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Moriarty to
Tijeras on the Salt Missions Trail |
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Edgewood
Founded in the early 1930’s,
Edgewood
is a “young” town by
New Mexico
standards. Established just in time to meet the needs of the changed
1937 Route 66
alignment,
Edgewood exudes the very essence of the
Mother Road.
All manner of motor courts and other services soon popped up. Today,
you can still get full service at several local gas stations and the town
still doesn’t have a single traffic light. The original two room
school house still stands. The area abounds with horse properties
and it’s not unusual to see modern day cowboys riding their steeds along
the roadways.
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Abandoned Trading Post outside
Edgewood,
courtesy
The Road Wanderer
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Edgewood
you can visit the Wildlife West Nature Park where you can view
numerous native New Mexican animals, including
whitetail deer, bobcats, cougars, coyotes, javalinas,
raptors, mountain lions, and wolves. Trails through the 122 acre park
are constructed through natural habitats. The park is located at
exit 187.
Also in Edgewood is an old
Valentine Diner
that once stood in Magdelena, New
Mexico before it was purchased by Jerry Ueckert and moved to
Edgewood. The diner had extensive damage and
Jerry is currently in the process of restoring it. It is located on
Route 66.

The Red Top is in the process of being
restored,
photo courtesy Jerry Ueckert.
Barton
Just four more miles
will bring you to
Barton,
New Mexico ,
officially a
ghost town,
but really not much more than a scattering of buildings. Here
you will see the old Lester homestead and original
Route 66
gas station complete with 1950's vintage gas pumps. The
homestead is a half-mile stretch at the corner of Old
Route 66
and Mountain Valley Road, owned now by an 80-year-old
Edgewood
resident named Bob Audet. An avid
Route 66'er,
Audit has made the
Mother Road
not only his passion, but his way of life. Filled with old cars
and other rusty memorabilia, some refer to this half mile stretch as a
“junkyard” but for
Mother Road
fans, it is a vintage delight. Also on the property is the
original
Barton jail which once detained such
outlaws as
the Dawson Gang.

Lester's Conoco in
Barton,
New Mexico ,
courtesy
Round
America.
Tijeras Canyon
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Tijeras Canyon vintage
postcard.
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Barton the road begins to climb upwards some 7,000 feet. When the
old road was built in the 1950's, the
Tijeras Canyon job was the largest road project ever taken on in the
State of
New Mexico . During the drilling, dynamiting, and dirt moving, a caravan of about 15
cars full of hired union men showed up to slow down the work. Commonly known as hired “goons,” they protested “Our men are on strike!” However, the road builders and contractors of
New Mexico
were not part of the union. Day after day for almost two months, the
goons tried unsuccessfully to delay the work and intimidate the employees. Finally, the goons disbanded and the union never succeeded in “organizing”
the road crews and contractors in
New Mexico . In 1951 it was finally completed.
Through this stretch keep your eyes open for old trading posts and wayside
gas stations, as well as enjoying the majestic views of the Rio Grande
Valley and the Sandia Mountains.
Right in the center of
Tijeras Canyon was once the Tijeras Pueblo. Established about
1300 A.D., the adobe structure housed about 400 people. “Tijeras,”
meaning “scissor” comes from the fact that the pueblo was on the
crossroads of two major trade routes, one extending from Mexico City to
Santa Fe, and the other from the
Great Plains to the Pacific Ocean. The pueblo was abandoned when
water became scarce along the Rio Grande Valley. Today the site is a
grass-covered mound where once stood the 200-room pueblo.
Soon you reach the small village of
Tijeras within the boundaries of the Cibola National Forest. The
town is the southern gateway to the Turquose Trail Scenic Byway that
travels to
Santa Fe. Along the trail are unique
towns, a number of museums and recreational opportunities along this path
where prehistoric peoples once made their homes. In
Tijeras is one of the Cibola National Forest’s Vistors Centers as well
as the Talking Talons Leadership Center & Living Conservation Museum.
West of the village,
Route 66
emerges from the canyon where you can see a beautiful view of the Rio
Grande Valley and
Albuquerque.
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©
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated September, 2007.
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