Why the Edgewood donation map is shaped by 19th-century homesteading, a 1999 incorporation, and a tri-county boundary
Edgewood is a fast-growing Town in central New Mexico, sitting on I-40 about 25 miles east of Albuquerque on the eastern slope of the Sandia / Manzano Mountains. Although administratively in Santa Fe County, the Town's boundary now extends — through post-incorporation annexations — into Bernalillo and Torrance Counties as well. Edgewood is geographically much closer to Albuquerque than to the city of Santa Fe, despite the Santa Fe County designation. The town's identity rests on three intertwined stories that distinguish it from any other community on the I-40 corridor.
Late-19th- and early-20th-century homesteading roots. Long before incorporation, the area that became Edgewood was settled by pioneer families obtaining land claims and beginning farming and ranching during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The community was founded by southern Santa Fe County residents and landowners — descendants of those original homesteaders still hold property and family papers in the area today. Older Edgewood estates can include early-20th-century homestead-era family papers, ranching records, and East Mountains agricultural documentation.
July 1, 1999 — Town of Edgewood incorporation. The Town of Edgewood was officially incorporated on July 1, 1999, after residents voted to do so in 1998. At the time of incorporation, the community had an estimated population of approximately 1,800-2,000 residents. By the 2020 census, Edgewood had grown to 6,174 residents — more than triple the incorporation-era count. The 1998-1999 incorporation paper trail (organizing-committee correspondence, ballot-and-vote records, early Town-government formation documents) is itself a meaningful late-1990s NM municipal-history archive.
Tri-county footprint via post-1999 annexations. One of Edgewood's most distinctive features is its tri-county footprint. The original 1999 incorporation was entirely within southern Santa Fe County. Beginning in 1999, voluntary annexation petitions from property owners extended the Town's boundaries into Bernalillo County (to the west, toward the East Mountains corridor) and Torrance County (to the east, toward Moriarty). These annexations supported orderly development along Interstate 40. The result: some Edgewood addresses are administratively in Santa Fe County, others in Bernalillo County, and others in Torrance County — for property records, voter registration, and county-tax purposes, the relevant county varies by parcel. This is genuinely unusual in New Mexico, and creates an unusually complex property-records situation for older estates.
Wildlife West Nature Park and the Pinto Bean Museum. The Wildlife West Nature Park complex sits on the original Route 66 alignment in Edgewood. In August 2011, the Park opened the Historic Pinto Bean Museum during the annual Harvest Festival, displaying antique bean-processing tools and a documented history of pintos dating back to 2000 BC. The Pinto-Bean Museum is part of a working-bean-farm preservation effort that ties Edgewood directly into the broader Estancia Valley pinto-bean heritage (Moriarty's "Pinto Bean Capital" identity, the dryland farming era, and the mid-20th-century cooperative-bean-cleaning industry). The Park complex also includes a Red Top Valentine Diner (a preserved Route-66-era roadside-diner artifact) and is the village's central cultural anchor.
The donation map reflects the town's fast growth, the tri-county complexity, and the heritage layers. The principal public library is the Edgewood Community Library at 171 NM-344. The 35-mile drive each way puts Edgewood in NMLP's most-traveled lane — the I-40 / East Mountains / Estancia Valley corridor. Routes pair regularly with East Mountains addresses (Tijeras, Sandia Park, Cedar Crest, Sandia Heights, Carnuel) and with Moriarty (10 miles east on I-40). Scheduling is standard.
Edgewood Community Library
Address: 171 NM-344, Edgewood, NM 87015 (mailing: P.O. Box 3610)
Phone: (505) 281-0138
System: Town of Edgewood municipal library
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.
Wildlife West Nature Park & Pinto Bean Museum
The Wildlife West Nature Park on Route 66 is Edgewood's central cultural anchor. In August 2011, the Park opened the Historic Pinto Bean Museum inside an antique-bean-processing-tools facility once part of a working bean farm; the Museum displays the history of pintos dating back to 2000 BC alongside original processing equipment. The Park also includes the preserved Red Top Valentine Diner — a Route-66-era roadside-diner artifact. Material with documented archival relevance to early Edgewood Pinto-Bean farming, Route-66-era roadside-business operations, or East Mountains agricultural history should route through Wildlife West Nature Park BEFORE general donation. Visit wildlifewest.org for guidance.
When NMLP free pickup makes sense in Edgewood
- Late-19th and early-20th-century homestead-era family papers. Original land-claim documents, family correspondence, ranching records — UNM CSWR or NM State Records Center FIRST.
- 1998-1999 Town-of-Edgewood incorporation-era civic-formation records. Organizing-committee correspondence, ballot records, early Town-government documents — UNM CSWR or appropriate County Clerk (depending on parcel — Santa Fe, Bernalillo, or Torrance).
- Pinto-Bean Museum-adjacent material. Working-bean-farm operation records, antique processing tools, Pinto-Bean-history ephemera — Wildlife West Nature Park / Pinto Bean Museum FIRST.
- Route-66-era corridor archives. Diner / motel / gas-station records, period photographs, tourism ephemera — Wildlife West Nature Park or NM State Records Center.
- Tri-county property-records material. Particularly complex Edgewood estate clearances may involve multiple county clerks; NMLP can help route documented archival material to the appropriate county records office.
- Documented Pueblo cultural material: always route through the relevant Pueblo cultural office (Sandia or Isleta Pueblo cultural offices are appropriate first contacts). Never into general donation.
- Mobility-constrained donors, particularly elderly East Mountains residents.
- Out-of-state heir coordinating remotely.
- East Mountains / I-40 corridor rural addresses. Sandia Park, Cedar Crest, Sandia Heights, Tijeras, Carnuel, Stanley, Sedillo, San Antonito — all within reach of an Edgewood-area route run.
Logistics: Call or text 702-496-4214. Routes pair with East Mountains corridor activity and with Moriarty (10 mi east on I-40).
Decision shortcut for Edgewood
- One bag or box of clean current books, you're already in Edgewood: Edgewood Community Library at 171 NM-344.
- ANY Pinto-Bean Museum-adjacent or Route-66-era working-farm material: Wildlife West Nature Park / Pinto Bean Museum BEFORE general donation.
- Late-19th-century homestead-era family papers: UNM CSWR or NM State Records Center.
- 1998-1999 incorporation-era civic-formation records: UNM CSWR or the appropriate County Clerk (depending on parcel — Santa Fe, Bernalillo, or Torrance).
- Multi-generation East Mountains / Edgewood estate library: NMLP for the broader library; route documented archival material to relevant institution above.
- ANY Pueblo cultural material: Sandia or Isleta Pueblo cultural office BEFORE doing anything else.
- Mobility-constrained donor or out-of-state heir handling Edgewood estate remotely: NMLP.
- Worn or water-damaged books only, small quantity: Santa Fe / Bernalillo / Torrance County (depending on parcel) 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 Edgewood 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 the East Mountains — adjacent corridor
- Where to donate books in Moriarty — 10 miles east on I-40, route-paired
- Where to donate books in Estancia — Estancia Valley sister-town
- Where to donate books in Santa Fe — county seat
- Where to donate books in Rio Rancho
- Schedule a free pickup with NMLP
Sources
- Town of Edgewood — Library (official Town library page)
- Edgewood Community Library — Library Technology Guides (171 NM-344; (505) 281-0138)
- Edgewood, New Mexico — Wikipedia (July 1 1999 incorporation; 1998 vote; ~1,800-2,000 residents at incorporation; 6,174 at 2020 census; tri-county footprint via post-1999 annexations)
- Town of Edgewood — About Edgewood (official Town history; founding context)
- Pinto Bean Museum opens soon in Edgewood — Route 66 News (August 2011 Museum opening within Wildlife West Nature Park; antique bean-processing tools; pintos history dating to 2000 BC)
Last reviewed 2026-05-08. NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business; donations are not tax-deductible. Library address and phone, July 1 1999 incorporation date, ~1,800-2,000 residents at incorporation / 6,174 at 2020 census, tri-county Santa Fe / Bernalillo / Torrance footprint via post-1999 annexations, and August 2011 Pinto Bean Museum opening at Wildlife West Nature Park verified against official sources cited above; report corrections to [email protected].