Why the Artesia donation map is shaped by an 1890 stagecoach stop, three town renamings, an 1903 aquifer discovery, and the largest refinery in New Mexico
Artesia is a mid-sized City in Eddy County, sitting on US-285 in the Pecos Valley, 35 miles south of Roswell and 35 miles north of Carlsbad. Its identity rests on a remarkable layered history: three different town names in 13 years, an 1903 aquifer-discovery-driven renaming, and a 20th-century industrial economy anchored by the largest refinery in New Mexico.
1890 — 'Miller' stagecoach stop. The settlement originated in 1890 as a stop called Miller on the old stagecoach route between Roswell and Carlsbad. The Miller-era documentary record is the foundational pre-railway layer in Artesia history.
1894 — 'Stegman' Pecos Valley Southern Railway shipping point. When the Pecos Valley Southern Railway (J.J. Hagerman's southern Pecos-Valley railroad-and-irrigation development) was completed in 1894, the Miller settlement was renamed Stegman and operated as a livestock-shipping point on the railway line. The Stegman-era ranch-and-railway family business records are core to older Artesia estates.
1903 — 'Artesia' after artesian-aquifer discovery. In 1903, after the discovery of an artesian aquifer in the area — the same Pecos Valley artesian belt that supports Dexter, Hagerman, and the broader southern-Chaves-County agricultural revolution — the town was renamed Artesia in recognition of the abundant artesian wells that began transforming the regional agricultural economy. The 1903 renaming is the inflection point in the Town's identity.
1905 — official incorporation. The City of Artesia was officially incorporated in 1905 — two years after the artesian-aquifer-driven renaming. The 1903-1905 founding-era paper trail forms a substantial early-statehood-era civic-and-business archive.
20th-century Navajo Refinery and oil-and-gas economy. HF Sinclair Corporation operates the Navajo Refinery at 1st and Main Street — the largest refinery in New Mexico. The Refinery has been a foundational Artesia employer for most of the 20th and 21st centuries. The combined Pecos-Valley artesian-irrigation agriculture + Navajo Refinery oil-and-gas refining economy makes Artesia one of the most industrially-dense smaller cities in southern NM. Multi-generation Artesia estates frequently contain Navajo-Refinery employee correspondence, technical reports, period photographs, and contemporaneous regional press.
The donation map reflects the City's mid-sized scale (population ~12,000) and the layered industrial-and-agricultural heritage. The principal public library is the Artesia Public Library at 205 West Quay Avenue. The 280-mile drive each way puts Artesia in deep volume-justified territory for NMLP. Routes always combine with Carlsbad (35 miles south on US-285) and Roswell (35 miles north on US-285), and frequently with Hagerman, Dexter, and Lake Arthur on combined Pecos Valley corridor runs.
Artesia Public Library
Address: 205 West Quay Avenue (also listed as 2015 W. Quay Ave on some directories), Artesia, NM 88210
Phone: (575) 746-4252
System: City of Artesia Public Library serving Artesia and the surrounding Eddy County / southern Pecos Valley
Source: Artesia Public Library — Official City SiteLibrary Technology Guides
Standard library donation rules apply: clean condition, books in sellable shape, no water damage, no mold, no significant marginalia or highlighting, no ex-library copies. The library accepts books and standard media at the front desk during open hours.
For donors with mixed-condition material, large estate libraries, or volumes that exceed what the library can absorb, NMLP free pickup is the answer.
When NMLP free pickup makes sense in Artesia
- 1890 'Miller' / 1894 'Stegman' / 1903 'Artesia' / 1905 incorporation-era family papers. Original stagecoach-era documents, Pecos Valley Southern Railway records, 1903 artesian-aquifer-discovery documentation, 1905 incorporation paper trail — UNM CSWR, NM State Records Center, or NMSU University Archives FIRST.
- 20th-century Navajo Refinery / HF Sinclair / oil-and-gas-era family records. Employee correspondence, technical reports, period photographs — UNM CSWR, NMSU University Archives, Permian Basin Petroleum Museum, or relevant corporate-history archives FIRST.
- Multi-generation Pecos Valley artesian-irrigation agricultural family records. Alfalfa / cotton / dairy / pecan-orchard family records, Pecos Valley irrigation-district documentation — NMSU University Archives or NM State Engineer's Office archives.
- Multi-generation Hispano household estate libraries.
- Documented Mescalero Apache cultural material: always route through the Mescalero Apache Tribe cultural office. Never into general donation.
- Mobility-constrained donors, particularly elderly multi-generation Artesia residents.
- Out-of-state heir coordinating remotely.
- Eddy County / Pecos Valley rural addresses. Hope, Loco Hills, Atoka, Lakewood, Lake Arthur — all within reach of a Pecos Valley / US-285 route run.
Logistics: Call or text 702-496-4214. Routes always combine with Carlsbad (35 mi S) and Roswell (35 mi N) on combined Pecos Valley / US-285 corridor runs.
Decision shortcut for Artesia
- One bag or box of clean current books, you're already in Artesia: Artesia Public Library at 205 W Quay Avenue.
- ANY 1890 'Miller' / 1894 'Stegman' / 1903 'Artesia' / 1905 incorporation-era family papers: UNM CSWR, NM State Records Center, or NMSU University Archives BEFORE general donation.
- 20th-century Navajo Refinery / HF Sinclair / oil-and-gas-era family records: UNM CSWR or Permian Basin Petroleum Museum.
- Pecos Valley artesian-irrigation agricultural family records: NMSU University Archives or NM State Engineer's Office archives.
- Multi-generation Artesia estate library: NMLP for the broader library; route documented archival material to relevant institution above.
- ANY Mescalero Apache cultural material: Mescalero Apache Tribe cultural office BEFORE doing anything else.
- Mobility-constrained donor or out-of-state heir handling Artesia estate remotely: NMLP.
- Worn or water-damaged books only, small quantity: Eddy County waste-management paper recycling.
Request a callback
Don’t want to call? Drop your name and a phone or email below — I’ll reach out personally to confirm a Artesia pickup window. Free pickup, any condition, no sorting required.
Related
- Complete guide: 18 Albuquerque-area book donation channels compared
- The lifecycle of a donated book in Albuquerque
- Where to donate books in Carlsbad — 35 miles south on US-285, route-paired (Eddy County seat)
- Where to donate books in Roswell — 35 miles north on US-285, route-paired
- Where to donate books in Hagerman — north on US-285
- Where to donate books in Dexter — north on US-285
- Where to donate books in Hobbs
- Schedule a free pickup with NMLP
Sources
- Artesia Public Library — City of Artesia (official municipal library page; 205 W Quay Ave; (575) 746-4252)
- Artesia, New Mexico — Wikipedia (1890 Miller stagecoach origin; 1894 Stegman PVS Railway shipping point; 1903 'Artesia' renaming after artesian-aquifer discovery; 1905 incorporation)
- Artesia — Britannica (oil-town context; Pecos Valley setting)
- HF Sinclair — Artesia / Lovington Refinery (Navajo Refinery as the largest refinery in New Mexico, located at 1st and Main)
- History of Artesia, New Mexico (regional history context)
Last reviewed 2026-05-08. NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business; donations are not tax-deductible. Library address and phone, 1890 Miller stagecoach origin, 1894 Stegman PVS Railway renaming, 1903 'Artesia' renaming after artesian-aquifer discovery, 1905 incorporation, and HF Sinclair Navajo Refinery as largest NM refinery verified against official sources cited above; report corrections to [email protected].