Located in New Mexico's Taos County, Taos was incorporated in 1934, and takes its name after the Native American village, Taos Pueblo. Alternately referred to the Place Of Red Willows, it boasts a number of buildings that feature on the National Register of Historic Places, such as the the Mabel Dodge Luhan House, the Kit Carson House and the Ernest L. Blumenschein House. Taos featured on an episode of the X-Files owing to the eerie Taos Hum, which is a mysterious low-frequency noise that only some people can hear.
Red River is a resort town in Taos County that was named after a stream that flowed all year round. The town had its beginnings in 1870 when immigrants were attracted to the gold rush eventually leading to the set up of a prosperous town whose economy depended on copper, gold and silver. Today this town beckons to visitors summer and winter offering a perennial range of activities like biking, swimming, skiing, fishing, horseback riding, snowboarding etc.
Located in New Mexico's Taos County, Taos was incorporated in 1934, and takes its name after the Native American village, Taos Pueblo. Alternately referred to the Place Of Red Willows, it boasts a number of buildings that feature on the National Register of Historic Places, such as the the Mabel Dodge Luhan House, the Kit Carson House and the Ernest L. Blumenschein House. Taos featured on an episode of the X-Files owing to the eerie Taos Hum, which is a mysterious low-frequency noise that only some people can hear.
Red River is a resort town in Taos County that was named after a stream that flowed all year round. The town had its beginnings in 1870 when immigrants were attracted to the gold rush eventually leading to the set up of a prosperous town whose economy depended on copper, gold and silver. Today this town beckons to visitors summer and winter offering a perennial range of activities like biking, swimming, skiing, fishing, horseback riding, snowboarding etc.