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Moments of Enchantment brought to you by the New Mexico Office of Cultural Affairs and 770 K .O .B. Radio. Santa Fe, the name itself brings to mind images of Spanish conquistadors, missionaries, and American pioneers. But it was the early Pueblo Indians, who were the first to call the Santa Fe area home. They called their village O Gapogue, more in a moment. We think of Santa Fe's rich history as beginning with Spanish explorations into northern New Mexico in the middle 1500s. The city's formal founding was in 1609, but Santa Fe had a long history before the first Europeans ever arrived. Roaming Indian Hunters camped along the Santa Fe River as long ago as 10 ,000 B .C. And after that, hunters and gatherers inhabited the area during summers, staying in temporary shelters. By the year 600, Indians were living in the Santa Fe area year
-round in underground pit houses, and by the year 1000, Pueblo Indians were living in an above -ground Adobe Village on the site of present -day downtown Santa Fe. The multi -story department buildings probably looked a great deal like the Taos Pueblo, and the village had a plaza in about the same location as today's Santa Fe Plaza. From the village area around the plaza, the O Gapogue community spanned outward for nearly a mile to the west and to the south, as many as 2 ,000 residents lived in the town. For nearly 500 years, O Gapogue prospered until the early 1400s when severe famine and drought drove its residents away. During the next century, when Spanish explorers arrived, they found only Adobe Ruins and pottery fragments. Four centuries of European settlement have wiped out the remains of these early Santa Fe Indians, but their lifeways are still evident in Santa Fe today. To learn more about New Mexico's early history, plan to visit the Palace of the Governor's History Museum
inside of Fe. Moments of Enchantment brought to you by the New Mexico Office of Cultural Affairs. For Moments of Enchantment, I'm David Griffin.
Series
Moments of Enchantment
Episode Number
171
Episode
Ogha Po'oge
Producing Organization
David Griffin, High Desert Communications
Contributing Organization
KANW (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip-1d2f4049226
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Description
Episode Description
Hosted by David Griffin, this episode of Moments of Enchantment highlights Ogha Po'oge, today known as Santa Fe. Ogha Po'oge was occupied for thousands of years by Indigenous people.
Series Description
Moments of Enchantment is a series of radio vignettes that tell the extraordinary stories of the people, places, history, and legends of New Mexico through the millennia. The series was originally created and aired on New Mexico radio stations in the 1980s and 1990s to increase interest in and knowledge of the museums of New Mexico - the largest state-sponsored museum system in the country.
Asset type
Episode
Genres
Miniseries
Media type
Sound
Duration
00:02:27.879
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Credits
Producer: Griffin, David
Producing Organization: David Griffin, High Desert Communications
AAPB Contributor Holdings
KANW
Identifier: cpb-aacip-0773e5bd83d (Filename)
Format: DAT
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Citations
Chicago: “Moments of Enchantment; 171; Ogha Po'oge,” KANW, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed June 10, 2025, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1d2f4049226.
MLA: “Moments of Enchantment; 171; Ogha Po'oge.” KANW, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. June 10, 2025. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1d2f4049226>.
APA: Moments of Enchantment; 171; Ogha Po'oge. Boston, MA: KANW, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1d2f4049226