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Show 217 Kolhu/wala:wa pilgrimage, while the road approximates today's Highway 666. An 1875 survey of the Arizona/New Mexico territorial line located the Camp Apache road where it crossed the line. 218 Site #2A locates the Dan Dubois cabin along the trail and route. By the 1880s Dubois had moved and established a new ranch, well away from the Kolhu/wala:wa route, between Manuelito and Zuni. Perhaps the burning of his fence in 1880 and the Zunis militant defense of their rights to the area along the trail had a bearing on his decision to move. The Zunis told Wheeler in 1873 that they had always lived in the area, and had not only occupied a ruin at Ojo Benado, but one at Tule Spring (Lyman Lake), as well. The Zunis' Governor indicated to the surveyors that the Zunis were extremely unhappy that 217. Wheeler, George M. Report upon United States Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian, Vol. I-Geographical Report, Washington, GPO, 1889, pp. 60-62. Wheeler, George M. "Parts of Eastern Arizona and Western New Mexico Atlas Sheet No. 76," 1878. 218. Robbins, Chandler Field Notes of the Survey and Establishment of the Western Boundary of New Mexico, 1875, New Mexico State Records Center and Archives, Santa Fe, New Mexico, who also locates Deer Spring, the site of the Dubois homestead. Stauber, Ronald L. "Notations from Surveyors' Notebooks," Map #42. - 143 - |