La Madera, New Mexico


La Madera is a census-designated place in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, United States. Its population was 154 as of the 2010 census. La Madera has a post office with ZIP Code 87539. New Mexico State Road 111 and New Mexico State Road 519 intersect in the community.

Geography

La Madera is located at. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the community has an area of, all of it land.
La Madera, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico; is a community located in the mountains of Northern New Mexico and nestled within the confines of the Kit Carson National Forest. The village location is geographically surrounded by many of the existing Hispano communities which populated the area during the 18th and 19th centuries.
The topographical layout of the village is consistent with that of many of the small towns and villages of the region: a fertile valley surrounded by high volcanic scarps descending from the surrounding mesas.
Sacramental records for the pueblo church at Abiquiu, Province of New Mexico, often referred to a settlement Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de la Cueva. This hamlet probably served as the initial source of settlers that later formed the future village of La Cañada de La Madera approximately two miles due north of this site.
At some point in time in the early 1900s the name of the village of La Cueva was changed to Cañada de La Madera. The first US Post Office was established under the name of La Madera, rumored in order to accommodate postal authorities. The first postmaster, Elias Gallegos, was appointed July 9, 1906. The post office was operated within the mercantile store that Elias Gallegos had previously built.
The settlement's economy changed dramatically by 1912 when the Hallack and Howard Lumber Company of Denver, CO opened a sawmill to provide lumber for the company's western and mid-western clientele. The company built two large logging camps which served as a source of timber harvested from permitted Federal Government land in the nearby Carson National Forest.
The company financed the construction of a narrow gauge rail spur from the La Madera operation to the D&RG Railroad connection at Taos Junction. The cut logs were transported by the company's own locomotives to the rail spur head at Tres Piedras, New Mexico. The lumber company also constructed permanent housing for its employees as well as a primary school and commissary.
Since the settlement of La Cueva, Province of New Mexico, was not a result of a formal land grant with specific assignment of land parcels to original grantees, the analysis of the initial pobadores will be made in a sequential manner starting with the year 1822.