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Jemez Valley Public Schools is a public school district headquartered in unincorporated Sandoval County, New Mexico, United States; the facility has a Jemez Pueblo postal address, but it is outside of (north of) the Jemez Pueblo census-designated place.
It seems that a significant part of the Jemez Pueblo population originates from the surviving remnant of the Pecos Pueblo population who fled to Jemez Pueblo in 1838. The Jemez speak a Kiowa–Tanoan language also known as Jemez or Towa. As of the census [9] of 2000, there were 1,953 people, 467 households, and 415 families residing in the CDP.
This is a list of Chapters of the Navajo Nation.The Navajo Nation is divided up geographically into Chapters which are similar in function to municipalities.Chapters are subdivisions of Agencies which are similar in function to counties.
In 1989 the school had a mixing of on-track and remedial students known as the "join-in" program. It also had a "spontaneous speech" program where students give impromptu speeches about Jemez culture. [5] In 1988, the school had dance classes involving dances seen in Broadway theatre and in the Jemez people culture. [4]
Northside of Jemez Pueblo, New Mexico, 1915 Sandoval County has 12 Indian reservations and two joint-use areas lying within its borders. This is the second highest number of reservations of any county in the United States (after San Diego County, California , which has 18 reservations.)
When district enrollment declined heavily in 1984 the school board decided to close a junior high to save money. The district chose to keep the newer school, Cumbres, open and closed Pueblo in the summer of that year. The school district wanted to make a clean break from the past and named the amalgamated school simply "Los Alamos Middle School".
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Church doors, San Ysidro. The village is near the junction of U.S. Highway 550 and New Mexico State Road 4, at the south end of the Jemez Valley.The Jemez River runs through San Ysidro, just north of where the Rio Salado joins the Jemez River.