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Explorers - The Spanish Trail Spanish Explorers
The Spanish Trail is a 1200-mile route between
Santa Fe and Los Angeles serving as a trade passage between the two Mexican provinces of New Mexico and
California. Attempts to cross this treacherous route started as early as 1765, but were not completed
until the winter of 1829-30. During January of 1830, the first mule train to cross from Santa Fe to Los
Angeles passed through the Las Vegas Valley. A Mexican merchant, by the name of Antonio Armijo, and his
entourage of 60 men were the first men to complete the journey. Their mission was to take manufactured
goods from Santa Fe to Los Angeles and return driving herds of mules and horses.

On Armijo's excursion, the path that
led him and his crew from the Colorado River through the valley later became the "Las Vegas Wash."
The desert wash led the travelers into a lush valley that is known today as the city of Las Vegas. The
city obtained its name in the 1800's by Spanish explorers translating into English as "the meadows."
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