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The Camino Real

El Paso, El Paso County

Marker Text

For more than 200 years the Camino Real, or Royal Road, was the major route for transporting commercial goods from Mexico City and Chihuahua to Santa Fe and Taos. First traveled by Juan de Onate during his 1598 expedition to New Mexico, the Camino Real followed the San Elizario, Socorro, and Ysleta Road, crossed the Rio Grande west of present downtown El Paso, and continued north into New Mexico. When the Rio Grande was established as the U.S. - Mexico boundary in 1848, this section of the old Camino Real became part of the United States. (1983)

Marker Details

Address 119 S. Old Pueblo Road
Location Description Installed near Tigua Arts and Crafts Center in 1983. One of five markers by this title in El Paso County. Marker reported missing Jan. 2007. Map dot approximate.
Marker # 645
Dedicated 1983
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code Exploration and expeditions; roads
Latitude, Longitude 31.690445, -106.326223

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