Old Spanish Trail - Armijo Route
Making the JourneyWith bits and pieces of vague information that trickled in from rendezvous, conversations, journals, and maps drawn during the Dominguez-Escalante expedition of 1776, Antonio Armijo imagined an overland trade route. He was willing to risk it all to seek his fortune and forge the first overland trade route from Abiquiu, New Mexico to Los Angeles, California. Hardships on the first journeyWith persistent determination, Armijo led 60 men and 100 mules loaded with fine woolen serapes and blankets produced by New Mexico’s sheep industry on an arduous journey through a most rugged and rocky landscape-the same landscape that challenged the faith and fortitude of the Dominguez and Escalante expedition. Risking hunger and thirst, eating dust and mules, and taking a chance with the value of his goods proved a profitable risk for Antonio Armijo. Antonio ArmijoAntonio Armijo’s father, Jose Francisco Armijo, traded on the Santa Fe Trail. Applying his knowledge of trade and commerce, Antonio saw an opportunity and figured out how to turn visionary ambition into a profitable venture. In reality, he took an enormous risk to trade woolen blankets to Californios for horses and mules. Acquiring California horses and mules at the low cost of one blanket for two animals turned a fine profit in the Santa Fe market. This afforded Antonio Armijo the opportunity to return to California with his parents in 1830. In 1831, he married Dolores Engracia Duarte y Peralata, the daughter of a wealthy California Rancher. They eventually settled in the Solano and Napa counties where they raised seven children. By Traders, For TradersLittle is known about the first journey and the original route of the Old Spanish Trail, for it was used only once by daring men. Established by traders for traders, subsequent routes of the Old Spanish trail demonstrated an earnest desire to avoid the hardships and hazards Armijo experienced during this first and seminal event in expanding trade and commerce in the Southwest. Expanded Trade RoutesSouthwest commerce improved with the establishment of the Old Spanish Trail. It connected established trade routes and intersected with native trails, thus creating an international transcontinental trade network. This trade network improved rural economies in Northern New Mexico, yet it would forever change interethnic trade with native people in drastic and fateful ways. The Old Spanish Trail not only facilitated trade for woolen blankets, goods, horses, and mules, but also the enslavement and trade of native people. Armijo Route TodayPreservation of historic trails gives modern day explorers the opportunity to trace the footsteps of intrepid trailblazers and discover triumphant and tragic stories born in the dust of their passing. As we probe for vague traces of the trail, we become acquainted with people, paths and places, such as Antonio Maria Armijo and the Old Spanish Trail that passed through the rugged and rocky Glen Canyon landscape. Just a small bit of the larger storyOld Spanish National Historic Trail |
Last updated: September 8, 2023