- El Quartelejo Ruins
Infobox_nrhp | name =El Cuartelejo
nrhp_type = nhld
caption =
nearest_city=Scott City, Kansas
lat_degrees = 38
lat_minutes = 40
lat_seconds = 41
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 100
long_minutes = 54
long_seconds = 51
long_direction = W
locmapin = Kansas
area =
built =1650
architect=
architecture=
designated=July 19 ,1964 cite web|url=http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=236&ResourceType=District
title=El Quartelejo |accessdate=2008-04-03|work=National Historic Landmark summary listing|publisher=National Park Service]
added =October 15 ,1966 cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]
governing_body = State
refnum=66000351El Quartelejo (from Spanish "cuartelejo", meaning "little barracks") is the name given to the archeological remains of the northernmost Indian
pueblo and the only known pueblo inKansas . Located in Lake Scott State Park, the remains of the stone and adobe pueblo are situated north ofScott City, Kansas , on Ladder (Beaver) Creek.There are two possibilities for the origin of El Quartelejo. In 1664 a group of
Pueblo Indians leftNew Mexico and were later rounded up and brought back by the Spanish. They may have constructed El Quartelejo, but more likely is the second possibility. After the collapse of thePueblo Revolt (1680-1692) most Pueblo Indians accepted the return of Spanish dominion over their lives. A group from the Taos and Picuris Pueblos, however, did not. In 1696 this group fled New Mexico in search of a new home among thePlains Apache . They moved to theGreat Plains and evaded the Spanish for ten years, but in 1706 they were captured and forced back to New Mexico. When the Pueblo Indians were seized, the Spanish commander, Juan Uribarri, wrote that they were dwelling in houses of a permanent type. The Spanish called this settlement El Quartelejo and the region around it was called San Luis Province.No Indians lived in El Quartelejo after 1706, but Spanish and French occasionally occupied the structure as a frontier outpost during the 1700s. However, after 1763 and the French retreat from the area, the pueblo was abandoned. Its walls decayed and the structure was buried by drifting soil.
The pueblo was unknown to American explorers, but in 1898 archeologists rediscovered El Quartelejo. Since then, the site has been excavated to reveal that the pueblo was a seven-room structure, enough to house a small band of Indians. Near the pueblo are traces of shallow ditches extending from the nearby springs. These ditches were most likely used to irrigate crops in nearby fields.
In 1964, the El Quartelejo ruins were designated a
National Historic Landmark , and the area was made into a State Park. Since 2004, theNational Park Service has listed the El Quartelejo site as "at risk" because of ongoing weather-related deterioration to the ruins.References
External links
* [http://scottcity.com/index.asp?DocumentID=201 El Quartelejo Pueblo Ruins]
* [http://abyss.kgs.ku.edu/pls/abyss/pubcat.phd1.View_Photo?f_id=10993&f_hd=Y aerial view of the ruins]
* [http://skyways.lib.ks.us/history/pueblo.html El Quartelejo]
* [http://www.lasr.net/pages/city.php?Scott%20City&KS&El+Quartelejo+Museum&City_ID=KS1018019&Attraction_ID=KS1018019a003&VA=Y El Quartelejo Museum]
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