Santa Clara Pueblo's Puye Cliffs National Historic Landmark The Pueblo of Santa Clara is pleased to announce that the Puye Cliffs
Dwellings National Historic Landmark has been reopened for group tours
following an eight-year closure.
This ancestral home of Santa Clara Pueblo supported 1,500 people from
1100 to 1580 A.D. An original Fred Harvey House built on site in the
early 1900s to accommodate guests exploring the American Southwest will
once again accommodate guests with a museum and cultural center. It is
the only Harvey House on a Native American reservation.
"Puye Cliffs was closed as a result of the Cerro Grande fire that impacted access to the area," said Lucretia Jenkins-Williams, Puye Operations Manager for the Santa Clara Development Corporation. "We have created a destination where people can experience the beautiful panoramic scenery of northern New Mexico, while learning of the ancient Pueblo people who called Puye Cliffs home." Carved into the volcanic tuff of the panoramic Puye Cliffs, alcoves were fronted with natural rock to create hundreds of homes and storage rooms for the population. Above the cliffs are the remains of many more rooms and circular, underground religious structures called kivas. Puye Cliffs will offer enchantment and education in one location, giving visitors a unique insight into the significance of the Pueblo's ancestral home while celebrating one of the tribe's modern successes. Tours of Puye Cliffs are managed by the Pueblo's own Santa Clara Development Corporation. "Tours of the Puye Cliffs will give New Mexicans and their visitors a genuine cultural experience," said Michael Cerletti, Secretary of the New Mexico Tourism Department. "There is no better way to discover the beauty, enthusiasm and tradition of the pueblos than through the people that have inhabited those lands for generations." Tour Details: For more information Contact Lucretia Jenkins-Williams, Puye Operations Manager, 505-747-2455 or visit PuyeCliffs . © 2008 |
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