Buckman, New Mexico

Buckman is a ghost town in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, United States of America, about 5 miles (8.0 km) south of San Ildefonso Pueblo, on the east bank of the Rio Grande in White Rock Canyon.

Buckman, New Mexico
Buckman, New Mexico
Location within the state of New Mexico
Buckman, New Mexico
Buckman, New Mexico (the United States)
Coordinates: 35°50′06″N 106°09′46″W[1]
CountryUnited States
StateNew Mexico
CountySanta Fe
Population
 (2000)
  Total0
Time zoneUTC-5 (Mountain (MST))
  Summer (DST)MDT
Area code(s)505

History

About 1888, Henry S. Buckman, a lumberman from Oregon, constructed a plank bridge across the Rio Grande at the point where the narrow-gauge D&RG railroad’s Santa Fe Branch, popularly known as the Chili Line, diverged south-eastward toward Santa Fe from its route along the river bank. Buckman had contracted to have a road blasted up a side canyon onto the Pajarito Plateau, and he moved a sawmill in to harvest stands of Ponderosa Pine. A small community grew at the railway stop, supported by the timber harvesting, and a post office was established on July 22, 1888 with Mr. Buckman as the postmaster. By 1903 Mr. Buckman’s sawmills had stripped all of the pine for which he had been licensed (and allegedly much more) and he departed, with the closure of the post office on January 5, 1903 and the collapse of the community.[2]

The stop on the railway, the bridge, livestock pens and the road remained for several years, and continued to serve a number of homesteads on the Plateau, including the Los Alamos Ranch School and Bandelier National Monument. After a road bridge was constructed in 1924 at Otowi, about 3 miles north, the Buckman bridge and its road fell into disuse and were abandoned. The railroad closed in 1941 and was removed during the following year.

Present Day

Virtually no trace now remains of the community or bridge.

In 2001 the site was chosen for the Buckman Direct Diversion Project, a water supply development owned by, and serving the city and county of Santa Fe. The BDDP became operational in 2011.[3]

References

  • Harris, L.G. & Porter, P; Ghost towns alive: trips to New Mexico's past, UNM Press 2003;

ISBN 0-8263-2907-1

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