Monday, February 1st, 2010
Picacho Peak
Picacho Peak, 4959 feet, about 7 miles from Las Cruces. (Click for a larger image.)
The old village of Picacho is located southeast of the peak, at the edge of the Mesilla Valley. Picacho was a stage stop on the Butterfield Overland Stage Line , the first stop after Mesilla. From Picacho, the stage climbed the mesa and went around the north side of Picacho Peak through Box Canyon. This lead to a very difficult route through several mountain ranges, but was the only route on which water could be supplied at the stage stops, which were located about one hour of travel time apart.
From Mesilla the stage stops to the Arizona border were: Picacho, Rough and Ready, Goodsight, Cooke’s Springs, Mimbres, Cow Springs, Soldiers’s Farewell, Barney’s, Steins Peak.
The Butterfield Stage began operation on September 15, 1858, with stages leaving San Francisco and St. Louis, the two ends of the line, on that day. Mesilla was located about the middle of the route.
The Butterfield Stage was put out of operation by the start of the Civil War.
See also:
Picacho Cemetery
Picacho — A Brief History
Picacho — Forgotten Butterfield Stage Stop
Rough and Ready — Butterfield Stage Stop
Stage Coach from Mesilla – Unfulfilled Promise
Mesilla Stage Coach – More
Tags: History, Mesilla, Stage Coach, Butterfield Overland Mail
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