Guadalupe Pass (New Mexico)

Guadalupe Pass is a mountain pass located in the Guadalupe Mountains of Hidalgo County, New Mexico. It lies at an elevation of 5075 feet or 1547 m.[1]

History

Guadalupe Pass was used first by the Spanish and then by the Mexicans for Janos - Fronteras Road between Chihuahua and Fronteras, Sonora from the late 17th century. In 1846, American soldiers of the Mormon Battalion led by Philip St. George Cooke used the pass and the old road for the route of Cooke's Wagon Road between the pass and the San Pedro River. This road was heavily used by the 49ers during the California Gold Rush. It was soon after replaced by a more direct route, the Tucson Cutoff to the north.[2]

gollark: They should just become the Pope and retroactively make it valid.
gollark: I think that I will simply not do that, and leave it running for as long as my laptop is on, and then wait for the inevitable nightly backup process to restart the rsyncing anyway.
gollark: It occupies a full 0.5p of storage, by my 2p/GB metric.
gollark: Wow, Grafana is 241MB?
gollark: rsync is probably maybe resumable later anyway. But still.

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Guadalupe Pass
  2. Leland J. Hanchett, Crossing Arizona, Pine Rim Publishing, Cave Creek, AZ, 2002, p.193

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