Chief Yellowhorse Route 66 Indian Trading Post - Full Tour (New Mexico and Arizona State Line)
Check out this place! A lot of the goods (Apart from in the TeePee) are all hand crafted and handmade by the native american tribes. A lot of the produce is also collected from the local area and made into gifts. The prices vary, you can easily pickup cheap $1 gifts, such as: arrow heads, mini statues sitting a on a little stone and some cheap snacks. I was also impressed by seeing cow head skulls for only $25. You can also see the stateline run through Chief Yellowhorse's hut on the right end of the row. We spoke to his son and he was very friendly and nice. There is also a trail out back from the hut you can walk along.
Video Title: Chief Yellowhorse Route 66 Travel Center - Full Tour (New Mexico and Arizona State Line)
Video File Created Date: 25 February 2015 (Video may or may not have been captured on this date, it shows the date the video was last converted.)
-- Video Uploaded and Managed using YouTube Lazy Uploader. GinkoSolutions.com
Surviving Columbus (Parts 1 and 2)
Late one afternoon in May 1539, the world of the Pueblo Indians changed forever when Estebanico - a Black slave from Morocco - and his 300 retinue of Mexican Indians marched into the Zuni city of Hawikuh. Through wild tales and exaggerations, Hawikuh would be transformed into one of the fabled Seven Golden Cities of Cibola, and a year later, Coronado and his soldiers would wreak destruction and violence on this peaceful world in search of non existent gold. Surviving Columbus is a search for the Pueblo people's view of these first encounters with European civilization, told exclusively through the voices and visions of the Pueblo Indians.
Frontier Plunder Indian Trading Post - 1910 - 1920s Zuni Pueblo Owl
A Hard To Find Older Zuni Owl Of The Distinctive Pinkish Zuni Clay
- Polychrome, painted with white, dark brown and reds, all fired on
- He is unsigned as would be expected of a pottery piece of this age
- Condition is very good, some very small spots of rubbing on the old paint on one ear and underside of the tail
- 3 3/8 high x 3 3/8 in diameter
- Native American Pueblo Pottery
- Frontier Plunder Indian Trading Post
Zuni Pueblo
To see the Grand Kivas, Hawikuh or other sights on Zuni land, please contact Zuni Tourism at 505-782-7238
FORD MOTOR COMPANY PUEBLO INDIANS in TEXAS & NEW MEXICO 49264
The culture of Pueblo Indians is explored in this 1950s color film, produced by the Ford Motor Company. Opening with shots of the far southern United States, the picture cuts to a Native American village (mark 00:46) where men and women go about their daily routines of cleaning, doing laundry, and other chores. At mark 01:40, one of the men receives an invitation to the end of summer Indian festival and the man and his son began preparations. The young boy tries to learn a native hoop dance at mark 03:05, before being shown how it properly performed (mark 03:35). As the film continues, the man explains the ways of the Pueblo people to his son (and the audience) starting at mark 04:45 — a peaceful people whose homes began in high cliffs before moving into the valleys. “We have defended our homes against the war makers but never have we gone out to make war on others for the glory of combat,” he explains. As he speaks we see scenes of men and women making pottery or working in the fields of the Rio Grande Valley in Texas as Native American songs play in the background. After harvesting corn and wheat beginning at mark 07:35, the narrator explains how it is important not to waste anything from a harvest as “waste is the brother of famine.” We see life inside a classroom (mark 09:55) as other young men learn a trade and participate in other native dances (mark 12:30). At mark 16:55, discussion returns to the time of the Native American festival in Gallup, New Mexico — an annual event where representatives of all Native American tribes gather to celebrate. Beginning at mark 18:20, the film shows Pueblos, Navajos, Comanches, Apaches, Hopis, and several other tribes — “all one great people” — participating in the celebration as crowds line the streets.
The Pueblo peoples are Native Americans in the Southwestern United States who have in common their style of living in towns constructed of adobe, stone and other local materials; their buildings are constructed as complex apartments with numerous rooms, often built in strategic defensive positions. The Pueblo peoples speak languages from several different groups and are also divided culturally by their kinship systems and agricultural practices, although all cultivate varieties of corn.
In addition to differing kinship systems, the peoples have differing marriage practices: exogamous (or outside connections) or endogamous (within the clan or band). Those who have a matrilineal system, in which children are considered born into the mother's clan and her line is used for inheritance and descent, are the Hopi, Keres, Towa and Zuni. The non-Towa Tanoan have a patrilineal system, with clan membership, inheritance and descent all passed through the father's line. All the Pueblo peoples have traditional economies based on agriculture and trade.
At the time of Spanish encounter beginning in the 16th century, these peoples were living in complex, multi-story villages often built around a central courtyard. The Spanish called these pueblos, meaning towns, and applied the name to all the peoples living in such complexes. In the 21st century there are 21 surviving pueblos in the Southwest of the United States. Taos, Acoma, Zuni, and Hopi are the best-known. The main pueblos are located primarily in the present-day states of New Mexico and Arizona.
We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: 01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference.
This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit
Richardson Trading Post, Gallup New Mexico pt. 2 0f 2
Route 66, Native American art, Gallup New Mexico, Trading Post, Western History, Kachinas, Jewelry, Paintings, Carvings,
August 5-9 2015 The Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial - Gallup New Mexico
A pictorial documentary of the Annual Inter-tribal Indian Ceremonial in Gallup, New Mexico
as portrayed by Southwestern Photographer Daryl Custer in his book Visions of the Ceremonial.
(505) 228-4444 Call for details on the ceremonial!
VIEW THE BOOK!
Claudine Halloo Zuni Artisin Potter
Zuni potter Claudine Haloo
Claudine Haloo takes us through the process of making Zuni pottery, with traditional Zuni hand painting. Claudine Haloo specializes in Native American art and is capable of making pottery, Zuni fetishes and inlay jewelry. Zuni pottery can be seen in Gallup, New Mexico at Perry Null Trading Company or online on the Zuni Reservation.
ZUNI WEEKEND
To learn more about one of the
state's lesser-known Native American
tribes, head up to Smoki Museum
for a special exhibit celebrating the Zuni Culture.
A Zuni Weekend July 27 and
28. The Smoki is located at 147 N. Arizona
Ave. in Prescott. Admission is only $7.
A dozen artists from the Zuni Pueblo
community will demonstrate and sell
their artwork, including pottery, fetishes,
carvings and more. While the majority of
the Zuni Pueblo is located in New Mexico,
the tribe does have a small land holding
in the southern portion of Arizona's
Apache County. The reservation is south
of Holbrook, straddling the state line with
New Mexico.
The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. Saturday and 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday. At 2
p.m. each day, enjoy authentic Zuni dance
and song in the Pueblo. The Council for
Indigenous Arts and Culture (CIAC) also
will be on hand to educate the public on
how to tell the difference between real
and fake Indian jewelry.
For more information, call 928-445-
1230 or visit smokimuseum.org
Native American Ceremonial, Gallup, August 2001
Native American Ceremonial, Gallup, New Mexico, August 2001
Harlem Shake - Trading Post Style
Perry Null Trading performs the Harlem Shake. Customers and members of the Gallup and surrounding area stop by to dance.
Zuni Pueblo Band pt.1 of 2
Zuni Marching Band, from Zuni, New Mexico. Videoed at the Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff 29 May 11
★☆KACHINA☆★
SONG IN PRACTICE FORM TO BE ON DWAYNE LEFTRIDGE'S UPCOMING CD, PLEASANT BRAIN NOISE.
TravelGuide New Mexico tm, Gallup Inter - Tribal Ceremonial
The 89th Annual Inter-Tribal Ceremonial...Gallup, New Mexico!
People come from all over the world for this spectacular event, and whether you're eight...or eighty, it's an experience you'll never forget!
For decades, Native American groups have come to Gallup to perpetuate the tradition...the culture...the rich heritage of this annual event.
Highlights include the dances and competitive pow wows, with songs, dance steps and costumes passed down from generation to generation.
The parades are immensely popular....a continuous and colorful pageantry that includes tribal groups, dancers, horseback riders, Navajo Code Talkers and tribal royalty.
And for art lovers, this is THE event of the year. The authenticity and quality of the arts, crafts and world-class juried art show make this a shopper's paradise...an absolute gold mine!
For a touch of the wild west, enjoy the Ceremonial Rodeo...with dust-swirlin' action and heart-poundin' excitement!
And believe me...you could come just for the food! Navajo fry bread and tacos....Hopi corn stew...roasted corn on the cob...Zuni oven bread...you'll love every mouthwatering bite!!
It's the 89th Annual Inter-Tribal Ceremonial...August 11th to the 15th...at Red Rock State Park here in Gallup
Classrooms open without state OK
Students are finally in class and learning, but the state and the Gallup McKinley County School District are at odds because some classrooms being used aren't certified yet.
Navajo Nation Delays Vote on Dividing Zuni Land
August 14, 2014 -- NAZ Today reports that the Navajo Nation has postponed voting on a measure that would divide 20,000 acres of land on Fort Windgate. The land that would be divided is located on the Zuni Tribe area. the Tribe is concerned that, if the Navajo Nation continues to delay the vote, Congress will decide to give the land to others, denying the tribe land that they have cultural and historic ties to.
Motorcycle Tour in New Mexico (Jul., 2012) : Navajo Nation & Shiprock (5/9)
1. Time : Jul. 12th, - 16th, 2012
2. Motorcycle : Honda Shadow Spirit, 1100cc, year 2000
3. Route:
# Day One
(1) Las Cruces
185
(2) Caballo Lake
152 & 180
(3) Silver City
# Day Two
(1) Silver City
180 & 191
(2) Springerville (Arizona)
61 & 53
(3) Zuni Pueblo
# Day Three
(1) Zuni Pueblo
53 & 602
(2) Gallup
491
(2) Ship Rock
64
(3) Farmington
# Day Four
(1) Farmington
371
(2) Thoreau
I-40
(3) Albuquerque
I-40, 217, 337, & 55
(4) Manzano Mountain
# Day Five
(1) Manzano Mountain
55, 60 & I-25
(2) Socorro
I-25
(3) Truth or Consequences
I-25
(3) Hatch
185
(4) Las Cruces
2009 Hike in Gallup, NM
We went for a hike up this mesa near where we were in Gallup.
The Hopi Ten Commandments
According to hundreds of military whistleblowers, we are on the verge of open contact with extraterrestrial civilizations. What will that do to the religious structure? What are the secrets hidden in the Jewish scriptures about ET life?
My book on amazon:
spaceship image credit: mark kings north
Pueblo Voices: Traditions
Pueblo Indians' historical perspectives are shaped by their deep cultural heritage, kept alive through oral tradition. Archaeologists' understanding of Pueblo history derives primarily from the application of the scientific method. In this series of videos, Pueblo people and archaeologists discuss aspects of Pueblo history and culture from their different—but often complementary—perspectives.