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Seton Village, New Mexico

Seton Village
House at Seton Village.jpg
House at Seton Village
Seton Village is located in New Mexico
Seton Village
Seton Village is located in the US
Seton Village
Nearest city Santa Fe, New Mexico
Coordinates 35°35′56″N 105°55′54″W / 35.59889°N 105.93167°W / 35.59889; -105.93167Coordinates: 35°35′56″N 105°55′54″W / 35.59889°N 105.93167°W / 35.59889; -105.93167
Area 43.7 acres (17.7 ha)
Built 1946 (1946)
NRHP Reference # 66000492
NMSRCP # 119
Significant dates
Added to NRHP October 15, 1966
Designated NHLD December 21, 1965
Designated NMSRCP May 18, 1973

Seton Village is a National Historic Landmark District in a rural residential area south of Santa Fe in Santa Fe County, New Mexico. It encompasses a residential settlement and educational facility established in 1930 by Ernest Thompson Seton (1860-1946), an educator and conservationist best known as a founder of the Boy Scouts of America. The district includes the remains of Seton's 32-room home and other residential and educational buildings constructed mostly between 1930 and 1945. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1965.

Seton Village is located about 7 miles (11 km) south of downtown Santa Fe and west of Interstate 25 on County Road 58. The village has a central plaza, around which adobe residences and community buildings. To the east of the plaza stand the remains of Seton's 32-room castle, which burned during restoration in 2005. Distinctive structures in the village include two building that were built around railroad cars that Seton brought to the site. Stripped over their interiors, the two cars were finished plaster on the inside, and had adobe walls built around them. One of these buildings has since had the car removed from its inside.

Seton began designing and building his castle in 1933. The 32-room, 6,900 square foot (640 m2) multi-level building had a flat-roof and rough hewn stone wall exterior. The interior had oak floors and plaster walls with the ceilings supported by log rafters. The Castle was built on one of the highest points on Seton's property, with views over his village and the western landscape.

The Village was home to the Seton Institute, including the Woodcraft League and the College of Indian Wisdom, which provided Woodcraft and Scouting leaders with a variety of training opportunities. The Institute closed at the outbreak of World War II.

At Seton's invitation, Maurice and Marceil Taylor moved their printing equipment to New Mexico in 1938 and set up the Seton Village Press. The Village Press closed in 1943, also because of the war.


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