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 For
more than three centuries – from the late 1100s to 1580 – Puye
Cliffs was home to 1500 Pueblo Indians who lived, farmed and hunted
game there. In the late 1500s, Puye Cliffs’ inhabitants moved
into the Rio Grande River valley, likely due to drought that caused
springs to dry up and crops to fail. Puye Cliffs’ inhabitants
are ancestors of the present-day Santa Clara people, who now live
at Santa Clara Pueblo, ten miles east of Puye.
Puye Cliffs consists of two levels of cliff dwellings cut into the
cliff face, as well as dwellings on the mesa top. The first level
is over one mile long and runs the entire length of the base of the
mesa. The second level is about 2,100 feet long. Stairways and paths
were cut in the face of the rock to connect the two levels and to
allow people to climb to the top of the mesa. Dwellings on the mesa
top are examples of Pueblo architecture and were part of a single,
multi-storied complex built around a large, central plaza. The complex
is known as the Community House or Great House. While the actual
number of rooms is unknown, the south part of the complex had 173
rooms on the ground floor, with multiple stories in various places,
similar to modern-day Taos Pueblo.
The largest of all settlements in the Pajarito
Plateau, Puye Cliffs was excavated in the summer of 1907 by Edgar
Hewitt, in cooperation with the Southwest Society of the Archeological
Institute of America. It was the first of the ancient Pueblos of
the Rio Grande Valley to be systematically excavated, and was named
a National Historic Landmark in 1966.

Geologically, the Pajarito Plateau was formed from successive layers
of basalt and volcanic tuff created by eruptions of the Jemez Caldera
volcano. Over time, erosion by rain, snow, wind and cycles of freezing
and thawing carved through the tuff to form sheer cliffs that border
the canyons of the Jemez Mountains. The weathering of the cliffs
created a somewhat hard surface layer that could be easily broken,
with a soft and crumbly underlying tuff that could be dug away
by stone tools.
Beginning in the
late 1100s, the upland mesas flanking the east side of the Jemez
Mountains were settled by people of the Anasazi Culture. At first
there were hundreds of individual, family-size dwellings, but
by A.D. 1300, the people were converging in relatively few principal
villages which grew to considerable size. Such villages include
Puye, Tsankawi, Tyuonyi, Otowi, Shufinne, and Tsirege. The latter
village, Tsirege, means "little bird" in
the Tewa language. Archaeologist Edgar L. Hewett adopted the
name, but translated it into Spanish - Pajarito - and applied
it as a general name for the great area of prehistoric settlement
around the eastern flanks of the Jemez Mountains, thus the Pajarito
Plateau. All settlements of the Pajarito Plateau contain cliff
dwellings and Great Houses, or large, multi-storied dwellings
arranged around central plazas. With 1500 inhabitants at the
height of its occupation, Puye Cliffs is the largest of all settlements
in the Pajarito Plateau.
 Harvey Houses were built by the legendary Fred Harvey Company
in the late 1800s as amenities for tourists traveling to the Southwest
by railroad, and later, and passenger car. The Harvey House at
Puye Cliffs is the only Harvey House built on an Indian reservation.
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