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Sierra, El Paso & Northeastern
Seminole, NM |
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HISTORY
Járilla Junction, once a station on
the El Paso and Northeastern Railroad, was renamed Seminole in
1905. Prospecting had started as early as 1879 in the Járilla
Mountains, but the 1905 discovery started a gold rush and gave
birth to the town of Seminole. For several years thereafter, the
town was the hub of intense mining activity and the population
grew to several thousand people. A fifty-five mile long water
pipe was laid from the Sacramento River to the town site. Almost
overnight, a hundred homes were built to house only a fraction
of the influx of people. Some were forced to live in hastily
erected shacks and tents. As happened so many times before,
there was less gold than had been anticipated and mining
activity began to wane. Today Seminole is reduced to a post
office, a few businesses and about fifteen families.
In 1899 a branch line was built into
the Járilla Mountains to the town of Járilla in order to bring
out iron ore. This was a Colorado Fuel & Iron (CF&I) Company
mine that produced high level iron ore and resulted in the daily
shipments to American Smelting and Refining (ASARCO) in El Paso.
Modeling Seminole in
1955
Seminole is
modeled as the small town that it was in the mid-1950’s. A
station track and stock pen siding are present on the layout.
Another siding, which has a couple of ore filled hoppers, also
exists to represent the branch line to the CF&I mine in Járilla.
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Seminole control
panel, not yet labeled. |
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Station at Seminole |
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Station |
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