San Diego Mountain (New Mexico)
History
San Diego Mountain on the east bank of the Rio Grande, marked the location of the Paraje de San Diego one of the Spanish campsites along the El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, in the Jornada del Muerto. The paraje was located just north of the mountain and was the last place to obtain water from the Rio Grande, half a league to the west, until the road reached the river again at Paraje de Fray Cristóbal 30 leagues from Paraje de San Diego.
San Diego Mountain later marked the location of the San Diego Crossing and the gap south of it, where the cutoff from the El Camino Real, crossed the Rio Grande to its junction with Cooke's Wagon Road. This junction was on the bluffs on the west bank overlooking the location where the Rio Grande made a great bend where it turned southeastward before turning south again just above the San Diego Crossing. Cooke's last camp before leaving the Rio Grande, was located across the river from "San Diego". Cooke's camp at the junction was near the site of Camp Garland and still later Fort Thorn.
References
- ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: San Diego Mountain
- ^ Bishop Tamaron’s Visitation to New Mexico, 1760 from newmexicohistory.org accessed January 10, 2017
- ^ Philip St. George Cooke, The Conquest of New Mexico and California, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1878, p.108 "... mountains rising abruptly from the eastern bank; but an apparently complete gap was observed, which was thought to be where the Jornada road approaches within four or five miles of the river; if so, it is where a future road should cross and fall into the one now being made."