 The Old Spanish Trail – Armijo's Route
Posted by: leadhiker
N 36° 05.861 W 114° 54.276
11S E 688633 N 3996815
Marker is on East Lake Mead Drive (Nevada Route 564) 0.1 miles south of Pyrenees Court, on the left when traveling north.
Waymark Code: WM8W52
Location: Nevada, United States
Date Posted: 05/19/2010
Views: 12
The Old Spanish Trail witnessed a brief but furious heyday between 1830 and 1848 as a trade route linking Santa Fe, New Mexico and Los Angeles, California. During that period, Mexican and American traders took woolen goods west over the trail by mule train, and returned eastward with California mules and horses for the New Mexico and Missouri markets.
Marker Title (required): The Old Spanish Trail – Armijo's Route
 Marker Number (If official State Marker from NV SHPO website above, otherwise leave blank): 141
 Marker Text (required): On January 8, 1830, the first pack train to pass from Santa Fe, New Mexico to Los Angles crossed Las Vegas Valley. Antonio Armijo, a merchant in Santa Fe, commanded the train and roughly sixty men. The successful completion of the journey opened a trade route between the two Mexican provinces of New Mexico and California.
Following the "longest, crookedest, most arduous pack mule route in the history of America," Armijo's party and others brought woolen goods to Los Angeles and returned to Santa Fe driving herds of valuable mules and horses. Later termed the Old Spanish Trail, this route was the principal means of transportation between the two Mexican territories, until the end of the Mexican War in 1848.
State Historical marker No. 141
Southern Nevada Historical Society
State Historic Preservation Office
Department of Cultural Affairs
 County (required): Clark (Las Vegas)
 Marker Type (required): Full Size (with blue painted mesh)
 Is Marker Damaged? (required): No
 Other Marker Type (optional): Not listed
 Other Damage Type (optional): Not listed
 URL - Website (optional): Not listed

|
Visit Instructions:
- The marker must be visited in order to log a Waymark
- Pictures are optional, however, if adding a picture try to include one of a different perspective (e.g. different
angle/season/lighting etc.)
- Add any personal experience or research information that would enhance the history of the marker.
- Thanks!
|