Civil War Battlefield Conservation: New Mexico
In March 1862, while Confederates from Texas battled a combined force of U. S. Regulars and volunteers from Colorado and New Mexico along the Santa Fe Trail near Glorieta Pass, a Union flanking column moved behind the Confederates’ lines and destroyed their wagon train at Cañoncito, forcing them to retreat to Texas.
A grant from the Gilder Foundation enabled us to work with the owners of historic land on the Glorieta Pass battlefield in the Pecos National Historical Park. We used the Southwest Revolving Fund, established by grants from the Hoblitzelle and Summerlee foundations, and a loan from the National Park Trust to purchase more than 100 acres of hallowed ground. We held the five properties until the National Park Service had the federal funding, supplemented by a grant from the Civil War Preservation Trust, to purchase them from us and add them to the park.
The sites include a pueblo built by Ancestral Pueblo people, and land at the center of the Glorieta Pass battlefield.
Time Magazine’s “Living The Civil War”
This video from Time and photographer Gregg Segal shows how development has affected Civil War battlefields today. View the video on Time's website.Learn More
- Battle of Glorieta Pass
- Our Civil War Battlefield Conservation Efforts
- Places We Save: Historic Lands