dr. Jody Pavilack History Dr. David R.M. Beck Native American Studies Avery, Doris, M.A., Spring 2008 History INTO THE DEN OF EVILS: THE GENíZAROS IN COLONIAL NEW MEXICO Chairperson: Dr. Dan L. Flores As a result of the Indian slave trade in the American Southwest, a group of detribalized Indians emerged in New Mexico during the Spanish colonial period.
    [Show full text]
  • Museum of New Mexico, Santafe.; New Mexico State Dept
    'DOCUMENT RESUME ED 124335 ' 24 RC 009 237 AUTHOR , Swadesh,,Prances Leon; And Others TITLE The Lands of New Mexico. INSTITUTION Museum of New Mexico, SantaFe.; New Mexico State Dept. of Education, Santa Fe.: SPOtS AGEN Y National Endowment for the Humanities (NUM), Washington, D.C.; Office ofBilingualEducation (DREW /OE), Washington, D.C. PUB DATE Mar 76 CONTRACT PM-22107-75-117 NOTE 64p.; Booklet prepared by the staff of a project entitled'uOur Living Iispanic'Heritage" (February 1975) ; For Spanish've\rsion, see RC 0 9 238 EDRS PRI E MF-$0.83 HC-$3.50 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *American Indians; *Area Studies; Biculturalism; . Bilingual Education; Cultural BackgroundliForeign Relations; Geographic 'egions; Land Acquisition; *Land Settlement; *Mexican American History; United States History; *Western Civilization IDENTIFIERS *New Mexico ABSTRACT New Mexico, the fifth largest state, measures 390 miles from north to south and 350 miles froi east to west. Six of the 1. 7 life zones found in the.U.S. are represented within the State's 77,866,240 acres. Its population has tended to congregate at. altitudes of 7,000 feet band below, especially in areas where water' is available. This booklet, prepared for use by schools with bilingual ; programs, presents information on New past and present. The information covers: New Mexico's Many environments, life zones, first inhabitants, and prehistoric agricultural communities; the Eve of the Spanish' Conquest; the Apachean nomads; the State a 17th century-- Spanish colony; New Mexico in the 18th and early 1 th centuries; New Mexico on the Eve of Conquest by the U.S.; Nev Mex to as a U.S, territory (1846-1912) ; and New Mexico in the 20th-century.
    [Show full text]
  • 1688 Coronelli People in New Mexico
    Vincenzo Maria Coronelli: America Settentrionale 1688 4 8 6 3 10 7 2 12 11 1 9 5 University of Texas at Arlington - Terms of Use 1: Hernan Gallegos 1581-1582 1581 Hernan Gallegos was one of the nine laymen chosen to accompany the missionary expedition headed by Don Francisco Sanchez Chamuscado and Fray Antonio Rodriguez (misspelled as Ruyz here). Along with two other men, he testified after the expedition as to the events that transpired. Two of the priests stayed behind (and were killed); Chamuscado died of illness shortly before arriving back in Santa Barbara. [Coronado Cuarto Centennial Publications] Links: New Mexico Office of the State Historian: Chamuscado Expedition -- http://www.newmexicohistory.org/filedetails.php?fileID=468 2: Piros 1582 By the time this map was created, the Piro province had been abandoned, never to be reclaimed by its original people. Quote: (1593) It was God's will that, on our way back to camp, we should meet an Indian about forty years of age. We thought that God had led him to us because we had decided to turn back; and as the Lord is most merciful He remembered us, so that our good purpose, for it was directed to His holy service, should not fail us but should, on the contrary, be furthered. He therefore sent us the Indian, who told us of what there was in the interior-- the many houses; the numerous clothed people;the abundant corn, beans, calabashes, cotton, and wild turkeys; and the fact that the inhabitants wore clothes and houses three or four stories high.
    [Show full text]
  • OSL and Ceramic Analysis at the Humphrey Site Ryan Mathison University of Nebraska - Lincoln, [email protected]
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Anthropology Department Theses and Anthropology, Department of Dissertations Summer 7-22-2019 OSL and Ceramic Analysis at the Humphrey Site Ryan Mathison University of Nebraska - Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/anthrotheses Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons, and the Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons Mathison, Ryan, "OSL and Ceramic Analysis at the Humphrey Site" (2019). Anthropology Department Theses and Dissertations. 56. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/anthrotheses/56 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Anthropology, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Anthropology Department Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. OSL and Ceramic Analysis at the Humphrey Site by Ryan Mitchell Mathison A THESIS Presented to the Faculty of The Graduate College at the University of Nebraska In Partial Fulfillment of Requirements For the Degree of Master of Arts Major: Anthropology Under the Supervision of Professor Phil Geib Lincoln, Nebraska August, 2019 OSL and Ceramic Analysis at the Humphrey Site Ryan Mitchell Mathison, M.A. University of Nebraska, 2019 Advisor: Phillip R. Geib The Sand Hills of Nebraska are a unique environment located in the west-central portion of Nebraska. This portion of North America has long supported human life. One group in particular that called the Sand Hills home are the Dismal River people. Dismal River is the name that archaeologists gave to a group of horticulturalists that lived in circular structures on the sand dunes, often near the rivers, in the Sand Hills.
    [Show full text]