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New Mexico Highlands University Athletics

NMHU AND REGIS TIES PICTURE 2 SEALS

General Jace Hinton

Regis and New Mexico Highlands’ Shared Las Vegas Roots

Historic Las Vegas, New Mexico, is home to notable architecture, founded during the Spanish-Mexican period. Las Vegas grew into a critical railroad hub and a significant stop on the Santa Fe Trail. It was also once home to outlaws such as Doc Holiday and once held the legendary Billy the Kid captive. Now home to the New Mexico Highlands University, it was also once home to another Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference (RMAC) school. 

 This weekend, New Mexico Highlands will travel up to Denver, Colorado, to take on the Regis Rangers to open RMAC Men's and Women's conference basketball play. However, while these two foes have played in the same conference since the mid-90s, the schools share a history of being in a historic location.

Founded in 1893, New Mexico Highlands is located in Las Vegas, New Mexico, right off Interstate 25 in northern New Mexico.

Regis University was established in its current Northwest Denver location in 1887, right off Interstate 70.

However, these two schools did not begin at their current locations; in fact, Regis was founded in 1877 in Las Vegas, New Mexico, as Las Vegas College. 

Then, in 1884, a man named Bishop Machebeuf invited the school to move to Morrison, Colorado, and renamed it the College of the Sacred Heart. It operated for three years in Morrison before being gifted the school's current land in 1887 by a Jesuit-educated man named Brisben Walker, which is where the University resides today. Thirty-five years later, it was renamed Regis College in honor of St. John Francis Regis.

Founded in 1893 as New Mexico Normal School, the school did not open until 1898 due to budget constraints. It opened its doors with 92 students. The school would then change its name from a school to a university in 1902. The school changed its name to New Mexico Highlands University in 1941. Thus, the university that remains in Historic Las Vegas today. 
 
New Mexico Normal University Students Photo Courtesy of Las Vegas CCHP
New Mexico Normal University Students Image Credit: Las Vegas CCHP

The nickname "Cowboys" was adopted by the Faculty Athletic Committee and Student Council as the official name for the university's athletic teams in February 1930. Before that time, the school's athletic teams were referred to as the "Tigers", but New Mexico Highlands University professor, accomplished writer of western tales, and noted alumnus S. Omar Barker launched a deliberate effort to change the team name to a mascot more representative of the area.  

Information obtained from Regis University and Las Vegas CCHP

 
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