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Casa San Ysidro: The Gutiérrez / Minge House in Corrales

Casa San Ysidro, the Albuquerque Museum's history house and property in Corrales, is open for tours through November 30.
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In the early 1950s, Shirley and Ward Alan Minge took a late 19th century building in Corrales and turned it into a plazuela-style rancho to house their exuberant collection of New Mexico vernacular art.

505-898-3915

973 Old Church Road
Corrales, NM 87048

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Tours

 

  • Adults: $6

  • Seniors (65+): $5

  • Students (13+): $5

  • Children (<12): $4

  • Groups of 5 or more adults: $5

Free Saturdays at Casa San Ysidro, 10:30 a.m.–3 p.m.

Admission is free for Albuquerque Museum Foundation Members.

Learn more: Albuquerque Museum Foundation

 

 

Learn about our history as a volunteer docent. We'd love to work with you!

Casa San Ysidro is a program of Albuquerque Museum and the Department of Arts & Culture, City of Albuquerque.

Casa San Ysidro Tour Admission

LINK TO ONLINE TICKETING

Color photo of a brown adobe house with a wooden ladder leaning against it to the right of an open door and a several stems of bright pink hollyhock in early bloom in the left foreground.
photograph by Nora Vanesky

Casa San Ysidro: The Gutiérrez/Minge House is a charming historic house museum in Corrales, New Mexico. A satellite of the Albuquerque Museum operated jointly with the Village of Corrales, New Mexico, with support from Sandoval County and the State of New Mexico Historic Preservation Division, and affectionately known as “Casa,” the property is home to one of the most comprehensive collections of New Mexican art and furnishings.

Like many historic properties in New Mexico, Casa San Ysidro’s history and construction is delightfully complicated. Casa consists of four main components:

  1. a Territorial Period Greek Revival rancho built around 1875 by Jesús María Gutiérrez and renovated by Dr. Ward Alan Minge and his wife Shirley Jolly Minge;
  2. additional adobe rooms designed and hand built by the Minges around a traditional eighteenth- to early nineteenth-century-style plazuela using structural parts from significant at-risk historical buildings;
  3. a re-created mid- to late nineteenth-century corral surrounding a historic barn and cabins moved to the property by the Minges, and
  4. a heritage field to the north of the rancho, protected from development by a conservation easement.

Casa San Ysidro may be the only historic property in the state where the collections, as well as the structures, are listed on the State Register of Cultural Properties. The Minge Collection includes architectural elements, furniture, religious art, household tools and hardware, jewelry, Hispanic and Pueblo weavings and pottery, a transportation collection, and historic photographs.

Casa San Ysidro is designated by the National Park Service as a stopping point on El Camino Real de la Tierra Adentro National Interpretive Trail.

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