Eddy County New Mexico has 35 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 7 places of National significance and 9 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Abo Elementary School and Fallout Shelter, Carlsbad Irrigation District, Caverns, The, Historic District (Boundary Increase), First National Bank of Eddy and LA 162411-Lost Again Shelter.
Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Jornada Mogollon, Apache and Archaic Horizon dating back to 3499 BC.
Many famous people are associated with these Eddy County historic places including Lt. Howard B. Cushing, Robert Casey, Sallie Chisum Robert, Robert Weems Tansill, Col. Etienne de Pelissier Bujac and Mary E. Tansill.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Eddy County places including Caples & Hammer, W.R. & Co. Bauske, E. Krause, Frank Standhart, Thomas C. Vint, USDA-Forest Service, CCC, H.F. Martin, Tom Heflin and Ernest H. Every. Prominent architectural styles found in Eddy Country are Queen Anne, Late 19th And Early 20th Century American Movements and Pueblo.
Historic Significance:
Person, Information Potential, Event
Historic Person:
Cushing, Lt. Howard B., Casey, Robert
Area of Significance:
Historic - Aboriginal, Military
Period of Significance:
1850-1874
Historic Function:
Defense, Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Battle Site, Village Site
Current Function:
Vacant/Not In Use
It was a brutal ambush. On November 13, 1869, Lieutenant Howard Cushing led thirty-two men of the Third Cavalry, along with a handful of civilian volunteers, down the sheer limestone cliffs of the Guadalupe Mountains to attack a hidden Mescalero Apache rancheria. No warning. Just sudden gunfire echoing off the steep canyon walls. The soldiers did not just trade shots with the warriors they systematically burned the band's entire winter supply of buffalo robes, blankets, and tons of prepared mescal. This hurt more than bullets. Without those provisions, the Mescalero faced starvation. Cushing's troopers also seized around 150 horses, scattering the surviving families into the brutal desert.
Today, the site holds immense archaeological value because the physical debris left behind tells the real, messy story, often contradicting the polished military reports. Bullet casings do not lie. Researchers mapping the canyon floor found Spencer carbine and Springfield rifle cartridges alongside Apache stone tools, pinpointing the exact skirmish lines and escape routes. Actually, this specific clash broke the Mescaleros' hold on the region. It forced them toward the reservation. By proving that even the most rugged mountain hideouts offered no safety, the battle signaled the end of Apache independence in southeast New Mexico.