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Ghost Story of Santa Fe Ghost Trail

2023-01-14 02:14:06

Santa Fe Ghost Trail Sunday afternoon, not the best time to talk about ghosts, but when I sat in a seat with a narrator, he told me of this ghost from New Mexico. Story Teller is a 18 year old freshman who majors in international relations in Bethesda, Maryland. He is a mixture of American father and Taiwanese mother. Born in California, grew up in Colorado, the storyteller is a convert Christian. Cashier is in the Boy Scouts, this is the source of the story: the real small little town of the city called New Mexico, Cimarron, it is small now, but at the end of the 19th century it is a vibrant intersection of people of all kinds was.

Santa Fe Trail is the first commercial highway in America. In 1821, the trader established a road between Missouri State and Santa Fe, New Mexico, and about 900 miles on the road to Great Plains. Prior to the completion of the Santa Fe railroad, Santa Fe Trail became a major channel trader, pioneer, and the US Army and played an important role in the expansion of the west side of America. For centuries before the Santa Fe Trail there was a trade between the Great Plains Indians and the early settlers of the Texas strip. As the trade route of Rio Grande expands, the business inevitably reaches the Spanish settlers in New Mexico - but Spain declares illegal trade with Native Americans.

Santa Fe Trail passes through Central America and is a 19th century transportation link between Missouri's independent city and Santa Fe, New Mexico. William Beckner was founded first in 1821 and it was an important commercial highway until the railroad was introduced in Santa Fe in 1880. Santa Fe is close to the end of El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro and there is a deal from Mexico City. This route bypasses the northern end and looks for a compensation channel and passes through the northwest corner of Comancheria which is the territory of Comanche, which represents another market for American merchants. Comanche suddenly attacked New Mexico in the southern part of Mexico, raised its dependence on American trade and let Comanche sell stable horses.