Every Type o’ Hotel » New Mexico

Looking for hotels Santa Fae, New Mexico? (Actually spelled “Santa Fe”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Santa Fe hotels:

Click here for a list of Santa Fe hotels

Here is some Santa Fe info from the wiki:

Santa Fe is the capital of the state of New Mexico. It is the fourth-largest city in the state and is the seat of Santa Fe County. Santa Fe had a population of 62,203 at the April 1, 2000 census; the estimate for July 1, 2006, is 72,056. It is the principal city of the Santa Fe, New Mexico Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses all of Santa Fe County and is part of the larger Santa Fe-Española Combined Statistical Area.

Looking for hotels Rosswell, New Mexico? (Actually spelled “Roswell”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Roswell hotels:

Click here for a list of Roswell hotels

Here is some Roswell info from the wiki:

Roswell is a city in Chaves County in the southeastern quarter of the state of New Mexico, USA. It is the county seat of Chaves County. As of the 2005 census estimate, the population was 45,199, making it New Mexico’s fifth largest city. It is a center for irrigation farming, dairying, ranching, manufacturing, distribution, and petroleum production. It is also the home of New Mexico Military Institute (NMMI), founded in 1891. Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge is located a few miles northeast of the city on the Pecos River.

Inside the Roswell UFO MuseumIn the 1930s, Roswell was a site for much of Robert Goddard’s early rocketry work. It is also the birthplace of actress Demi Moore, musician John Denver, and Hall of Fame jockey Mike E. Smith. A Golf Hall of Famer, Nancy Lopez, was reared in Roswell (though born in California). A Hall of Famer astronaut, sixth man on the moon Edgar Mitchell, attended school in Roswell. Roger Staubach (later of the Dallas Cowboys) played football at NMMI, and Lewis Lloyd (later of the Houston Rockets) played basketball there. The professional baseball record for home runs in a season, 72, was set in 1954 by Joe Bauman of the Roswell Rockets, who took up permanent residence there (the record was broken in 2001 by Barry Bonds).

Roswell is most popularly known for having its name attached to what is now called the 1947 Roswell UFO incident, even though the actual crash site was some seventy-five miles from Roswell and closer to Corona. However, the investigation and debris recovery was handled by the local Roswell Army Air Field.

In 2002, Roswell was named one of the All-American cities.

Looking for hotels Los Cruces, New Mexico? (Actually spelled “Las Cruces”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Las Cruces hotels:

Click here for a list of Las Cruces hotels

Here is some Las Cruces info from the wiki:

Las Cruces is a city in Doña Ana County, New Mexico, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 74,267. [1] The population was 89,722 as of the 2007 census estimate, [1] making it the second largest city in the state. Las Cruces is the center of an agricultural region irrigated by the Rio Grande, which flows just west of the city. The city of Las Cruces bisects the fertile Mesilla Valley, the flood plain of the Rio Grande which extends from Hatch, New Mexico to the west side of El Paso, Texas. Las Cruces is also the home of New Mexico State University. NMSU is New Mexico’s only land grant university, citing more than 23,000 graduate and undergraduate students on the main campus and four branch campuses. The Organ Mountains are to the east of the city. Las Cruces has a council-manager form of government. It is the county seat of Doña Ana County.

Looking for hotels Carlbad, New Mexico? (Actually spelled “Carlsbad”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Carlsbad hotels:

Click here for a list of Carlsbad hotels

Here is some Carlsbad info from the wiki:

Carlsbad is a city in and the county seat of Eddy County, New Mexico, in the United States.[1] As of the 2000 census, the city population was 27,463. Carlsbad is the center of the designated micropolitan area of Carlsbad-Artesia, which has a total population of 51,658.

Carlsbad is located in the Chihuahuan Desert and the Pecos River Valley at an elevation of 3,295 feet. Carlsbad Caverns National Park is located eighteen miles southwest of the city, with Guadalupe Mountains National Park lying forty miles further southwest across the Texas border. There are also three man-made lakes within fifty miles of the city, including Lake Carlsbad.

Looking for hotels Albaquerque, New Mexico? (Actually spelled “Albuquerque”…) You’ve found the right place. Just click on the following hotels list link for the guaranteed lowest price anywhere on some great Albuquerque hotels:

Click here for a list of Albuquerque hotels

Here is some Albuquerque info from the wiki:

Albuquerque; known as Bee’eldííldahsinil in Navajo is the largest city in the state of New Mexico, United States. It is the county seat of Bernalillo County and is situated in the central part of the state, straddling the Rio Grande. The city population was 518,271 as of July 1, 2007 U.S. census estimates [1] and ranks as the 34th-largest city in the U.S. As of June 2007, the city was the 5th fastest growing in America.[1] With a metropolitan population of 835,120 as of July 1, 2007,[2] Albuquerque is the 60th-largest United States metropolitan area. The Albuquerque MSA population includes the city of Rio Rancho, one of the fastest growing cities in the United States, and a hub for many master-planned communities that are expected to draw future businesses and residents to the area.

Albuquerque is home to the University of New Mexico (UNM) and Kirtland Air Force Base as well as the Sandia National Laboratories and Petroglyph National Monument. The Sandia Mountains run along the eastern side of Albuquerque, and the Rio Grande flows through the city, north to south.