NM True TV Palace of the Governors
Well before the Mayflower set sail for the east cost with its pilgrims the Palace of the Governors was already in place on the Santa Fe Plaza. It has served as the seat of the Spanish government in the Southwest, and is the oldest continuously inhabited building in what is now the United States. Fittingly it is now part of the New Mexico History Museum, where the building itself joins the exhibits inside as a huge draw for visitors.
Santa Fe Historic District - Santa Fe, New Mexico
Santa Fe, New Mexico (founded in 1610) is the oldest capital city in the United States. The Santa Fe Historic District is so rich in culture and history that in 1973 it was named to the National Register of Historic Places, a rare achievement for an entire district.
Places that make up the Santa Fe Historic District include:
La Castrene Site
Chapel of Our Lady of Guadalupe
Donaciano Vigil House
Acequia Madre (Mother Ditch)
Camino Royal
Cristo Rey Church and Reredos
Juan Jose Prada House
El Zaguan
Borrego House
St. Francis Cathedral
La Conquistadora Chapel
Juan Rodriguez House
Barrio de Analco
Chapel of San Miguel
Roque Tudesqui House
Gregorio Crespin House
Boyle House
United States Courthouse
Fort Marcy Ruins
Pinckney R. Tully House
Rosario Chapel and Cemetery
Stone Warehouse
Loretto Chapel
St. Michael's Dormitory
Palace of the Governors
Sena Plaza
Prince Plaza
Spiegelberg-Spitz House
Francisco Hinijos House
Felipe B. Delgado House
Hesch House
Nicolas Ortiz House
Plaza
Santa Fe Trail and Canyon Road
Padre Gallegos House
Roque Lobato House
Video by: Santa Fe Real Estate Property
The Palace of the Governors: A National Treasure
On January 28th, 2015, the National Trust for Historic Preservation named the Palace of the Governors in Santa Fe, New Mexico, a National Treasure. A crowd of more than 300 was on hand for the official announcement, and we spoke with a number of attendees who told us why the Palace of the Governors matters to them.
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Originally built in 1610, it is currently a part of the state history museum and a serves as reminder of the many milestones in New Mexico’s storied history. The Palace is threatened by the lack of budget for capital improvements to address the deterioration of the structure. Since the last full renovation in the 1970s, the building requires many much-needed repairs and mechanical upgrades.
Naming the Palace of the Governors as a National Treasure highlights the call to action for the state legislature and supporters to fund the site’s repairs so that it can continue to serve as the living embodiment of a history unique to the American Southwest.
New Mexico State Capitol - the Roundhouse
The New Mexico State Capitol, located in Santa Fe, is the only round state capitol in the United States, creating the joke that you can't corner a politician here.
The New Mexico State Capitol building is the fourth capitol in New Mexico. The first, the Palace of the Governors, is still standing today as the oldest continually occupied building in the United States.
You can visit the official New Mexico State Capitol and government Website at .
Palace of the Governors Video
Santa Fe Real Estate
Palace of the Governors
The Palace of the Governors, in Santa Fe New Mexico, originally served as the seat of government of the Spanish colony of Nuevo Mexico, which at one time comprised the present-day states of Texas, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Nevada, California, and New Mexico.
For more videos of the local area
National Museum of Nuclear Science and History Part 1
National Museum of Nuclear Science and History Part 2
Old Town Albuquerque
San Felipe De Neri Church
Los Alamos Historical Museum
Fuller Lodge in Los Alamos
Tour Inside White Sands Missile Range Museum
Tour Outside White Sands Missile Range Museum
VIsit White Sands Monument
Palace of the Governors
Toy Train Alamogordo
Santa Fe NM
For more of our travel videos, please go to
Please email us at FreeTravelWithUs@gmail.com with any helpful suggestions on how we can do a better job documenting our travels and getting the word out about our website. Thanks!
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New Mexico PBS Moments in Time: Palace of the Governors
Governor's Palace Tour
i did this for my work at first children and it was fun and wonderful at Williamsburg, Virginia at the governor's palace tour it was a light rain day but it was still a good day so i hope you all enjoy my video of this place there's 3 parts & i did my best to take this video some of you might like it but anyway enjoy X333333.& you can check out the pictures i took on my Facebook page
Jeff Hengesbaugh Lecture 2
Segesser II Paintings, Part II
Filmed March 6, 2015
Captured and Edited for the Bosque Museum by Will Godby
Jeff Hengesbaugh has a passion for history and in particular the Spanish experience in the American West. His lecture discusses the effects of Spanish defeats and conflicts with the French upon Spanish expansion in the American West. These events would forever change the territory boundaries of the future states of Texas and New Mexico.
Through the years Mr. Hengesbaugh has been featured in multiple print articles in publications such as Newsweek, Scouting Magazine, and the Chicago Tribune. He has appeared in a Mountain Man documentary for German National Television and has appeared with Charelton Heston on the American Sportsman television series. He has been interviewed multiple times on the Today Show and the Buddy Hackett Show. He currently serves as a Research Associate for the Palace of Governors, History Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Archaeological and Historical Perspectives on Southeast Santa Fe
Acequias, Trails, Land Grants, and Early Twentieth-Century Urban Expansion: Archaeological and Historical Perspectives on Southeast Santa Fe
Stephen Post
Sparks, SAR Boardroom
Tuesday, February 12, 2013, 3:00-4:00 pm, Free
The acequias and arroyos of Santa Fe's southeast neighborhood supported an agrarian lifestyle and served as important landmarks for Spanish land grants. Roads and trails through the area connected Santa Fe with settlements near Pecos and Galisteo during the Spanish Colonial period. Early twentieth-century growth and thirst for land gave rise to companies like the De Vargas Development Corporation, which was a major influence on the character of the neighborhood we see today. Stephen Post has spent more than twenty years researching the archaeological history of the Northern Rio Grande valley with emphasis on the Santa Fe area.
Videography and editing by SAR volunteer John Sadd
Jeff Hengesbaugh Lecture 4
Segesser II Paintings, part 4
Filmed March 6, 2015
Captured and Edited for the Bosque Museum by Will Godby
Jeff Hengesbaugh has a passion for history and in particular the Spanish experience in the American West. His lecture discusses the effects of Spanish defeats and conflicts with the French upon Spanish expansion in the American West. These events would forever change the territory boundaries of the future states of Texas and New Mexico.
Through the years Mr. Hengesbaugh has been featured in multiple print articles in publications such as Newsweek, Scouting Magazine, and the Chicago Tribune. He has appeared in a Mountain Man documentary for German National Television and has appeared with Charelton Heston on the American Sportsman television series. He has been interviewed multiple times on the Today Show and the Buddy Hackett Show. He currently serves as a Research Associate for the Palace of Governors, History Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Jeff Hengesbaugh Lecture 1
Segesser II Paintings, part 1
Filmed March 6, 2015
Captured and Edited for the Bosque Museum by Will Godby
Jeff Hengesbaugh has a passion for history and in particular the Spanish experience in the American West. His lecture discusses the effects of Spanish defeats and conflicts with the French upon Spanish expansion in the American West. These events would forever change the territory boundaries of the future states of Texas and New Mexico.
Through the years Mr. Hengesbaugh has been featured in multiple print articles in publications such as Newsweek, Scouting Magazine, and the Chicago Tribune. He has appeared in a Mountain Man documentary for German National Television and has appeared with Charelton Heston on the American Sportsman television series. He has been interviewed multiple times on the Today Show and the Buddy Hackett Show. He currently serves as a Research Associate for the Palace of Governors, History Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Jeff Hengesbaugh Lecture 3
Segesser II Paintings, part 3
Filmed March 6, 2015
Captured and Edited for the Bosque Museum by Will Godby
Jeff Hengesbaugh has a passion for history and in particular the Spanish experience in the American West. His lecture discusses the effects of Spanish defeats and conflicts with the French upon Spanish expansion in the American West. These events would forever change the territory boundaries of the future states of Texas and New Mexico.
Through the years Mr. Hengesbaugh has been featured in multiple print articles in publications such as Newsweek, Scouting Magazine, and the Chicago Tribune. He has appeared in a Mountain Man documentary for German National Television and has appeared with Charelton Heston on the American Sportsman television series. He has been interviewed multiple times on the Today Show and the Buddy Hackett Show. He currently serves as a Research Associate for the Palace of Governors, History Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Santa Fe History
As the nation’s oldest capital city, Santa Fe has over 400 years of history packed into a conveniently compact space. Between museums, registered historic sites and nearby pueblos, visitors can discover Native American, Spanish and Anglo influences that shaped the city.
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GTR bridgeport city guide
just showing you around at end i spawned in the air and fell in water then died for landing hard wanna play the game from the video go here:
Trust looks to renovate Palace of the Governors
The Palace of the Governors in Santa Fe was chosen as a national treasure on Wednesday. Subscribe to KOAT on YouTube now for more:
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california Governor's Mansion
Governor's Mansion
State Capitol Grounds and Building
State Capitol Grounds and Building,
Santa Fe's history as a capital city dates to 1610, when conquistador Don Pedro de Peralta established it as the capital for the Spanish Kingdom of New Mexico.
The Palace of the Governors, built in 1610, served as Spain's seat of government.
When Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821, the Mexican government designated Santa Fe as the capital of the Mexican province of Nuevo Mexico, and the Palace continued to serve as the seat of government. In 1846, when the U.S. declared New Mexico an American territory, the Palace became New Mexico's first territorial capitol.
Santa Fe New Mexico
Santa Fe, the capital of the state of New Mexico, is the fourth-largest city in the state (with a population of 69,204 in 2012) and is the seat of Santa Fe County. The city of Santa Fe, founded by Spanish colonists in 1610, is known as the oldest state capital city in the United States and the oldest city in New Mexico. Santa Fe means holy faith in Spanish.
For more videos of the local area
National Museum of Nuclear Science and History Part 1
National Museum of Nuclear Science and History Part 2
Old Town Albuquerque
San Felipe De Neri Church
Los Alamos Historical Museum
Fuller Lodge in Los Alamos
Tour Inside White Sands Missile Range Museum
Tour Outside White Sands Missile Range Museum
VIsit White Sands Monument
Palace of the Governors
Toy Train Alamogordo
Santa Fe NM
For more of our travel videos, please go to
Please email us at FreeTravelWithUs@gmail.com with any helpful suggestions on how we can do a better job documenting our travels and getting the word out about our website. Thanks!
If you are enjoying the videos, please help us continue by letting your friends know about them and subscribe to our channel so we can meet the new “1,000” subscriber requirements.
Haunted Places in New Mexico 2
Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, and more! This is the second time we've covered the top 10 most haunted places in New Mexico... and with good reason. The Land of Enchantment is chalk full of creepy houses, spooky old inns, and ancient apparitions. Are there any haunts near you? Enjoy!
Photos:
Palace of the Governors by Chris M Morris ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
Santa Fe, New Mexico USA - The Palace of the Governors (1610) - panoramio by MARELBU ( is licensed under CC BY 3.0 (
Las Cruces, New Mexico train station by Ron Reiring ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
Las Cruces New Mexico Railroad Museum by AllenS ( is in the Public Domain
East de Vargas Street, Santa Fe, NM, USA (Oldest House 1646) - panoramio” by MARELBU ( is licensed under CC BY 3.0 (
“De Vargas Street House in 2014” by Thomson200 ( is licened under CC0 1.0 (
“FOSTERS HOTEL AND SALOON CHAMA” by MRobison ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“Foster’s Hotel” by teofilo ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Old Bernalillo County Courthouse NM” by Camerafiend ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
“Old Courthouse” by teofilo ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“The Lodge at Cloudcroft New Mexico” by AllenS ( is in the Public Domain
“CloudcroftLodge2” by Convival ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Penitentiary of New Mexico Old Main” by New Mexico Department of Corrections ( is in the Public Domain
“Penitentiary of New Mexico - Dormitory Housing Unit” Ken Piorkowski ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“St. James Hotel” by Daniel Schwen ( is licnsed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
“Parlor at St. James Hotel” by Cyborglibrarian ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“Luna Mansion” by teofilo ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Los Lunas, New Mexico, Luna Mansion” by osseous ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“La Posada” by teofilo ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“La Posada de Santa Fe” by Christine Rondeau ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“La Posada de Santahaunted, places
Santa Fe Plaza Santa Fe, NM
David Red Fox grew up on the Sioux Nation reservation. After graduating from university, he was drafted into the army. He served as scout in a unit of Native Americans. April 13, 2009. Video by Benjamin Brown.