(Photos/San Miguel Chapel) |
Masses offered at the chapel are a Latin Mass at 3 p.m. and an ordinary form English Mass at 5 p.m. on Sundays.
Photos: Exterior (top) and interior (below) of San Miguel Chapel.
Why to go: The earliest record of the existence of San Miguel Chapel is from 1628, and it was built sometime before that year. The parish website says oral history says it was built around 1610. A fire in 1680 destroyed the first building, and it has been rebuilt and restored several times over the past 400 years.
The parish was established as the “Hermita de San Miguel,” and was built on the site of an ancient kiva — a gathering place — of the Analco Indians. Tlaxcalan (Tas-cal’-en) Indians, who are believed to have built the church, came to New Mexico from old Mexico in 1598 with the Spanish. At that time, the parish served a small group of Tlaxcalan Indians, laborers, and Spanish soldiers who lived in the area on the south side of the Santa Fe River.
The wooden altar screen, or reredos, at the front of the chapel is one of the oldest in New Mexico. An inscription dates the screen to 1798. Credit for the work is given to “Laguna Santero,” an anonymous artist who was active and influential in New Mexico between 1796 and 1808.
Hours: The chapel is open before and between Sunday Masses and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
Accessibility: The chapel is at ground-level, so it shouldn’t be too difficult for anyone to enter.
(Grand) Kid friendly: All ages are welcome.
Info: Address — San Miguel Chapel of Santa Fe, 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87501
Phone — 505-983-3974
Website — http://sanmiguelchapel.org/
— Sharon Boehlefeld compiled this story
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