Page 11 - Cooke's Peak - Pasaron Por Aqui
P. 11

 Introduction Figure 1. Figure 2.
Chapter 1 Figure 3.
Figure 4. Figure 5a. Figure 5b. Figure 6a. Figure6b. Figure 7. Figure 8. Figure 9. Figure 10. Figure 11. Figure 12.
Chapter 2 Figure 13.
Figure 14. Figure 15. Figure 16. Figure 17. Figure 18.
Chapter 3 Figure 19.
Figure 20. Figure 21. Figure 22. Figure 23. Figure 24. Figure 25.
Chapter 4 Figure 26.
Figure 27. Figure 28. Figure 29. Figure 30. Figure 31. Figure 32. Figure 33.
List of Figures
Cooke’s Peak area 2 Fort Cummings today 3
The Mogollon, Anasazi, Hohokam, and Mimbres Ranges 7 Mimbres culture distribution in the Southwest 8 Mimbres Black-on-white bowl: turtle with masked face 9 Mimbres Black-on-white bowl: rabbit and moon 9 Kokopelli petroglyph 10 Rattlesnakepetroglyph 10 The Athabascan migration route 12 Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca crossing the Great American desert 13 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado from a mural by Gerald Cassidy 14 Spanish roads and expeditions 15 Juan Batista de Anza 19 The Presidio of Santa Rita del Cobre 22
General Stephen Watts Kearny 31 The Morman Battalion trail (Cooke’s Wagon Road) 33 Colonel Philip St. George Cooke - circa 1858-1861 34 CSA Brigadier General Sterling Price 35 General William Alexander Doniphan 36 The Mormon Trail in the vicinity of Cooke’s Peak 40
Hugh Stephenson 53 Bartlett-Conde and Gray’s boundaries 55 Gadsden Purchase options and the final boundary 60 Railroad surveys in the western United States, 1854 62 Parke’s routes from cooke’s Spring to the Rio Grande 64 Fort Thorn, New Mexico 69 Routes of the emigrants, forty-niners, and cattle drives 72
Leach’s wagon road 91 The San Antonio-San Diego Mail Company route 95 Butterfield’s and Giddings’ routes, 1859-1861 100 Cooke’s Spring area 103 Butterfield’s operational schedule 104 Butterfield’s instructions to employees 105 New Mexico stagecoach 106 Stage stations and military sites in the Southwest 110
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