Romance of the Southwest: A City Different Kind of Chip by Doug Mattson

811 Words2 Pages

The Romance of the Southwest The Southwest is a region known for the unique cultures that it holds. Some may describe it as majestic place with such beautiful historic buildings and cultures. This is just one way to describe this region of world. Early tourism has had such a dramatic outcome for the region. It has become a romantic place for people to settle and to just visit for the weekend. The Southwest has a sense of excitement that comes from within the land, culture, and the people that live there. The history that surrounds the Southwest is not only what you can read in books, there is cultural history that is passed down by mouth and through cultural wardrobes, jewelry, blankets, and other cultural items. In Tourists and Indians in Fred Harvey’s Southwest by Leah Dilworth it states that Fred Harvey Company and AT&SF had created touristic desires of the Southwest, with much focus on the Indians. In the mid 1890’s they began to buy and sell Indian items and designing buildings and hotels with the attractiveness and appeal of the Indian artifacts to bring in the tourism. Both of these companies have used the Indians to enhance the Southwest’s appeal and it worked. When people hear the Southwest the first thing that comes to mind are the Native Americans and their culture that has influenced the region. Tourism in the Southwest has grown greatly since it first appealed to the outside world. The Pueblo people in New Mexico saw numerous amounts of foreigners in their area during the last few years of the nineteenth century. This was also around the time that the U.S. government had taken away the Native people’s water and land, as well as tries to dismantle their economic and cultural dominance that they had (Martinez, 40)... ... middle of paper ... ... they see their ancestry and culture that has been around for centuries. The Southwest is home to many different people and cultures. It has a simple beauty to it and maybe that is what makes people from around the world fall in love with the Southwest. Works Cited Blackdom. 2010. Educational Film. 2). Dilworth, Leah. "Tourists and Indians in Fred Harvey's Southwest." Ed. David M. Wrobel and Partick T. Long. Being Seen Tourism in the American West. Kansas: Univerisity of Kansas, n.d. 142-64. Print. 3). Martinez, Matthew J., and Particia C. Albers. "Imaging and Imagining Pueblo in Northern New Mexcio Tourism." The Framed World: Tourism, Tourists and Photography. By Mike Robinson and David Picard. Farnham, England: Ashgate Pub., 2009. 39-62. Print. 4). Matton, Doug. "A City Different Kind of Chip." The Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe] 7 Nov. 2003: A-1+. Print.

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