NAN Ranch

For the archaeological site, see NAN Ranch Ruin.
NAN Ranch
New Mexico
Location Faywood, New Mexico
Coordinates 32°39′16″N 107°50′59″W / 32.65444°N 107.84972°WCoordinates: 32°39′16″N 107°50′59″W / 32.65444°N 107.84972°W
Built c.1880, 1928
Architect Guy Frazer,[1][lower-alpha 1] Trost & Trost (1928)[4]
Architectural style New Mexico vernacular, Spanish Colonial Revival
NRHP Reference # 88000509
Added to NRHP 1988

NAN Ranch, also known as Y Bar NAN Ranch,[5] is a ranch in Faywood, New Mexico, that was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[6][lower-alpha 2] The property was developed as a ranch beginning in the late-1860s by John Brockman, who grew corn, alfalfa, and several types of fruit and bred cattle. Cattleman John T. McElroy purchased the ranch in 1927 and hired Trost & Trost to renovate and expand the ranch compound to become the NAN Ranch headquarters. The project included a new house, extensive landscaping, swimming pool, a slaughterhouse, powerhouse, and other residential and ranch buildings. It is historically significant due to its architecture and its role as a major 19th century ranch.

Geography

NAN Ranch is located along the Mimbres River,[4] less than .5 miles (0.80 km) east of NM 61 and 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Dwyer, New Mexico.[4]

History

The property, developed in the late-1860s by John Brockman[lower-alpha 3] represents 19th century agricultural enterprise and New Mexican architecture in the Mimbres Valley.[4] By 1869, he had cultivated 1,000 acres, operated the first flour mill in the area, and had more than 3,000 head of cattle.[4][9] He patented his homestead claim in 1881. Archaeologist Adolph Bandelier called the homestead a "plazita" following his visit in 1883. Considered a "model ranch" in the Silver City Enterprise, Brockman produced corn, alfalfa, cherries, peaches, pears, grapes, and apples.[4] He was the only supplier of hay to Fort Bayard and Fort Cummings.[9] The Clifton Clarion said in 1886 that he had the best all-purpose ranches in the state of New Mexico. Besides his agricultural pursuits, Brockman bred black and Shorthorn cattle.[12]

Brockman sold, what was considered "one of the three principal places on the Mimbres", in 1901 to the NAN Ranch and Cattle Company, which owned property just north of Brockman's land in Gallinas Canyon. NAN Ranch, which began developing its ranch in the 1880s, then moved its headquarters to the Brockman homestead. John T. McElroy, a cattleman from El Paso, Texas, bought the ranch in 1927.[4] The El Paso-based architectural firm Trost & Trost was hired by McElroy and his wife to complete a US $300,000 ($4,072,989 today) project to renovate and expand the complex to include a new house, swimming pool, large courtyard and landscaping. The house alone cost $100,000 ($1,357,663 today). The following year sixteen additional residential and ranch buildings were constructed, including a power plant and slaughter house. It became "the best country place" built in New Mexico in the 1920s according to Baker Morrow, the landscape architect who consulted for the New Mexico Historic Preservation Division. In 1945 the ranch, that was then 100,000 acres, was sold. In 1988, when it was registered as a historic place, it was owned by W. B. Hinton.[4] By that time the servants quarters building was used for archaeological teams from Texas A&M University who excavated the property's NAN Ranch Ruin.[4] Archaeologist Harry J. Shafer at the university began working on the excavation of the ruins after having been contacted by Margaret Hinton, who him told of the ruins found on the ranch and the connection to the nearby Swarts Ruin of the Mimbres culture.[13]

Description

The approximate 18 acre NAN Ranch headquarters contains historic residential, farm, blacksmith, grain silos, and other buildings.[4] The Brockman homestead was built about 1880.[4][lower-alpha 4] The Spanish Colonial Revival McElroy House (1928) has a red clay tile gable roof, stuccoed walls, cast Solomonic columns, exposed wood and cast stone details, and wrought iron fixtures. It has a central octagonal sun room and a sleeping porch. A swimming pool, red clay tile deck, high-walled courtyard, and wooden arbor are near the two main residences. The property is landscaped with cypress, cottonwood, mulberry, and hollyhock trees. Roses, hollyhocks, iris, English Ivy, and privet hedges also feature in the landscaping.[4]

Other historic residences include houses for the foreman, gardener, servants and cowboys. The foreman's house is a bungalow and a bunkhouse was built for cowboys. Other buildings include a slaughter house, blacksmith shop and power plant, chicken house, smoke house, laundry, garages, and barns. Irrigation ditches built by John Brockman were modified to concrete irrigation gutters.[4]

See also

Notes

  1. Guy Frazer worked for Trost & Trost by 1923, when he designed the nearby Silver Creek Elks Club,[2] and was chief architect at the architectural firm by 1938.[3]
  2. Some sources list the ranch being in Dwyer, but the town no longer exists. The post office in Dwyer was moved northeast from Faywood is named the Faywood Post Office.[7]
  3. The National Register of Historic Places nomination form states that Brockman was a customs agent at Mowry City, New Mexico,[4] however Mowry City was a short-lived town founded upon a scam.[8] A biography of his life states that Brockman served for the Union during the Civil War and afterwards moved west. He panned for gold before buying the ranch.[9] He went on to become a successful businessman, Silver City banker, and millionaire. By 1902, he lived in Los Angeles, California and was the owner of the Pearce, Arizona Commonwealth mine.[10][11]
  4. The nomination form provides a description of the Brockman house, but per the owner that information is incorrect.

References

  1. Guy Frazer (1927–1928), NAN Ranch architectural plans, El Paso Public Library Southwestern Collection
  2. "Elks Club, Silver City, New Mexico". Henry C. Trost Historical Organization. Retrieved December 5, 2014.
  3. "House Project". El Paso Herald-Post (El Paso, Texas). October 11, 1938. p. 7. Retrieved December 5, 2014.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 "NAN Ranch Nomination Form". National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  5. Harry J. Shafer (2003). Mimbres Archaeology at the NAN Ranch Ruin. UNM Press. p. xii. ISBN 978-0-8263-2204-3.
  6. "Grant County, New Mexico". National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  7. Robert Hixson Julyan (1 January 1996). The Place Names of New Mexico. UNM Press. p. 130. ISBN 978-0-8263-1689-9.
  8. Loreta Janeta Velazquez (1894). "The Valley of the Rio Grande". The Story of the Civil War. H.W. Hagemann. p. 603.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Press Reference Library (Western edition). Notables of the West (1915). Being the Portraits and Biographies of the Progressive Men of the West II. New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston, Atlanta: International News Service. p. 137.
  10. "Silver City". Albuquerque Citizen (Albuquerque, New Mexico). February 14, 1902. p. 6.
  11. Jim Hinckley; Kerrick James (1 March 2010). "Pearce, Arizona". Ghost Towns of the Southwest: Your Guide to the Historic Mining Camps and Ghost Towns of Arizona and New Mexico. MBI Publishing Company. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-61673-895-2.
  12. "Stock Notes". The Clarion Clifton. April 28, 1886. p. 1. Retrieved December 5, 2014.
  13. "The NAN Ranch Collection: The Legacy of Margaret R. Hinton". Western New Mexico University Museum. Retrieved December 5, 2014.

External links