The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Photograph - Sculptors are John and Ethan Houser. On Saturday, June 2, 2012 the Susan Magoffin Monument was unveiled. The Keystone Heritage Park Board provided a beautiful location for Susan and we feel she would be very happy there.

Area: Upper Valley / Keystone Dam

Source: Jody Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Susan Shelby Magoffin's diary has ben published as. Down the Santa Fe Trail and into Mexico.

Another tale of a woman traveler is in publication of El Paso County Historical Society- Wayne R. Austerman, "The Ordeal of Jane Adeline Wilson," Password, Vol. XXXV, No. 1, El Paso, TX, Spring ,1990,p. 19-25.

March is Women's History Month.

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

An enormous amount of people gathered to protest the celebration of Juan de onate.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian

Numerous individuals, gathered around the monument in commemoration for the famous Juan de Onate. This bronze sculpture is called "Equestrian" and represents the Spanish conquistador Juan de Oñate. It was dedicated on April 21, 2007. It was sculptured by John Sherrill Houser and by his associate sculptor Ethan Taliesin Houser. With 35-foot and 11-tons the statue is the world's largest bronze horseman. Oñate is celebrated as the founder of the first European settlement west of the Mississippi and celebrator of the first American Thanksgiving in 1598 on the Rio Grande. Today, he is remembered for savageries that some scholars dispute. This is why the unveiling of the monument was met with admirers as well as protestors. Especially members of the Acoma Tribe, which is near Gallup, N.M., opposed it. They said Oñate committed many atrocities on Native Americans.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Photo taken near airport El Paso, TX.

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

Former Mayor John Cook at celebration of installation of Juan de Onate sculpture - entrance El Paso International Airport, circa 2005.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Photo of sculpture 2005 taken in El Paso, TX.

Completed Statues - El Paso, Texas

Completed Statues - El Paso, Texas Photographs of completed statues in El Paso, Texas.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Jody Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian

Beginning construction of The Equestrian monument. The Equestrian, stands more than four stories tall and weighs in at 34,000 pounds. Located at the entrance of the El Paso (Texas) International Airport, it is the world's largest equestrian bronze. The statue depicts Don Juan Oñate, whom Houser calls the founder of the Hispanic Southwest, mounted on a rearing Andalusian stallion at the Pass of the North in 1598.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian

Individuals taking photographs of the monument . The Equestrian, stands more than four stories tall and weighs in at 34,000 pounds.Located at the entrance of the El Paso (Texas) International Airport, it is the world's largest equestrian bronze. The statue depicts Don Juan Oñate, whom Houser calls the founder of the Hispanic Southwest, mounted on a rearing Andalusian stallion at the Pass of the North in 1598. http://legacy.lclark.edu/dept/chron/johnhousers08.html

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Despite all controversy this massive piece of art greets visitor to the airport in El Paso, TX.

The Equestrian

Ethan Taliesin Houser, the son of the artist of The Equestrian.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian - El Paso, Texas

John Hauser was born in Cincinnati on 30 January, 1859, the son of John and Anna Schrenk Hauser, both recent immigrants from Germany. With the exception of his many trips to the West and extensive periods of study in Europe, he would remain a life-long resident of the Queen City. He grew up in Over-The-Rhine and received his early education in the Cincinnati Public school system. He studied drawing at the Ohio Mechanics’ Institute, and in 1873 enrolled in the McMicken Art School, studying under Thomas A. Noble. 1880 marked the first of his European study periods, when he traveled to Munich, where he studied under Nicholas Gysis at the Royal Academy of fine Arts. 1880 is also the date of his first documented painting, a portrait of Lord Baltimore. http://www.johnhauserproject.com/biography.php

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Sculpture of Equestrian was installed at entrance airport entrance.

The Equestrain

To the left Ethan Taliesin Houser, and to the Right John Sherrill Houser.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrain

The monument ,beginning to be put into place by construction workers.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrain

John Houser ,Sculptor of the Equestrian; admiring the hooves on the monument.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian

The Equestrian was ten years in the making. In 1992 sculptor John Houser was commissioned by the city of El Paso to create an equestrian monument of Don Juan de Onate, Founder of the Hispanic Southwest and Camino Real in 1598 and who also gave our city its name - El Paso del Norte.

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian

The world's largest bronze equestrian statue was bolted into place on October 25, 2006 at the entrance to El Paso, Texas's international airport. It stands 36 feet tall on an eight-foot base, and is the second-tallest statue in Texas, overshadowed only by a titanic Sam Houston in Huntsville. The statue, first proposed in the mid-1990s, is of a horse-riding Spanish conquistador named Don Juan de Oñate. It initially drew approval from city officials because Oñate was known for celebrating the first Thanksgiving in The New World, near present-day El Paso, a good twenty years before the Pilgrims did the same in New England. http://www.roadsideamerica.com/news/14011

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

The Equestrian

The world's largest bronze equestrian statue was bolted into place on October 23, 2006 at the entrance to El Paso, Texas's international airport. It stands 36 feet tall on an eight-foot base, and is the second-tallest statue in Texas, overshadowed only by a titanic Sam Houston in Huntsville. The statue, first proposed in the mid-1990s, is of a horse-riding Spanish conquistador named Don Juan de Oñate. It initially drew approval from city officials because Oñate was known for celebrating the first Thanksgiving in The New World, near present-day El Paso, a good twenty years before the Pilgrims did the same in New England. Directions: I-10 exit 25, then north on Airway Blvd a little over one mile to El Paso International Airport. The statue stands beside the entry road. http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM7K1B_The_Equestrian_El_Paso_International_Airport

Area: Eastside / El Paso Int'l Airport

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Susan Shelby Magoffin returned to the Santa Fe Trail on Saturday -- 164 years after she left it. About 60 people gathered at Keystone Heritage Park for the unveiling of a larger-than-life bronze statue of Magoffin, the first Anglo-American woman to make the journey from Missouri to El Paso, and from there to Chihuahua and Santa Fe. Magoffin kept an extensive diary of her trip, which was made famous when an account of it was published in 1927. The statue shows her perched on a steamer trunk next to her greyhound, Mr. Ring, bent over and writing in her diary. Sculptor Ethan Houser produced the statue as part of the XII Travelers Memorial of the Southwest -- an effort to commemorate the diversity of the historic Southwest. http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_20770928/magoffin-sculpture-unveiled-at-keystone

Area: Upper Valley / Keystone Dam

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Her diary has been published as Down the Santa Fe Trail and into Mexico.

March is Women's History Month annually in USA. Statues of women still a rarity in El Paso, TX in 2022. Why do you think that is so?

March is Women's History Month.

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Susan Shelby Magoffin returned to the Santa Fe Trail on Saturday -- 164 years after she left it. About 60 people gathered at Keystone Heritage Park for the unveiling of a larger-than-life bronze statue of Magoffin, the first Anglo-American woman to make the journey from Missouri to El Paso, and from there to Chihuahua and Santa Fe. Magoffin kept an extensive diary of her trip, which was made famous when an account of it was published in 1927. The statue shows her perched on a steamer trunk next to her greyhound, Mr. Ring, bent over and writing in her diary. Sculptor Ethan Houser produced the statue as part of the XII Travelers Memorial of the Southwest -- an effort to commemorate the diversity of the historic Southwest. http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_20770928/magoffin-sculpture-unveiled-at-keystone

Area: Upper Valley / Keystone Dam

Source: Jody Polk Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

March is Women's History Month annually in USA. Statues of real women are rarity? Why do you think that is so even in the year 2022?

More info available on Wikipedia.

March is Women's History Month.

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Information on "Down The Santa Fe Trail Into Mexico," " Twelve Traveler's and Tom Lea," and "Susan Magoffin At Keystone Heritage Park."

Area: Upper Valley / Keystone Dam

Source: Jody Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Susan Magoffin - History - El Paso, Texas

History of Susan Shelby Magoffin who arrived in El Paso del Norte on February 15, 1847. She recorded her experiences in a diary – Down the Santa Fe Trail and Into Mexico: The Diary of Susan Shelby Magoffin, 1846-1847 (1926) – which has been used extensively as a source for that period in history.

Area: Upper Valley / Keystone Dam

Source: Jody Schwartz

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

"March is Women's History Month. Statue of her by Houser is in El Paso, TX." - Eva Ross

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Northwest services center

Northwest services center in 4096 doniphan

Desert Botanical Garden

Desert Botanical Garden in west el paso on doniphan

EPIDS fine arts

EPIDS fine arts 4864 Doniphan

Amphitheatre

Amphitheatre at Keystone Park in Upper Valley, April 2013.

Susan Magoffin - Upper Valley - El Paso, Texas

Sculpture of Susan Magoffin by John Hauser in Keystone Park in ...

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Susan Shelby Magoffin returned to the Santa Fe Trail on Saturday ...

Keystone Heritage Park 2005

El Paso Desert Botanical Garden at Keystone Heritage Park

Flood 2006 Keystone Dam

The Keystone Dam Retention Basin during Flood 2006. It captured ...

Flood 2006 Keystone Dam

The Keystone Dam retention basin during the flood event of ...

San Judas Tadeo Parish - 1993

San Judas Tadeo Parish - Dedication with Bishop Reymundo Pena. ...

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Photograph - Sculptors are John and Ethan Houser. On Saturday, ...

Susan Shelby Magoffin - El Paso, Texas

Information on "Down The Santa Fe Trail Into Mexico," " Twelve ...

Susan Magoffin - History - El Paso, Texas

History of Susan Shelby Magoffin who arrived in El Paso del ...

home.search_collection