Gila, New Mexico

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Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. Gila is a census-designated place in Grant County, New Mexico, United States. It is Script error: No such module "convert". northwest of the county seat, Silver City. Its population was 314 as of the 2010 census.[1] The community is located in the irrigated valley of the Gila River in the midst of hilly and mountainous semi-arid terrain. The townsite was sporadically populated by the Apache, Spanish and Mexican colonists, and American mountain men prior to the rise to prominence of the million-acre Lyons & Campbell Ranch. The ranch established its headquarters in Gila in 1890 and was one of the largest ranches in the United States. The headquarters building is on the National Register of Historic Places.

History

The Gila River valley was attractive for human settlement because the river was one of the few dependable water sources in the arid southwestern United States. In the 18th and 19th century, the Gila valley near the present day town was the homeland of the Bedonkohe band of the Chiricahua Apache. One of the birthplaces proposed for the Apache warrior Geronimo is Turkey Creek Hot Springs in the Mogollon Mountains, Script error: No such module "convert". north of present day Gila and within the Gila Wilderness. In 1792, the Spanish rulers of Mexico established a rancheria at Gila, one of a chain of settlements in northern Mexico designed to keep peace with the Apache. The Spanish built a ten room adobe building on the site.[2][3] About 1829 American mountain men built a "frontier hacienda" at Gila for trade with the Apache and fur trapping. The hacienda they built (presumably with Apache help) was substantial, containing 12 rooms, an interior courtyard, and a perimeter wall. A 30-foot deep well provided water.[4]

In the 1830s warfare between the Apache and the newly-independent country of Mexico forced the Mexicans to abandon settlements in the Gila River area of New Mexico.[5] The last Apache raid in the area was in May 1885 when a small band of Apaches led by Chihuahua fleeing the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation crossed the Gila River near Gila.[6]

Lyons & Campbell Ranch

File:Portal East View, Lyons & Campbell ranch headquarters 01.jpg
The east portal of the ranch headquarters, built of adobe.

The founders and proprietors of the Lyons & Campbell Ranch, headquartered in Gila, were Tom Lyons (1850-1917) and Angus Campbell (1844-1892). Lyons was born in England, and grew up in Kenosha, Wisconsin. In 1878 or 1879 he came to Silver City and went into the mining business with Angus Campbell, a prospector. In 1880, they sold their mining assets and bought the White House Ranch, Script error: No such module "convert". north of Gila. In 1890 they moved their ranch headquarters south to present-day Gila. In 1892, Campbell died, leaving Lyons and Campbell's widow, Ida Runyon Campbell (1867-1954) as owners of the ranch. Lyons and Campbell subsequently married. Lyon's previous wife Emma Olive Lyons (1856-1903) had fled the marriage after Lyons shot and killed her lover.[7]

In the 1890s the Lyons & Campbell Ranch, also called the L.C. Ranch, controlled more than Script error: No such module "convert". of land and owned 60,000 cattle. The ranchlands reached from near Silver City on the east, westward to the Arizona border and southward from near Mule Creek, New Mexico along both sides of the Gila River to the northern part of the Animas Valley. The ranch owned "100 wagons, 750 riding horses, 400 work horses, 75 cowboys in season, and three to six chuckwagons. The farming operation employed 100 Mexican families, most of them imported from Chihuahua."[8]

File:Saloon, Lyons & Campbell ranch headquarters 02.jpg
The saloon at the ranch headquarters.

At Gila, Lyons built his headquarters. He converted the existing 12 rooms of the frontier hacienda into his residence and office. He added another 15 lavishly furnished rooms for guests and entertaining. Attached to the living quarters or in separate buildings was a stable, barn, bunkhouse, store, post office, jail, foreman's house, and saloon. Lyon's bedroom featured a trapdoor where he could hide if necessary from his numerous enemies who might attempt to kill or kidnap him.[9]

Lyons was murdered in 1917 in El Paso, Texas by a hired assassin. The identity of the person who hired the assassin was never discovered. Parcels of the ranch were subsequently sold and only a Script error: No such module "convert". parcel containing the headquarters buildings remain.[9] In 1978 the property, partially restored, was added to the National Register of Historic Places.[10]

Geography

File:North-northwest of Bill Evans Lake - Flickr - aspidoscelis.jpg
A typical landscape near Gila looking north to the Mogollon Mountains.

The community of Gila sits near the center of a narrow irrigated strip of land, approximately Script error: No such module "convert". in length, along both sides of the Gila River. Upstream from Gila and the irrigated strip, the river emerges from the large and rugged Gila Wilderness and downstream it enters a crumpled landscape that is mostly uninhabited. The unincorporated community of Cliff is approximately Script error: No such module "convert". east of Gila.

Climate

Gila is a BSk (Semi-arid, cold steppe) climate under the Köppen Classification system. Measured by the Trewartha climate classification system the climate is BSak (semi arid steppe, hot summers, cool winters). One half of the average annual precipitation is received in the three months of July, August, and September. April and May are the driest months. Gila has 291 days with sunshine per year compared to an average of 205 days of sunshine for the U.S. as a whole.[11] Script error: No such module "weather box".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

Demographics

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Historical population
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2020285
U.S. Decennial Census[12][13]

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Economics and culture

Services in Gila include: post office, library, EMT and medical clinic, community center, senior center, library, and several churches. The Gila Valley Library contains 4,052 volumes. The library circulates 6,699 items per year and serves a rural population of 807 persons living in or near Gila and Cliff.[14]

Transportation

Major highways

Gila can be accessed via NM 211 from US 180 north of Silver City. Also, NM 153 provides access to Turkey Creek.

References

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