The people of Taos have always displayed a feisty--if not downright
insurgent--spirit. Every uprising that toppled a New Mexican government
started here, beginning with the Pueblo revolt against the Spanish
colonists and including the assassinations of a Mexican-era tax
governor, who lost his head, and the first American governor, who lost
his scalp before his life. Living on the edge of the northern frontier
of New Spain, Taosenos became accomplished smugglers of slaves, firearms
and other black market goods. As a convenient terminus of the Old Sante
Fe Trail, Taos drew loitering rabble-rousers who were overly fond of the
dangerous hooch called Taos Lightning. In the twentieth century, a
sleepy artists' colony became a haven for a new kind of revolutionary,
who dreamed of overthrowing bourgeois values. Join author Ellen Dornan
as she delves into the wicked history of Taos, New Mexico.