Organ, New Mexico

Organ, New Mexico
Organ
—  Unincorporated  —
Organ as seen from the San Agustine Pass looking North/West.
Location in the state of New Mexico
Coordinates: 32°25′32.4″N 106°35′48″W / 32.425667°N 106.59667°W / 32.425667; -106.59667Coordinates: 32°25′32.4″N 106°35′48″W / 32.425667°N 106.59667°W / 32.425667; -106.59667
Country United States
State New MexicoNew Mexico
County Dona Ana
Founded 1883
Elevation 5,000 ft (1,524 m)
Time zone Mountain (UTC-7)
 – Summer (DST) DST (UTC-6)
Area code(s) 575

Organ is an unincorporated community in Doña Ana County, New Mexico, United States.[1][2] Organ was initially started as a mining camp prior to the American Civil War. However, it was not officially established as a community until 1883. President Chester A. Arthur granted the 40-acre (160,000 m2) parcel of land under congressional approval through a Federal Land Grant to the Organ Mining Corporation in 1883.[3] Mining operations near Organ produced gold, lead, iron, silver and other minerals. Actual mining in the Organ Town Site was prohibited. The largest production mine was the "Torpedo Mine". Organ originally had its own school, constable's office, community center, town square, post office, hotel, business district and cemetery. Organ also had two large mining furnaces for smeltering ore and a geological assay office belonging to the mining company. In 1885 Organ's population was over 1500 people.[4]

In the 1930s the mines in the area became inundated with water and were no longer feasible for use and with the onset of the Great Depression, mining operations ceased. However, with the opening of White Sands Missile Range and the testing of the Nuclear Bomb in 1945, Organ began to thrive again as a community providing homes and leisure services to military personnel and government contractors only a short distance from the main military post. Organ is very active supporting the military and White Sands Missile Range still.

Today, Organ is under the direct jurisdiction of Doña Ana County and the County Probate Judge as directed in the presidential order of 1883, because it was never incorporated. The state government recognizes Organ as an independent community under New Mexico State House Bill 523 of the 44th State Legislature in 1999, which recognized "Traditional Historic Communities." For this reason, Organ cannot be annexed by any municipality according to the provisions directed under this house bill.[5]

Organ's old schoolhouse in 2010

Organ still has its own water and sewer utility service and other services are provided independently. The Organ Community Center was improved in 2008 and is still located on land of the original town square. The roads are paved and improvements are still ongoing through the supervision of Dona Ana County. The Organ Post Office is still in operation and Organ still has a few businesses. The cemetery is still in use and is called the "Slumbering Mountain Cemetery" with newer and historic graves. Educational services for children are provided by the Las Cruces Public Schools in Las Cruces, New Mexico (the original Organ schoolhouse has been closed for some time). Organ is still an active community and has a rich history. There are roughly 100 households in the area currently.[6]

Organ lies at the southwest foothills of the San Augustin Mountains, the terminal subrange at the south of the extensive San Andres Mountains. Across San Augustin Pass on U.S. Route 70 in New Mexico at the south of the San Augustin's lie the Organ Mountains.

References

  1. ^ Henry Chenoweth. "Organ - New Mexico Ghost Town". Ghost Towns and History of the American West. http://www.ghosttowns.com/states/nm/organ.html. Retrieved 8 April 2009. 
  2. ^ Dan Gulino. "Organ, New Mexico". Western Ghost Towns. http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~gulino/ghosttown/organ_nm.htm. Retrieved 9 April 2009. 
  3. ^ Documents, Presidential Order, Administration of Chester A. Arthur, 1883. Land Grant Order.
  4. ^ U.S. Census Bureau, Census of 1890, New Mexico, Dona Ana County, Organ Townsite
  5. ^ New Mexico State House Bill 523 of the 44th State Legislature in 1999.
  6. ^ Records, Organ Water and Sewer Association, Domestic Water Service Provider, Las Cruces, NM.

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Organ Mountains (New Mexico) — For the Brazilian mountain range of similar name, see Serra dos Órgãos Organ Mountains Range The Organ Mountains seen from the west …   Wikipedia

  • New Mexico — This article is about the U.S. state of New Mexico. For other uses, see New Mexico (disambiguation). Land of Enchantment redirects here. For the Michael Martin Murphey album, see Land of Enchantment (album). State of New Mexico Estado de Nuevo… …   Wikipedia

  • New Mexico — Nouveau Mexique New Mexico State of New Mexico [ anglais ] Estado de Nuevo México [ espagnol ] État du Nouveau Mexique …   Wikipédia en Français

  • New Mexico State Route 404 — Basisdaten Gesamtlänge:  9,7 mi/15,6 km Anfangspunkt:  …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mesilla, New Mexico — Mesilla redirects here. For the New Mexico wine region, see Mesilla Valley AVA. Mesilla is also a spider genus (Anyphaenidae). Mesilla, New Mexico   Town   …   Wikipedia

  • Chaparral, New Mexico —   CDP   Loca …   Wikipedia

  • Mesquite, New Mexico —   CDP   Locatio …   Wikipedia

  • Southwestern New Mexico — is a region of the U.S. state of New Mexico commonly defined by Hidalgo County, Grant County, Catron County, Luna County, Doña Ana County, Sierra County, and Socorro County. Some important towns there are Lordsburg, Silver City, Deming, Las… …   Wikipedia

  • Doña Ana County, New Mexico — Doña Ana County courthouse in Las Cruces, New Mexico …   Wikipedia

  • Las Cruces, New Mexico — Infobox Settlement name = Las Cruces settlement type=Incorporated City official name = City of Las Cruces settlement type = City nickname = The City of the Crosses imagesize = image caption = Las Cruces from I 10 image image mapsize = 250px map… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”