Our History

El Palacio is the oldest museum magazine of its kind, first published in 1913 by the Museum of New Mexico. This state museum system was created by an act of the territorial legislature in 1909, three years before New Mexico became a state (January 6, 1912). It was established in the Palace of the Governors with the School of American Archaeology (later the School of American Research) alongside the already existing Historical Society of New Mexico. El Palacio (“the palace”) magazine was first published in November 1913—its name refers to the Museum of New Mexico’s first home.

The Museum of New Mexico was eventually reorganized under the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA), which was established in April 2003 after the governor signed legislation elevating the Office of Cultural Affairs to Cabinet-level status.

In the words of one writer, El Palacio “has appeared over the years in numerous manifestations, from its beginning as a thin pamphlet in the teens to a journal that grew from the ‘50s through the ‘80s to a glossy magazine with color art and (gasp!)

 

1913

Edgar Lee Hewett (1865–1946), who founded the School of American Archaeology in 1907 and the Museum of New Mexico in 1909, founded El Palacio in 1913 because he needed to promote these institutions and their projects.

The first issue of El Palacio was published in November 1913 by the Archaeological Society of New Mexico; it focused on Southwest archaeology and Museum of New Mexico news. Paul A.F. Walter was the inaugural editor and the acting director of the Museum of New Mexico at the time.