Nogales Cliff House in Lindrith, New Mexico

Tag : Atlas Obscura

Nogales cliff dwelling from further below.

New Mexico has 19 official Pueblo tribes. These groups have existed for hundreds of years, surviving war, disease, and colonization. Many other unfortunate indigenous groups did not survive contact with settlers. In a remote corner of northern New Mexico, one can find the legacy of one such group.

The Nogales Cliff House, located on land belonging to the Forest Service, is a pueblo ruin built in the Rosa style between 1000 and 1300. It is believed to be one of the last remnants of the Gallina people. This group, while lending its name to a nearby village and several physical landforms, does not have any living members to tell its story. A tale passed down in the oral tradition from the Jemez Puebloans, however, may clear things up.

As the story goes, the ancestors of the Jemez people were searching for new places to live. The Jemez scouts came across the Gallina, who initially treated them well. Something caused the Gallina to turn on the Jemez visitors, who were then killed by their hosts. Unfortunately for the Gallina, the main group of Jemez came along and learned the fate of their scouts. The story goes that the entire tribe was wiped out in retribution. There is physical evidence to support this theory—most notably the fact that nearly every Gallina skeleton yet discovered died violently. Unfortunately, we will never know for sure what happened. Their bones, pottery shards, and the crumbling walls of their homes are all that is left.