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Our Mission
Our mission is to promote and
develop the history and character of the village of Corrales
through a yearly educational and recreational event that
showcases the local agriculture, merchants, artwork,
performing arts and historic culture. We
support organizations and activities meeting the
agricultural, civic and social needs of the community of
Corrales.
Organization
The Corrales Harvest Festival is
organized and managed by the Kiwanis Club of Corrales
Foundation, Inc., a non-profit corporation organized under
the laws of the state of New Mexico. Board and
Committee members serve without compensation of any kind.
Event Overview
The Corrales Harvest Festival is a two
day event that takes place each year throughout the village
of Corrales during the last weekend in September. The
Festival had been held continuously since 1986.
Traffic through Corrales is restricted during the event
to provide and safe and enjoyable experience for our guests.
Parking
Corrales is a small village with many intersecting small
roads which do not allow parking. Parking areas provided at
the North and South ends of the village, where hay rides
(“Corrales Rapid Transit”) transport Festival attendees to
all venues. Please adhere to the event signs and use the
designated parking areas. This helps us provide a safe and
pleasant experience for all.
About Corrales
The Village of Corrales is a small, treasured oasis
located within a large, fast-growing metropolitan area. The
village is bordered on the east by the Rio Grande and,
across the river, by the Sandia Indian Reservation. To the
south is the City of Albuquerque while to the west and north
is the City of Rio Rancho. The greater metropolitan area
numbers well over a half million people, but Corrales, about
9,000 in population, aggressively strives to retain a rural
lifestyle. Prehistoric sites indicate the Corrales Valley
has been occupied as early as 500 A.D. when the ancestors of
the present-day Indian Pueblos derived sustenance from the
fertile valley.
Conquistadors came to the region in
1540. In the 1600s, the vicinity may have been a
stopping spot for Spanish soldiers as they traveled the
Camino Real between Santa Fe and Mexico. In 1710, a large
land grant was established in the vicinity of Alameda and
southern Corrales. In 1712, the King of Spain awarded the
Alameda land grant to F. Montes Vigil for his part as a
soldier of the campaign. Vigil later sold the land grant to
Captain Juan Gonzales Bas (Alcalde Mayor of
Albuquerque), and many Gonzales heirs still live in the
village.
By 1776, two settlements were thriving –
Los Corrales de Alameda and Corrales Alto. A few adobe or
terrone (sod) structures from this time period still exist.
The village was a local agricultural center throughout the
18th and 19th centuries, and remains partially agricultural
today. Several buildings and homes in Corrales date to
early to mid 1800s. The Casa San Ysidro on Old Church Road
is the best preserved example of an 18th to 19th century
Spanish colonial rancho in the Albuquerque area. Following
the completion of the Santa Fe Railroad in the mid 1900s,
many settlers from all over the United States moved to New
Mexico. In 1848, New Mexico became a US Territory.
Today, Corrales is distinguished by its broad green
pastures and orchards, its rich historic and artistic
character, and of course the sounds and scents of roosters,
cows, horses and sheep. To cross the borders into
Corrales is to step into another time and place where the
stresses of twenty-first century life give way to the grace
and pace of another era.
The Village was
incorporated September 17, 1971. However, the southern
portion of the incorporated area was still located in
Bernalillo County. As of January 1, 2005, all of the
incorporated area is located in Sandoval County.
The
Corrales Harvest Festival celebrates the history and
people that have made Corrales the charming village that it
is today. It began in 1985 with hayrides during the fall
harvest. Over the years, other farms, businesses and
restaurants began to participate, enlarging the festival
from 800 to over 10,000 visitors. |