Showing posts with label Santa Fe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Santa Fe. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 08, 2024

Ghosts of New Mexico


 It's my favorite month of the year, October!!!  I love the cool mornings, the golden light, the golden aspens and chamisa here in New Mexico, apple cider, and especially Halloween.  I've always been fascinated by ghosties and fairies, and there are plenty here.

It also means next month I have TWO books coming out!  One is the fourth Amanda Allen 1920s mystery, Murder at the Hacienda.  Maddie, David, and their friends (and police inspector frenemy) are snowed in at a remote hacienda for Christmas, when, of course, there is a murder.  One of the people trapped there must be the killer, but which one??  And who will be next?

I based the setting on the real-life rancho, Los Luceros, which is located just outside Espanola and is now a museum/nature center (and a gorgeous place to visit, any time of year).  A bit of its history, according to Atlas Obscura:


Nearly 1,000 years ago, the unassuming spot next to the Rio Grande River was home to the ancestors of today’s Tewa residents of Ohkey Owingeh Pueblo (meaning “Place of the Strong Ones”). The ancient pueblo, Po’yege, is an archaeological site now, but the legacy of the Strong Ones lives on. The people of Ohkey Owingeh, located just downriver from Los Luceros, was one of the first sites to resist Spanish colonization and cruelty in the 1680 Pueblo Revolt. (The Pueblo is the only one with a stone Catholic Church (others are adobe or wood) because the Strong Ones burned it three times.)


At the time of the Revolt, Los Luceros was part of the Sebastian Martin Serrano land grant. The original hacienda, encased inside the 19th-century renovations, dates to the 1700s. It is one of the earliest sites in the Spanish colony where apple trees were planted. There are over 1,000 trees still on the property. 

The Ortiz family, who owned the property in the 1800s expanded the Hacienda and constructed the present capilla, or chapel, onsite. It is still owned by the Archdiocese of Santa Fe.

In the early decades of the 20th century, the site had fallen into ruin and was part of a larger dude ranch. But a wealthy Bostonian, Mary Cabot Wheelwright, came west after the deaths of her parents. She fell in love with the site, purchased it, and had it restored. Hiring noted artist Olive Rush to paint murals on the kiva fireplaces. While spending time at Los Luceros, Wheelwright met two-spirit Dine weaver Hasteen (or Hastiin) Klah. She and Klah collected Native arts from throughout New Mexico, creating the original collection for what would become the Wheelwright Museum.


Marie Chabot, a young woman seeking her place in the world, came to New Mexico from San Antonio, Texas. She was working as a magazine writer. Chabot found her way to Los Luceros where Wheelwright was hosting gatherings of “New Women” like Georgia O’Keeffe, Mabel Dodge Lujan, Carol Stanley, and others. Chabot stayed on, living for a while in the Hacienda and, later, in a nearby casita. Chabot inherited Los Luceros upon Wheelwright’s death. She would go on to have a relationship with O’Keeffe. In those days, they would have been referred to as having “Boston marriages.”

The site is a hidden gem with a deep and complex history. More than one ghost story has been told about the hacienda. If you don’t come for the history or the ghosts, then definitely come for the flock of Churro sheep that graze out back. 

And, of course, it has ghosts!  Apparently, there was a 1998 TV show called "Hauntings in America" that featured the property (before restoration, and in bad condition), but which was mostly untrue legends about hanging trees and women pushed down stairs.  There ARE many reports of windows and trap doors opening and closing by themselves, women crying, sounds of a party, etc, all to be expected in such an old property.  I was able to incorporate some ghostly tales in Maddie's Christmas visit!  Stay tuned all this month for more Santa Fe ghost stories here on this blog...

A few links to info about Los Luceros:

New Mexico Historic Sites (with visiting info)

"Love and Hate at Los Luceros"

The Accidental Angel

Paranormal Claims at Los Luceros


Tuesday, September 03, 2024

Fiestas!


 This past weekend started off the annual Fiestas here in Santa Fe, with the burning of Zozobra!  It's a unique local tradition, with a fascinating history I loved using in Death Comes to Santa Fe, and I love how it signals the beginning of autumn.  Here's some info from the book:


Fiesta has its origins in 1692, when the Spanish who were driven out by the Pueblo Revolt twelve years before, returned, led by Don Diego de Vargas. In 1712, the Spanish governor of the province proclaimed a religious commemoration of those events, where there were Masses, processions, and family dinners. This didn’t change for many years, and in fact had much lapsed by the 1760s.

In 1912, the Chamber of Commerce thought Fiesta ready for a revival—as a commercial scheme. They organized events that often didn’t have much to do with New Mexico, and charged entry fees which shut out many locals and was meant to draw more tourists to the new state. In the 1920s, a group of artists, led by Will Shuster, protested this and organized their own “El Pasatiempo,” complete with many of the events we have now—parades, dances, and especially Zozobra! (There are still traditional events, as well, such a Novenas and Masses, and the procession of La Conquistadora, a wooden figure of The Virgin Mary brought to Santa Fe in 1692 and now housed in the Cathedral).


Will Shuster was one of the great characters of Santa Fe in the twentieth century! Born in Pennsylvania in 1893, he came to New Mexico with his wife in 1920 for his health (he was gassed in World War I) and to pursue his dreams of being an artist. His natural gregariousness and creativity made him a leader, especially among a group who lived near him called Los Cinco Pintores (or “five little nuts in five mud huts,” as some wags called them!). He was constantly throwing parties, organizing events, getting into scrapes. One of his most enduring parties is Zozobra, or “Old Man Gloom.” Made of wool, wire, and cotton cloth, he now reaches 50 feet high and his burning is attended by around 70,000 people, who crowd into a park to contribute their “glooms” (anxieties or bad events, written on slips of paper to be packed in and around the giant marionette). In 1924, Zozobra was only about 6 feet high, a puppet in Shuster’s garden to amuse his artist friends. As far as I know, there were no body parts found in the ashes that year! By 1926, he realized it was a popular thing and moved to a park for others to see. On Shuster’s death in 1969, he left the rights to Zozobra’s party to the Kiwanis Club, and it’s run every year as a charitable fundraiser (and gloom-burner).

The White sisters, Elizabeth and Martha, were also real figures in 1920s Santa Fe! The college-educated daughters of a wealthy Pennsylvania newspaper magnate, they were on a cross-country trip to California after the War (where Elizabeth served as a nurse), and decided to stay in Santa Fe, where they built their large compound “El Delirio” (named after their favorite bar in Seville, Spain!). Elizabeth lived a long, energetic life as a patron of the arts, breeder of Irish wolfhounds (she liked to march them in the Fiesta parades!), and Native American rights activist. Their home is now the School of Advanced Research, and has a wonderful library where I’ve done much research! They were the first home in town to have a tennis court and swimming pool, and the party to inagurate the pool was a real event! (Complete with poem by Witter Bynner, another of the great characters of Santa Fe!)

A few sources I’ve found very helpful are:

--Joseph Dispenza and Louise Turner, Will Shuster: A Santa Fe Legend (1989)

--Edna Robertson, Los Cinco Pintores (1975)

--Jennifer Owings Dewey, Zozobra: The Story of Old Man Gloom

--Gregor Stark and E. Catherine Rayne, El Delirio: The Santa Fe World of Elizabeth White (1998)

--Stacia Lewandowski, Light, Landscape, and the Creative Quest: Early Artists of Santa Fe (2011)

--Van Deren Coke, Taos and Santa Fe: The Artists’ Environment 1882-1942 (1963)

--Edna Robertson, Artists of the Canyons and Caminos (2006, reprint)


Thursday, August 03, 2023

Book Release Day!!!

 


The third in my 1920s Santa Fe mysteries is out NOW!!!  I am so excited about this book.  I put so much of my love of this place, my love of Maddie and her quest to find herself, into these stories, I love having them out in the world...


Former New York darling turned amateur sleuth Madeline Vaughn-Alwin is once again thrown into a colourful yet deadly web of secrets, lies and soirees to die for!

It's the week of Fiesta in Santa Fe and Maddie is looking forward to enjoying the celebrations. But as 'Old Man Gloom' Zozobra goes up in flames, so too do Maddie's hopes for a carefree life . . . Human remains are found in the dying embers of Zozobra, and then Maddie and her dashing beau Dr David Cole find a body washed up in the arroyo at the edge of town.

Soon identified as Ricardo Montoya, a wealthy businessman and head of one of the most affluent families in Santa Fe . . . the plot starts to thicken. While his beautiful wife Catalina and her complicated children seem less than heartbroken at his untimely demise, and with many disgruntled locals crawling out of the woodwork, Maddie is surrounded by suspects.

With the celebrations of Fiesta continuing around them, Maddie and her 'Detection Posse' get busy infiltrating the best parties and hobnobbing with old and new faces - but can they bring the murderer to justice before they strike again?


Santa Fe, a place of beauty and artistic inspiration, provides the perfect backdrop for the sympathetic sleuth. --Kirkus Reviews


Buy Link

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Abigail's Patio Reviews: The Teahouse

There are so, so many things we've loved about Santa Fe since moving to Santa Fe last year!  Beautiful weather, the mountains, art and music, interesting people, great food.  One of the best is the way so many restaurants have patios, and thy don't just allow dogs, they love them!  Our little Poodle fur-baby, Abigail, loves it now that the weather is getting warm again and she can visit her favorite spots.  It's especially good for her now that she has a stroller, and can see the table and be part of the party!

She started the season today, with a walk up Canyon Road and lunch at The Teahouse.  Abigail gives them 3 out of 5 Barks.  Pluses: a pretty garden that welcomes dogs (there were at least 6 other puppies for her to meet!), an extensive tea menu (dozens of teas, all varieties--we tried an Imperial Grade Sencha, light and delicate, and a nice, smoky Lapsang Souchong, I like it the stronger the better), and tasty food (a simple lunch, a panini and a beet/goat cheese salad).  Minuses: a very long wait and slow service, which seems par for the course there.  If you have time for a leisurely meal, and just want to sit around with your dog in the shade, it's great.  If you're on a quick work lunch, not so much.



Abigail says she now looks forward to sharing all her favorite patios with you this spring. :)

The website for The Teahouse

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Things I Love Thursday

"But the moment I saw the brilliant, proud morning shine high up over the deserts of Santa Fe, something stood still in my soul, and I started to attend" --DH Lawrence

What I love this week--Santa Fe! Here are a few pics of a trip I took there last month. I try to get there at least a couple times a year, it's like nowhere else. The light and fresh air, the beautiful buildings and scenery, the food, the art galleries and museums, it's very inspiring and helps me fill up my "creative well." Wish I was there right now, having a margarita on a sunny patio...