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$14.95 from Amazon
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PC, Mac,
etc.)
also available from
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or in
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and on
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ROSWELL HOME PAGE
About Roswell
The Real Roswell Roswell History
1947 UFO Crash
The Events The Locations UFO Museum UFO Festival Souvenirs The Song
Characters, Events
(coming soon)
Tour Roswell
Highlights N of Courthouse Courthouse, Pioneer Plaza S of Courthouse Historic District NMMI Spring River Bike Trail Hondo River, Chihuahuita RIAC NE Roswell SE Roswell SW Roswell NW Roswell Roswell with Children Travel Updates
About the Book
Roswell, Your Travel Guide Table of Contents Buy the Book Media Kit
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What is the Real Roswell?
— A town of 50,000 (we keep claiming in spite of what the Census Bureau
says).
— Anglos (meaning Caucasians) with Southern manners, conservative ideas, and a hint of Western individualism.
— Hispanics who are mostly just a few generations removed from Mexico,
unlike those northern New Mexicans whose ancestors arrived from Spain in
the 1600s.
— A scattering of African-Americans, Asians, and maybe an occasional
Navajo or Mescalero Apache, but more likely a one-sixteenth Cherokee who
drifted west from Oklahoma.
— A sprinkling of “arty” types, some UFO nuts, an occasional real
cowboy, and a good chunk of Midwestern retirees who enjoy the low cost
of living while playing golf all winter.
— An economy based on ranching and farming, oil and gas, and now
tourism; plus
enough medical, educational, professional, and business people to keep
the place going, as the closest real city is two hundred miles in any
direction.
In some ways Roswell hasn’t changed much since Sheriff Pat Garrett
kept—or didn’t keep—the peace. Someone said, “They call it the Land of
Mańana, but that really overstates the pace of life here.” You won’t
find much excitement in Roswell, except of course when it rains and
there’s water in the rivers—although it is usually deeper in the
streets—or when all those UFO folks arrive every year in early July for
the Festival.
Anyway, Roswell is a good place to raise a family: wholesome and safe,
except for the occasional tornado or drive-by shooting. Roswell calls
itself “the Pearl of the Pecos” and a pretty smart fellow named Will
Rogers called it “the prettiest little town in the West.”
Roswell isn’t on the way to anywhere, except maybe Carlsbad Caverns if
you’re driving the Mother Road—what’s left of Route 66—or if you are
headed west from Texas to the skiing or horse racing in Ruidoso. You
really have to want to be here to get here!
Roswell is a small (some say “backward”) town in the middle of nowhere.
It isn’t a resort destination. If you can accept Roswell for what it is,
you will be pleased with your stay, and maybe even learn a few things.
Enjoy this outpost in the Land of Enchantment: seek out Roswell’s little
pleasures, track down its footnotes to history, discover its quirks—like
something that happened that July 1947.
To learn more about the people and culture of Roswell . . .
BUY the paperback version
(single copies or in bulk) of Lynn Michelsohn's guidebook
Roswell,
Your Travel Guide to the UFO Capital of the World!
also $9.99 on
Kindle
(readable on Pad, PC, Mac, iPhone, Blackberry, Android, etc.),
and available from other online booksellers, through your local
bookstore, or on
NOOK.
Also available . . .
Roswell, NM: The Ten Best FREE Things To Do (Plus a Few More)
Your Brief Travel Guide to Fun in the UFO Capital of the World!
$2.99 on
Kindle , also on
NOOK
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© 2008 -2011
by Cleanan Press, Inc.
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