History of Magdalena

Lady on the Mountain 001.jpg

1500s

The history of Magdalena is a reflection of the Old West, with a pattern of American Indian, Spanish and Anglo interaction in the area.

Prior to, and after the arrival of Europeans in the region, the area was a hunting ground for numerous Indian groups, including the Piros, Pueblo, Navajo, Gila, Mogollon, Apache and Comanche peoples.
The first Spanish explorers arrived in the late 1500's and named the area "la Sierra de Magdalena", having seen what they believed to be the face of St. Mary Magdalene in the nearby mountains, a similar geographic feature to a mountain in Spain.

 1800s

Magdalena began to grow in 1866 when lead, zinc, and silver mining opportunities were discovered in the surrounding mountains, particularly at the Kelly mines. Magdalena became an incorporated municipality in 1884, and shortly after, a railroad spur was built between Magdalena and the smelting industry in Socorro. The new railroad also had an important impact on the other major industries in the area: cattle and wool. The three markets of mining, cattle, and wool brought prosperity and development to Magdalena. Positioned as a center of commerce, the village provided professional services, business, entertainment, medical clinics, and schools for the region.

Magdalena Train Depot, c. 1880s

Covered wagons in Magdalena, c. 1890s

Picture of the Magdalena Hall Hotel in a newspaper wanted article, c. 1880s

1900s 

In 1910, the Forest Service established a regional headquarters in the Village it is now the longest continuous “business.”

Magdalena’s three major economic markets began to decline after World War II. The mines were spent of their major minerals, the cattle were shipped on trucks instead of on the train, thus ending the necessity of large cattle drives, and a decline in the value of wool plus overgrazing brought an end to sheep herding in the region.

The Kelly area was abandoned by the 1950’s when Kelly residents moved into Magdalena or elsewhere.

In 1958, the Bureau of Indian Affairs built a boarding school for Indian children in the Village. This promoted activity in the local economy by attracting school teachers, as well as family visitors of the boarding students in the Village. In 1974, the BIA policies changed and the school was closed. The facilities have been vacant and neglected since its closure. The Village of Magdalena purchased the campus in the fall of 1996 but has never used the facility.

The railroad stopped using the Magdalena-Socorro spur in 1971 and the tracks were removed in 1972. By that time the nation’s first coast to coast highway, United States Highway 60, had already displaced the railroad as a Magdalena commerce corridor. Cattle began to be transported on trucks.

Magdalena Depot with tracks in front, sometime before 1972.

Depot building, sometime after the train tracks were removed in 1972.

Back side of the Magdalena depot building, after the train tracks were removed.

Main Street of Magdalena, NM

Main Street, in front of Aragon Hotel

Mactavish Store in Magdalena, NM

Magdalena Hall Hotel when deserted; since refurbished in 2018.

Magdalena mercantile, with a condemned notice above the door.

Street corner in Magdalena, NM

2000s

Residents of Magdalena drive to Socorro and elsewhere to work. There are some arts and crafts stores, a theater, a museum, a library, and a Forest Service office here. Cattle is hauled in trucks. Hunters hunt for pleasure. People move to Magdalena to enjoy a less expensive and calmer way of life.

But the old ways are not forgotten. Yearly events like Old Timer’s Reunion and Frontier Festival are great opportunities for the community to come together and celebrate the wonderful history of Magdalena.

 A Brief History of Magdalena: written by the Magdalena Historical Society, 2011. Minor edits by Librarian Ivy Stover, 2021.