Inscription
The Tularosa Basin has been occupied by Indian groups for thousands of years. The first Hispanic settlers moved here from the Rio Grande Valley in 1862. Anglo settlers and cattlemen began moving into the region in the 1870s. The original 1862 townsite has been designated a State and National Historic District.
Tularosa appears as "Oasis" in the novels of western writer Eugene Manlove Rhodes.
Location
Sources
More markers in Otero
Alamogordo
Timberon, NM
Population-24,024 Elevation-4350 ft. In 1898 the brothers Charles B. and John A. Eddy, promoters of the El Paso and Northeastern...
Apache Battleground
Timberon, NM
In this immediate vicinity, Captain Henry W. Stanton of the U.S. Army, for whom Fort Stanton was named, lost his life in 1855 in a...
Blazer’s Mill
An early battle in the Lincoln County War happened at Blazer’s Mill, now ruins found three miles west of here.
Cloud-Climbing Railroad
In order to provide timber for the construction of his El Paso & Northeastern Railroad north of Alamogordo, Charles B. Eddy in 1898 built...
Dog Canyon
(Cañon del Perro) For the Mescalero Apaches, Dog Canyon was a favorite camping area and trail through the Sacramento Mountains.
