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National Historic Landmark - Pietro and Maria Botto House

National Historic Landmark - Pietro and Maria Botto House

On January 27, 1913, 800 workers at one of the largest silk mills in the silk manufacturing capital of the country walked off the job, in a dispute over job security, low ...

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National Historic Landmark - John Ballantine House

National Historic Landmark - John Ballantine House

One of the very few completely documented 19th-century -palaces--, this building (1884) vividly evokes a picture of Victorian life of the wealthy.

Built for a member of the Ballantine family, whose brewery in Newark was ...

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National Historic Landmark - Abbott Farm Historic District

National Historic Landmark - Abbott Farm

Abbott Farm is the largest known Middle Woodland (ca. 500 B.C.-500 A.D.) village site in the coastal Mid-Atlantic/New England region.

This property became the focal point of a famous 40-year controversy about the antiquity of human ...

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National Historic Landmark - Zuni-Cibola Complex

National Historic Landmark - Zuni-Cibola Complex

The Zuni-Cibola Complex is comprised of a series of sites on the Zuni Reservation, containing house ruins, kivas, pictographs, petroglyphs, trash mounds, and a mission church and convent.

They have proven to be an important source ...

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National Historic Landmark- Village of Columbus and Camp Furlong

National Historic Landmark -Village of Columbus and Camp Furlong

On March 9, 1916, approximately 485 Mexican revolutionaries under the command of Gen. Francisco --Pancho-- Villa (1877?-1923) crossed into the United States and attacked the sleeping border town of Columbus, killing 10 ...

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National Historic Landmark- Taos Pueblo

National Historic Landmark -Taos Pueblo

One of the most traditional of the Eastern Pueblos, Taos has borrowed from Anglo- and Spanish-American cultures over centuries of contact, while retaining its cultural integrity and identity as a community.

In the 17th century, the Pueblo ...

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National Historic Landmark - San Gabriel de Yunque-Ouinge

National Historic Landmark - San Gabriel de Yunque-Ouinge

These ruins mark the site of the first Spanish-built capital of New Mexico, established at a Tewa Pueblo which the Spanish took over.

The capital was moved to Santa Fe in 1610.

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National Historic Landmark - Rabbit Ears

National Historic Landmark - Rabbit Ears

A double-peaked mountain rising above level plains, this conspicuous landmark guided wagon trains on the Cimarron Cutoff of the Santa Fe Trail across more than thirty miles of the Oklahoma panhandle.

It was the focal point ...

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National Historic Landmark - Pecos Pueblo

National Historic Landmark - Pecos Pueblo

This sizeable Pueblo community on the edge of the Plains was occupied for over 400 years.

It was important in the history of the Spanish arrival in New Mexico, and the Spanish built and occupied a ...

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National Historic Landmark-NPS Region III Headquarters Building

National Historic Landmark - National Park Service Region III Headquarters Building

The National Park Service's Region III Headquarters Building is a masterpiece of Spanish-Pueblo Revival architecture.

The largest known adobe office building in the United States, it contains an outstanding art collection, ...

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