Despite their seemingly impenetrable western facade, the Sandia
Mountains of central New Mexico have been home to humankind for
millennia. Ancient cultures ventured into these peaks for the creeks,
game, and shelter. The Spanish established protective outposts along the
canyons and intermarried with local tribes. Civil War soldiers passed
through en route to their infamous battle at Glorieta Pass. Navajos
marched around the mountains' southern end after the confinement that
ended their Long Walk. Anglo settlers cleared the hilly land and built
cabins. And tuberculosis patients moved up into primitive resorts,
hoping that the mountains' abundant sunshine and fresh air would help
them heal. Today the tiny resorts and traditional hamlets of the Sandias
are established villages and communities-Carnuel, Tijeras, San Antonio,
Cedar Crest, Sandia Park, San Antonito, Placitas, and others-and the
rough dirt roads that once saw the passing of ox carts are highways and
even an interstate. The area's history lives on, however, in crumbling
adobe walls, bits of rust, fading memories, and in this photographic
retrospective.