New Mexico State Road 27

New Mexico State Road 27 (NM 27) is a 30.200-mile-long (48.602 km) paved, two-lane state highway in Sierra and Luna counties in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It travels south-to-north over the eastern flank of the Black Range.

State Road 27
Route information
Maintained by NMDOT
Length30.200 mi[1] (48.602 km)
Existed1905–present
Major junctions
South end NM 26 in Nutt
North end NM 152 in Hillsboro
Location
CountiesSierra, Luna
Highway system
  • State Roads in New Mexico
NM 26NM 28

The southern terminus of NM 27 is at intersection with NM 26 near a ghost town of Nutt. The northern terminus is in Hillsboro where it intersects NM 152.

NM 27 is a part of Lake Valley Back Country Byway.

Route description

The highway begins in a ghost town of Nutt. Formerly this was the point at which the spur left the main trunk of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway railroad and headed north to a mining community of Lake Valley. For the first 3.700-mile-long (5.955 km) NM 27 runs concurrently with Luna County CR A027. The road passes through the Chihuahuan grasslands between the Nutt and Round Mountains. At 12.9 miles NM 27 reaches a former mining town of Lake Valley. The town is a preserved ghost town most famous for its silver mining. Silver was first discovered here in 1876 and for the period from 1878 through 1931 5.8 million ounces or 180 metric tons of silver was mined. At 17.3 miles the road crosses Berrenda Creek with a few agricultural fields in the vicinity. Shortly after, the road passes by North and South Sibley Mountains named after a confederate general Henry H. Sibley. After passing a 22 mile mark, the highway crosses the Tierra Blanca Creek, and at 23.5 miles Oak Spring Creek. The road then turns further northwest and continues on for the next 5.2 miles before taking a turn to north-northeast right before reaching Hillsboro. At 30.2 miles NM 27 reaches its northern terminus at NM 152.

History

NM 27 was initially a part of the original Route 26 created in 1905 by the Territorial Legislative Assembly. The old Route 26 ran from Deming, through Nutt, Hillsboro, Truth or Consequences to Engle. The stretch from Nutt to Hatch was designated as Route 27. In 1930s the Route 26 was shortened with the northern terminus shifting from Engle to Hillsboro. During early 1940s Route 26 was re-routed towards Hatch, and the road to Hillsboro became Route 27. The road was considered a secondary state route from its early days and remained either "graded" or "gravel" until it was paved some time in 1960s.[2]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[3]kmDestinationsNotes
LunaNutt0.0000.000 NM 26 Deming, HatchSouthern terminus
SierraHillsboro30.20048.602 NM 152 Santa Clara, CaballoNorthern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: I was going to suggest a bitmap or something, but you need *three* states for that - block, no block, unscanned block.
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gollark: If you serialize all your data in some application-specific binary format, that should be smaller than a bunch of ASCII.
gollark: You could maybe make a better encoding for it.
gollark: The last time I did compression I just used some random LZW library off the interwebs.

See also

  •  U.S. Roads portal

References

  1. "NMDOT Posted Route - Legal Description" (PDF). New Mexico Department of Transportation. p. 8. Retrieved October 29, 2017.
  2. "Details of New Mexico State Routes 26-50". Steve Riner Highways. Retrieved October 29, 2017.
  3. "TIMS Road Segments by Posted Route/Point with AADT Info" (PDF). New Mexico Department of Transportation. June 8, 2016. p. 12. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
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