The Roque Lobato House - A Book on HSFF's Register Property Lobato - Morley House

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The Roque Lobato House
Santa Fe, New Mexico

by Chris Wilson and Oliver Horn
Photography by Robert Reck
Schenck Southwest Publishing
2014

Description from book jacket:
The eighteenth-century world that Roque Lobato, soldier and eventual armorer to the Royal Spanish Garrison of Santa Fe, entered was a dark, turbulent, and unforgiving place. Born into a poor family most likely in the 1730s, Lobato grew up during a time when the nature of the Spanish colony was changing. Brash and perulant, Lobato avoided almost certain indentured servitude by opting for the dangerous course of winning honor and wealth as a soldier. As a reward for his many years of participation in the Comanche Indian Wars, Governor Juan Bautista de Anza granted the land for the construction of the Roque Lobato House.

Built in 1785, the Roque Lobato House has not only witnessed transformative historical events but also actively participated in some. In the nineteenth century, the house was intimately involved with Don Gaspar Ortiz y Alarid and the activities of the notorious Santa Fe Ring, known for defrauding New Mexicans of their land titles.

In the twentieth century, the by then renovated house served as a prototype for archacologist and occasional spy Sylvanus G. Morley's Spanish Pueblo revival architectural style, ultimately adopted as the Santa Fe style that unified the city architecture and attracted tourists to the city. Most recently, the Roque Lobato House underwent an extensive renovation that removed many of the changes made in the previous few decades.

Chris Wilson and Oliver Horn trace the long history of the Roque Lobato House and its fascinating owners. This house was not only pivotal in the development of Santa Fe style but also one of Santa Fe’s most historic houses.

About the Authors:
CHRIS WILSON, former J. B. Jackson Professor of Cultural Landscape Studies of the University of New Mexico School of Architecture and Planning in Albuquerque, and founding director of the its Historic Preservation and Regionalism Program, has written widely on architecture, tourism, and the politics of culture in the Southwest. His coauthored book La Tierna Amarilla: Its History, Architecture, and Cultunal Landscape (1991) won the Downing Award from the Society of Architectural Historians. His book The Myth of Santa Fe: Creating a Modern Regional Tnadition (1997) received the Villagra Award from the Historical Society of New Mexico and the Cummings Award from the Vernacular Architecture Forum. Facing Southwest: The Life & Houses of John Gaw Meem (200) sings the virtues of both one of Santa Fe's leading citizens and the regional design tradition he helped to sustain. Everyday America: Cultural Landscape Studies After J, B. Jackson (2003), also coauthored, provides the most up-to-date survey of cultural landscapes. Wilson was lead author and editor of the award-winning study The Plazas of New Mexico (2011). A Field Guide to Cool Neighborhoods, focuses of pedestrian neighborhoods in North America before and after the automobile.


OLIVER HORN is urrently a PhD candidate in US Diplomatic History at Georgetown University. He also holds an MA degree from Georgetown University in Global International and Comparative History. He
graduated magna cum laude with a BA degree from Washington and Lee University, double majoring in US History and Politics. He has written numerous articles for Heritage Foundation. This is his first book.

Read about the Lobato - Morley on HSFF’s Register of Properties Worthy of Preservation nomination written by Dr. Audra Bellmore.

The Roque Lobato House, Santa Fe, NM
$39.95

The Roque Lobato House
Santa Fe, New Mexico
by Chris Wilson and Oliver Horn
Photography by Robert Reck
Schenck Southwest Publishing
2014

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Nuevo Mexico Profundo Interview Series: Mac Watson

Mac, 2014.jpeg

This subject is near and dear to many of us, especially at the Historic Santa Fe Foundation. Mac Watson is a consummate professional in the field of preservation, and our former Chair of the Foundation Board. He is a native of Santa Fe and the interview covers growing up here, his life and work, and thoughts on the future of preservation. This is well worth a listen from a well respected member of this community.

Mac has added this written note to his audio discussion:

After listening to the recording of my conversation with Frank Graziano I became concerned that, in response to Frank’s questions about my experiences growing up in Santa Fe and about my relations with Hispanic children in particular, I may have presented a completely negative story. I spoke about a few experiences when I was subject to aggression at the hands of small gangs of Hispanic kids, mainly because those moments are at the surface of my memory and recalled without effort.  What I failed to mention are the many Hispanic friends I had throughout my time in public school here in Santa Fe, from the 4th grade and until I left after the 10th grade to attend school on Colorado.

As one might expect, most but not all of these friendships were with boys. When I started the 4th grade I knew not a soul in the school so Rudy Rios, whose desk was next to mine soon became my “best friend.” We have remained friends over all the years that have passed and I became close to many in his family--his parents, his younger brother  León, his sisters Cecilia and Rita, and Rudy’s nephew Juan. Before the Covid struck, one of my favorite pastimes was to join the Rios family in the family home on Camino del Monte Sol for their regular family lunch.

Several of my friendships were made with kids who were in the both in the junior high and high school bands with me. These include the brothers Donald and Horacio Manzanares and Stanley Griego Evans. Stan, when I meet him now, never fails to make sure that I’m told that he was a better musician than I was.

I knew the basketball stars Jerry and Leonard Roybal in junior high. Because we were in the same grade, Leonard and I were closer. I remain happy to congratulate Lenny whenever he coaches the Espanola Sun Devils to another state championship. These friendships and many others were possible for me because Santa Fe’s neighborhoods were considerably more ethnically “mixed” than they are now. 

About Nuevo Mexico Profundo
Nuevo Mexico Profundo is the venture that conducts tours of New Mexico churches on the High Road, in the mountain villages, at pueblos, to raise money for the repair and restoration of these churches so important to the communities where they reside. Profundo is a collaboration started by Frank Graziano and supported by the Historic Santa Fe Foundation, Spanish Colonial Arts Society, Cornerstones Community Partnerships, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division, the Office of the New Mexico State Historian, and the New Mexico Heritage Preservation Alliance. Given the conditions of the ongoing health crisis, tours and events planned by Profundo have been canceled for the year. This program of interviews and recording histories was put into action according to social distancing and health regulations. You can learn more about Nuevo Mexico Profundo at nuevo-mexico-profundo.com.

Three Properties Added to HSFF's Register of Properties Worthy of Preservation

Historic Santa Fe Foundation recognizes the Dorothy McKibbin House, Roque - Lobato House, and El Delirio/SAR campus

Photograph of El Delirio/SAR above by Simone Frances for the new edition of Old Santa Fe Today

Photograph of El Delirio/SAR above by Simone Frances for the new edition of Old Santa Fe Today

At the August 27, 2020 Board of Directors meeting, the  Historic Santa Fe Foundation's Board of Directors voted to add three properties -- The Dorothy McKibbin House, Lobato - Morley House, and El Delirio/School for Advanced Research (SAR) to the HSFF Register of Properties Worthy of Preservation. The properties were approved unanimously by the Board and the Register now holds a total of 96 to be included in the new edition of HSFF's upcoming book Old Santa Fe Today authored by Dr. Audra Bellmore with photography by Simone Frances, and published by Museum of New Mexico Press. The book will the culmination of all the efforts of those who nominated, researched, and listed properties and resources on HSFF’s Register of Properties Worthy of Preservation, one of the first initiatives of the foundation since the incorporation in 1962. There are many properties in Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico that deserve this attention and recognition. Our efforts in listing these historic structures and resources brings attention and awareness to the need for their continued preservation and maintenance.

Please find brief information below about the three new nominated, reserched, and approved properties. Contact Pete Warzel at pete.warzel@historicsantafe.org or 505-983-2567 for more information or visit HSFF's 545 blog piece on the three new properties or HSFF's Register page.

Terraced landscaping at El Delirio, as viewed from the White sisters’  home.  Photo by T. Harmon Parkhurst, 1928,  SAR Archive, AC 18 418 30a,  Courtesy of the School for Advanced Research

Terraced landscaping at El Delirio, as viewed from the White sisters’ home. Photo by T. Harmon Parkhurst, 1928, SAR Archive, AC 18 418 30a, Courtesy of the School for Advanced Research

El Delirio/SAR
Nomination written by Dr. Nancy Owen Lewis and Jean Schamberg

You may know this property as the campus of the School for Advanced Research (SAR). “El Delirio” is the original name given the estate by the White sisters, Amelia Elizabeth and Martha, who purchased the land, including a small adobe house, in 1923.

Dr. Nancy Owen Lewis, PhD, and Jean Schaumberg, each with intimate knowledge of SAR and the estate, researched and wrote the nomination for the property. Lewis has previously published the book A Peculiar Alchemy: A Centennial History of the School for American Research, 1907-2007.

The property and its architecture, the history of its use through today, as well as the significance of the people associated with El Delirio over almost a century, certainly signify the former estate worthy of preservation, recognition, and addition to the HSFF Register. It is an honor to make that addition.

View the Register listing for El Delirio/SAR


Photograph of Lobato - Morley House above by Simone Frances for the new edition of Old Santa Fe Today

Photograph of Lobato - Morley House above by Simone Frances for the new edition of Old Santa Fe Today

The Lobato – Morley House
Nomination written by Dr. Audra Bellmore
The Roque  Lobato House was one of the first properties added to the newly instituted HSFF Register of Properties Worthy of Preservation in 1964. In 1978, it was unceremoniously removed when the then owner did renovation and reconstruction after asking HSFF to review his plans, but completed the work before any evaluation was undertaken. The property remained on the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties and lingered contentiously in the background of HSFF history.

Chris Wilson, Regents Professor of Landscape Architecture, Emeritus, at University of New Mexico (UNM), co-authored the book on the property with Oliver Horn titled The Roque Lobato House: Santa Fe, New Mexico (2014). In that publication, Wilson opined that “…the Roque Lobato House is unique even among its peers in its historic breadth and density.” So, in mid-2020, Dr. Audra Bellmore, PhD, Associate Professor and Curator of the Center for Southwest Research, Special Collections, at UNM, researched and wrote the nomination for the more properly named Lobato – Morley House.

HSFF welcomes back this Santa Fe treasure to the Register of Properties Worthy of Preservation, where it belongs.

View the Register listing for Lobato - Morley House here


The Dorothy McKibbin House
Nomination written by Katie Dix

This home is an architectural gem and a fairly unknown center of significant Santa Fe and U.S. history. Dorothy McKibbin was the renowned ‘gatekeeper’ at 109 E. Palace Avenue in Santa Fe for entry and exit to the WWII-era Manhattan Project up the hill at Los Alamos Laboratories. This was her home, built in 1936, and the center of social life for scientists and employees at the Lab when in Santa Fe.

The nomination was researched and written by Katie Dix, a UNM graduate student in the School of Architecture and Planning, and our first official Mac Watson Fellow. This fellowship program was specifically designed to engage grad students from UNM to participate with HSFF in research of significant properties as additions to our Register. Dix’s work and written nomination made an elegant argument that the Dorothy McKibbin House be added as “an outstanding example of New Mexican architecture and Santa Fe styles, showcasing the work of Kathy Stinson Otero as an architect.”

For more information or questions, contact Pete Warzel at pete.warzel@historicsantafe.org or 505-983-2567 or visit HSFF's 545 blog piece on the three new properties or HSFF's Register page.

Paul Weideman Honored for 2020 Heritage Preservation Award

HSFF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR PETE WARZEL PRESENTS PAUL WEIDEMAN WITH HIS ARCHITECTURAL STEWARDSHIP AWARD ALONG WITH OSFA PRESIDENT RANDELL BELL, HSFF BOARD CHAIR KEN STILWELL, AND OSFA SECRETARY/TREASURER ELIZABETH WEST

HSFF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR PETE WARZEL PRESENTS PAUL WEIDEMAN WITH HIS ARCHITECTURAL STEWARDSHIP AWARD ALONG WITH OSFA PRESIDENT RANDELL BELL, HSFF BOARD CHAIR KEN STILWELL, AND OSFA SECRETARY/TREASURER ELIZABETH WEST

In honor of the 48th annual celebration of New Mexico Heritage Preservation Month, the City of Santa Fe partnered with the Historic Santa Fe Foundation and the Old Santa Fe Association to present the 2020 Santa Fe Heritage Preservation Awards. This year’s awards ceremony was postponed indefinitely due to COVID-19 restrictions. Historic Santa Fe Foundation (HSFF) and Old Santa Fe Association (OSFA) held a small ceremony on September 29, 2020 in the garden at HSFF’s El Zaguán in honor of our jointly awarded 2020 Architectural Steward Paul Weideman. Find the information about Paul Weideman below and read the entire piece on the awardees here.

Purchase Paul Weideman’s book Architecture: Santa Fe, A Guidebook at the bottom of this page.

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:OSFA SECRETARY/TREASURER ELIZABETH WEST, HSFF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR PETE WARZEL, PAUL WEIDEMAN, HSFF BOARD CHAIR KEN STILWELL, AND OSFA PRESIDENT RANDELL BELL

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:OSFA SECRETARY/TREASURER ELIZABETH WEST, HSFF EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR PETE WARZEL, PAUL WEIDEMAN, HSFF BOARD CHAIR KEN STILWELL, AND OSFA PRESIDENT RANDELL BELL

HISTORIC SANTA FE FOUNDATION
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH OLD SANTA FE ASSOCIATION AWARD

Architectural Stewardship Award Service Award

PRESENTED TO PAUL WEIDEMAN

In recognition of his meticulous efforts, through his factual and elegant writing, to present to, and educate us all, about the rich architectural and cultural history of the city of Santa Fe and state of New Mexico.

Kenneth Stilwell, Chair of the Board of the Historic Santa Fe Foundation
Randall Bell, Chair of the Board of the Old Santa Fe Association

2020 HSFF and OSFA Architectual Stewardship Award: Paul Weideman

Paul Weideman was born in Indianapolis and grew up in Ohio, Michigan, and in Southern Rhodesia, Africa. He earned bachelor’s degrees in biology (Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo) and editorial journalism (University of Washington, Seattle) and has worked as a journalist since 1984, the last 22 with the Santa Fe New Mexican. In 1996, he married Mary Margaret Vigil, whose parents were members of multigenerational Santa Fe families and who has given him scores of insights about "old Santa Fe" — that is, from the 1950s and 1960s. Paul was presented a Service Award by the Santa Fe chapter of the American Institute of Architects in 2017 for articles about design and architecture in his "Art of Space" column in Pasatiempo magazine and in the monthly Home/Santa Fe Real Estate Guide.

Paul Weideman is a friend of historic preservation and architectural stewardship, putting his own mark on the complexities of the integrative development of Santa Fe architecture, from the distant past to the modern present. His work has been consistently focused on educating the public about the long history of architecture and culture of the Santa Fe area, and the need for concerted preservation of each. He has recently published a sensible and inviting study of Santa Fe style called Architecture Santa Fe, a Guidebook. His newspaper columns relating to history, architecture, real estate ,and thoughtfully published comments, opinions and insights about regional preservation needs and efforts have guided readers for many years. His audience includes the citizens of Santa Fe and northern New Mexico as well as the architects, builders, and the preservation community through articles that connect the many aspects of Santa Fe cultural history. His writing has been called “scholarly,” “invaluable,” “trenchant,”  “fluent” and it is witty, helpful, and ultimately kind.

The Historic Santa Fe Foundation and the Old Santa Fe Association are pleased and proud to join together in naming Paul Weideman the recipient of this Architectural Stewardship, 2020, as part of the annual Heritage Preservation Awards held by our two organizations along with the City of Santa Fe, Historic Preservation Division.

PAUL WEIDEMAN WITH HIS ARCHITECTURAL STEWARDSHIP AWARD PRESENTED JOINTLY BY HSFF AND OSFA

PAUL WEIDEMAN WITH HIS ARCHITECTURAL STEWARDSHIP AWARD PRESENTED JOINTLY BY HSFF AND OSFA

Purchase Paul Weideman’s book below:

 

El Zaguán Video Series: Tom Leech and Patricia Musick on Something Wicked This Way Comes Exhibition

In April 2020, Historic Santa Fe Foundation hosted the exhibition Something Wicked This Way Comes, a colloborative show from Tom Leech, a Santa Fe papermaker and marbler, and Patricia Musick, an accomplished Colorado calligrapher and artist, inspired by some of Shakespeare's most famous lines.

The exhibition was open by appointment and online and artwork sales were very successful. It was a very popular show for HSFF.

20% of all sales benefit Historic Santa Fe Foundation. Available works will show the add to cart option. FEW PIECES FROM THIS EXIBITION REMAIN AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE.

To join HSFF as a member or donation to our general fund or specific programs including the new edition of Old Santa Fe Today, the Mac Watson Fellowship, and the Faith and John Gaw Meem Preservation Trades Internship, visit the Join & Give page.

Watch the video on YouTube here

Visit the Shakespeare Gallery here

2020 Virtual Annual Garden Party & Members' Meeting

Mara Saxer speaking about HSFF’s El Zaguán front wall repairs, September 2020.

Mara Saxer speaking about HSFF’s El Zaguán front wall repairs, September 2020.

Historic Santa Fe Foundation is pleased to present this video version of our Annual Garden Party & Members’ Meeting. Each year, HSFF holds this members-only event in the garden on Canyon Road. Usually, members meet, share refreshments, enjoy the company of our community, and attentively listen to our guest speaker. In recent years, we have had the honor of hosting the State of New Mexico’s Historic Preservation Officer Jeff Pappas, City of Santa Fe’s Historic Preservation Division Manager Lisa Roach, and Director at School for Advanced Research Michael Brown as speakers. With the pandemic restrictions and health safety concerns, the staff and board decided to create a video for the 2020 annual meeting. We are delighted to have Lissa Johnson, of the Santa Fe Extension Master Gardeners, provided a tour of the garden and conclude this year’s online gathering as our keynote speaker.

For this video, we are fortunate to have established a relationship with videographer Kyle Maier who is producing a documentary/art film on Canyon Road and digging into Santa Fe’s history after his return to New Mexico after years in Gettysburg, PA. Along with the garden tour that closes our online meeting, Maier filmed and edited this feature that starts with an introduction to the year’s building projects by Mara Saxer, and follows with a discussion and presentations by HSFF staff Pete Warzel and Melanie McWhorter, and HSFF Board Chair Ken Stilwell. We present a well-rounded state of the nonprofit set in the beautiful background the offices and home at HSFF’s El Zaguán in the heart of Santa Fe at 545 Canyon Road. Please enjoy this video and feel free to reach out to HSFF with any questions or comments.

To join HSFF as a member or donation to our general fund or specific programs including the new edition of Old Santa Fe Today, the Mac Watson Fellowship, and the Faith and John Gaw Meem Preservation Trades Internship, visit the Join & Give page.

Watch the video on YouTube here

Melanie McWhorter, Pete Warzel, and Ken Stilwell on HSFF’s El Zaguán Portal, September 2020

Melanie McWhorter, Pete Warzel, and Ken Stilwell on HSFF’s El Zaguán Portal, September 2020