The Spanish Conquest of New Mexico
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The conquest of that portion of tho North American continent lately the province, now the territory, of New Mexico, and which the United States acquired from Mexico under the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, is an unpublished page in Spanish-American history. The historian has overlooked this field of early adventure and given his attention to what seemed a more inviting banquet, thus depriving the world of one of the most interesting relations of incidents to be met with in the record of early explorations in the New World. The earliest mention of Spaniards penetrating into New Mexico is found in the journal of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca written in the first half of the sixteenth century. He wad an officer of the unfortunate expedition of Narvaez, and with three companions was wandering nearly ten years across the continent, at the end of which time he reached the Spanish settlements on the gulf of California.
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