Farmington, New Mexico

    Article

    Farmington is a town located in northern New Mexico between the San Juan, La Plata, and Animas Rivers in San Juan County. The name for this settlement in Navajo is Tóta, meaning "Between the Waters.” The area of Farmington was originally settled by Ancestral Puebloans, as evidenced by the nearby Salmon Ruins and the Aztec Ruins. After the Ancestral Puebloans abandoned the Farmington area, it was occupied by the Navajo, Utes, and the Jicarilla Apache. The current town was incorporated in 1901, and a narrow gauge railroad to Durango, Colorado was completed in 1905. There was a significant population increase in the 1950’s after the San Juan Basin Natural Gas Pipeline was constructed.

    Photo Credit

     
    "Cultural Heritage Parade," photograph, Eduardo Fuss Photograph Collection (2011-001-b1-f2-0004). Center for Southwest Research, University Libraries, University of New Mexico.

    References

     
    Aztec Ruins National Monument
         N.d.   History & Culture: People. http://www.nps.gov/azru/historyculture/people.htm,
             accessed September 27, 2014.

    Hudnall, Ken and Hudnall, Sharon
         2005   Spirits of the Border IV: The History and Mystery of New Mexico. El Paso: Omega
             Press.

    Linford, Laurance D.
         2001   Tony Hillerman's Navajoland: Hideouts, Haunts, and Havens in the Joe Leaphorn
             and Jim Chee Mysteries. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.

    Smith, Claudia
         N.d.   Farmington. New Mexico Office of the State Historian.
             http://newmexicohistory.org/places/farmington-main-street, accessed September 26,
             2014.