"Snow Lays on the Mountain" by NPS Photo / Katy Hooper , public domain
CoronadoBrochure |
Official Brochure of Coronado National Memorial (NMEM) in Arizona. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Coronado
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Memorial
Arizona
Tracking the Coronado Expedition
Vista from Montezuma Pass, looking east
Coronado National Memorial commemorates
and interprets the Coronado expedition and
the cultural conflict and exchange between
indigenous peoples and Spaniards during the
1500s. The area offers panoramic
views of the US-Mexico border
and San Pedro River Valley—
Coronado’s probable route.
drive across San Rafael Valley and over the
Patagonia Mountains to Nogales. The visitor
center (elevation 5,230 feet) has a picnic area
and nature trail. Camping is prohibited in the
park but available in Coronado National
Forest or at Parker Canyon Lake, 18 miles
west in the Canelo Hills.
Plants The park is a
cultural area in a natural
setting of 4,750 acres of
oak woodlands in southeast Arizona at the southern end of the Huachuca
(wha-CHOO-ka) Mountains.
The park preserves plants and
© DAVE BLY
animals that are native to the
Southwest and typical of “sky islands”
(mountains set above arid valleys). Desert
grasses and shrubs grow at low elevations
with honey mesquite and desert willow along
short-lived drainages. Oak, pinyon pine, and
alligator juniper forests dominate the upper
canyon with Arizona sycamore and walnut
along drainages. Other common plants are
manzanita with its distinctive red bark, agave
(century plant), Schott’s yucca, sacahuista
(beargrass), and sotol (desert spoon). Cacti include pincushion, rainbow, and prickly pear.
Many plants, like prickly pear pads, pine nuts,
manzanita berries, agave hearts, and yucca
seeds, provide important food for wildlife.
Animals Commonly seen mammals at the
park include gray fox (above), white-tailed
deer, peccary (javelina), coatimundi with its
long tail, and coyote. Also found here, but
more elusive, are bobcat, black bear, and
mountain lion. Well-known for rich birdlife,
the park features over 140 recorded species,
including 50 resident birds with different
species sighted each season. Often seen are
acorn woodpecker, Mexican jay, Montezuma
quail, spotted towhee, white-winged dove,
rufous-crowned sparrow, painted redstart,
and many species of hummingbirds.
Driving and Hiking Routes At 6,575 feet,
Montezuma Pass has sweeping views of
San Pedro River Valley to the east and
San Rafael Valley to the west. Caution!
Vehicles over 24 feet are prohibited on
the road up to the pass due to steep
grades and tight switchbacks. Atop the
pass is parking for hikers using park
trails and connecting US Forest Service
trails in the Huachuca Mountains. Cave
Trail leads to the 600 foot long Coronado Cave. The entrance and cave are un
improved; access may be difficult. Hike the
one-mile roundtrip path to explore this natural limestone feature. Windmill Trail follows
an old two-track ranch road through the
grasslands
and visits an
historic windmill and corral.
This two-mile
roundtrip trail
is an excellent
winter birding
path. Yaqui
Ridge Trail is
the southern
Cave
end of the 790- Coronado
© JIM SHULTZ
mile Arizona Trail
that crosses the state from Mexico to Utah.
At vistas along the trails, you can look toward
the horizon and see country through which
Coronado led his soldiers and missionaries.
Getting Here Take AZ 90 off I-10. Drive 25
miles south to Sierra Vista, then take AZ 92
16 miles to S. Coronado Memorial Dr. (joins
AZ 92, 20 miles west of Bisbee). Near the park
this road becomes E. Montezuma Canyon Rd.,
which is paved for a mile west of the visitor
center then becomes a dirt-and-gravel mountain road up to Montezuma Pass. From there
a dirt road continues west—a slow, scenic
• Crest Trail (distance
not labeled on map).
• Parker Canyon Lake is
west 18 miles/33 kilometers.
• Nogales is west 55
miles/86 kilometers.
© DAVE BLY
Weather Carry plenty of water when hiking.
Protect yourself from the sun. Summers are
hot with daytime temperatures in the 90s°F
and low humidity. Winter temperatures often
fall below freezing at night with daytime
highs of 40–60°F. The rainy season runs late
June to early September. Severe thunderstorms, lightning, and flash floods often
accompany rain. Precipitation averages 20
inches a year.
Regulations Federal law protects all plants
and animals in the park; do not gather, disturb, or destroy them. Hunting and wood
gathering are prohibited. Pets are prohibited
on all trails except Crest Trail (begins north
of the Montezuma Pass parking area). For
firearms regulations check the park website.
Safety Smuggling and/or illegal entry are
common this close to the US-Mexico border.
Be aware of your surroundings at all times.
Do not travel alone in remote areas. Report
suspicious behavior to a park ranger or
border patrol agent at 877-872-7435.
More Information
Coronado National Memorial is one of
over 400 parks in the National Park System.
To learn more, visit www.nps.gov.
Coronado National Memorial
4101 E. Montezuma Canyon Rd.
Hereford, AZ 85615-9376
520-366-5515
www.nps.gov/coro
IGPO: 2019—398-407/31019 Last updated 2017
Elevations
• Bob Thompson Peak is
7,325 feet/2,233 meters.
Trail distances (oneway)
• Arizona Trail (distance
not labeled on map).
• Montezuma Peak is
7,676 feet/2,341 meters.
• Montezuma Pass
Overlook is 6,575
feet/2,005 meters.
• Coronado Peak Trail
is 0.4 mile/0.7 kilometer.
• Coronado Cave is
5,700 feet/1,737 meters.
• Cave Trail is 0.5
mile/0.8 kilometer.
• Visitor center is 5,230
feet/1,594 meters.
• Joe’s Canyon Trail is
3.1 miles/5 kilometers.
• Coronado Peak is
6,864 feet/2,092 meters.
• Yaqui Ridge Trail is 1
mile/1.6 kilometers (to
the U S-Mexico border).
East Montezuma Canyon Road is paved, while
Forest Road 61 is unpaved. A paved road from
the visitor center / park headquarters area leads
to a picnic area in Montezuma Canyon.
• Windmill Trail is
1 mile/1.6 kilometers.
• Sierra Vista is east 21
miles/34 kilometers.
The visitor center to:
• Bisbee is east 26
miles/42 kilometers.
The Coronado Expedition and the ”Seven Cities of Cíbola”
Coronado National Memorial com
memorates the first major European
expedition into the Southwest.
The park lies in sight of the San
Pedro River Valley, through which
the Coronado expedition first
E
entered today’s United States in
search of the Seven Cities of Cíbola.
Above: Expeditionaries leave Mexico
City in November 1539 to join the
Coronado expedition at Compostela,
Mexico. NPS / NEVIN KEMPTHORNE
arly in the 1500s Spain established a colonial empire
in the Americas. Gold from Peru to Mexico (New Spain)
poured into Spain’s treasury, and new lands opened for
settlement. Beyond the frontier a few hundred miles north of
Mexico City lay lands unknown to the Spaniards. Tales of riches
there had ignited Spanish imaginations since Spain’s arrival in
the Americas, luring explorers like Hernán Cortés (Mexico,
1519), Pánfilo de Narváez (Florida, 1528), and Francisco Pizarro
(Peru, 1531). A few successes kept alive the dream that great
wealth was within reach, but many Spanish expeditions failed.
purpose was missionary, not conquest. The expedition left
Compostela on February 23, 1540, with over a thousand native
allies, 350 Spaniards, many servants and enslaved people, and
several priests, including Fray Marcos. Supplies went north by
ship under Captain Hernando de Alarcón, but Alarcón and the
supplies failed to reach Coronado. After arriving at Culiacán,
Coronado and 100 soldiers marched ahead of the slower main
army. On July 7, 1540, Coronado’s group arrived at the pueblo
Háwikuh—the first of the Cities of Cíbola. Instead of a golden
city, they found a crowded, rock-masonry village. After brief,
unsuccessful negotiations the Spaniards attacked and forced
the Zuni who lived there to leave. The pueblo, stocked with
food, became Coronado’s headquarters until November 1540.
Fray Marcos, whose tales had misleadingly raised hopes of
fortune, was sent back to Mexico City amid rising resentment.
Signature of Francisco
Vásquez de Coronado
At Háwikuh Coronado sent his captains to scout the region.
Don Pedro de Tovar went to Hopi villages in today’s north
eastern Arizona. Garcia López de Cárdenas reached the Grand
Canyon of the Colorado. Hernando de Alvarado went east
past Acoma and Tiguex pueblos to Cicuyé (Pecos) pueblo on
the upper Pecos River. Here, the Spaniards encountered a
Plains Indian they nicknamed the Turk “because he looked like
one.” The Turk astounded them with tales of a rich land to the
east—Quivira—that renewed the Spaniards’ hopes of wealth.
But exploration had to wait until spring. The army wintered at
Tiguex, where the Indians, at first friendly, grew hostile over
the Spaniards’ violations of hospitality and friendship. Battles
followed; the Spaniards killed residents of one pueblo and
forced others to abandon several pueblos.
COURTESY THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
In 1536 the four survivors of the shipwrecked Narváez expedi
tion, which included Cabeza de Vaca and enslaved African
Estéban de Dorantes, arrived in Mexico City. After eight years
of wandering in what is today Texas and northern Mexico,
they spoke of “large cities, with streets lined with goldsmith
shops, houses of many stories, and doorways studded with
emeralds and turquoise!” Eager to know if these stories were
true, the viceroy of New Spain Antonio de Mendoza sent Fray
Marcos de Niza to explore the “Tierra Nueva” (New Land) in
1539. As a scout for Fray Marcos’s party, Estéban learned many
languages and was able to relay information to Fray Marcos
about the people he would encounter. Estéban is known as
the first person of African descent to visit this part of the
world and was among the first from the Spanish explorations
to make contact with these early peoples of America’s South
west. Though Fray Marcos returned with garbled, exaggerated
reports, Mendoza believed he spoke the truth and chose
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado to lead an expedition to the
fabled “Seven Cities of Cíbola.”
Coronado had come to New Spain in 1535. His friendship with
Mendoza and successful missions had won him prominence
on the Mexico City council and, since 1538, as governor of the
frontier province New Galicia. On January 6, 1540, Mendoza
commissioned Coronado to be expedition commander and
captain-general of all the lands he might discover and claim
for king and country. Mendoza counseled Coronado that the
O
n April 23, 1541, the army, guided by the Turk, set out
for Quivira. After 40 days Coronado sent most of the
men back to Tiguex then pressed on with 30 others.
At Quivira they were again disillusioned—the villages were
grass houses. After admitting the Quivira story was a Pueblo
Indian plot to lure them onto the plains to die of starvation,
the Turk was killed. Dreams of fame and fortune shattered,
Coronado returned to Mexico City in spring 1542. Though
discredited, he resumed governorship of New Galicia. He
was called to account for his cruelty toward the American
Indians during the expedition, but his name was eventually
cleared. He died in 1554 at age 42. Rather than gold, the
expedition brought back knowledge of the northern lands
and its peoples and put further colonization within reach.
• the supposed location
of Quivira.
• Hopi,
Historic pueblos in
clude:
• Háwikuh,
• Taos,
• Tiguex,
• Cicuyé, and
• Acoma,
Alarcón and his supply ships
traveled along the Gulf of
California, reaching Yuma in
August 1540.
Coronado departed north from Compostela in
February 1540. Traveling along the Rio Sonora,
San Pedro, and Zuni rivers, he reached Háwi
kuh in July 1540. He wintered at Tiguex in
1540 to 1541. His route across the plains is un
certain. He reached the supposed location of
Quivira in spring 1541.
While Coronado was in what
is now Kansas, Hernán de
Soto’s expedition was a few
hundred miles to the south
east in present-day Arkansas,
Louisiana, and Texas.