Torrance County · Northern Estancia Valley · Route 66

Where to donate books in Moriarty

Moriarty Community Library, 1887 Michael Timothy Moriarty homesteading from Iowa, 1903 Santa Fe Central Railroad, 1937 Route 66 re-alignment, "Pinto Bean Capital of the World" identity, and NMLP pickup from 45 miles southwest on I-40.

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Why the Moriarty donation map is shaped by an Iowa homesteader's rheumatism, the 1937 Route 66 re-alignment, and a pinto bean identity

Moriarty is a small City in northern Torrance County, sitting on I-40 and on the original Route 66 alignment, at the northern edge of the Estancia Valley. The town's identity rests on three intertwined late-19th- and 20th-century stories that distinguish it sharply from the rest of the Estancia Valley and shape what shows up in local estate libraries today.

1887 — Michael Timothy Moriarty homesteading from Iowa. The town bears its founder's family name. Michael Timothy Moriarty, his wife, and their three children arrived in the fall of 1887 and homesteaded the land. The Moriartys had relocated from their Iowa farm to escape Iowa's cold winters, which had aggravated Mr. Moriarty's rheumatism — a small, specific medical detail that drove the founding of the entire town. The Moriarty family's homestead became the nucleus of the community. Multi-generation Moriarty estates frequently include original homestead-era family papers, Iowa-to-NM relocation correspondence, and 1880s-1900s Estancia Valley homesteading documentation.

1903 — post office and Santa Fe Central Railroad. A post office was established in Moriarty in 1903, with Michael Moriarty as the first postmaster. The Santa Fe Central Railroad built its line through the area in 1903, and in 1908 the line became the New Mexico Central Railroad. The early-20th-century railroad and post-office era set the rhythm of life for Moriarty's first half-century: rail-supplied dryland agriculture, freight-and-mail business, and the gradual buildup of a small but persistent main-street commercial district.

1937 — US Route 66 re-alignment through Moriarty. In 1937, US Route 66 was re-routed to NM Highway 6 in the Rio Grande Valley and passed through Moriarty. The pre-1937 Route 66 alignment had taken a more northerly route via Santa Fe; the 1937 re-alignment shortened the road and sent it through the Estancia Valley. For four decades — from 1937 until I-40 superseded Route 66 — Moriarty was a meaningful Route-66 main-street town. The Sunset Motel (still operating today as a Route-66-themed property) and dozens of other roadside motels, gas stations, and diners sat directly on the alignment. The Route-66-era cultural fingerprint is foundational to Moriarty's identity and to the documentary record of older estates here. With the Route 66 Centennial approaching (2025-26), Route-66-era primary-source material has acquired new archival weight.

The "Pinto Bean Capital of the World." Moriarty annually hosts the Pinto Bean Fiesta every October — a parade, simple Crosley Park games, and the crowning of a "Pinto Bean Queen." The high-school athletic teams are the Pintos. The pinto-bean identity reflects the Estancia Valley's 20th-century dryland-farming heyday — the same agricultural era documented in Estancia and Mountainair estates — and the Pinto-Bean-Capital-of-the-World branding has become part of the town's modern marketing profile.

Moriarty Historical Museum. The local Moriarty Historical Museum (operated by the City of Moriarty as part of the combined Library & Museum system) is the canonical local archive for Moriarty's homesteading, railroad, Route-66, and pinto-bean stories. Material with documented archival relevance to any of these threads should route through the Museum BEFORE general donation.

The donation map reflects the town's small scale and the heritage layers. The principal public library is the Moriarty Community Library at 202 S Broadway. The 45-mile drive each way puts Moriarty in route-friendly territory for NMLP. Routes pair regularly with Estancia (15 miles south on NM-41), Edgewood (10 miles west on I-40), Stanley, McIntosh, and the broader East Mountains / Estancia Valley / I-40 corridor activity.

Moriarty Community Library

Address: 202 S Broadway, Moriarty, NM 87035

Phone: (505) 832-2513

System: City of Moriarty Library & Museum (combined library-and-museum operation)

Source: Moriarty Community Library — Official SiteCity of Moriarty — Library & Museum

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 combined Library & Museum operation means local-history material with archival relevance can be routed to the Museum side specifically — call the library to ask about Museum-track donations for Route-66 / homesteading / Moriarty-family-history material.

For donors with mixed-condition material, large estate libraries, or volumes that exceed what a small library can absorb, NMLP free pickup is the answer.

When NMLP free pickup makes sense in Moriarty

Logistics: Call or text 702-496-4214. Routes pair with Estancia (15 mi south on NM-41) and Edgewood (10 mi west on I-40), and combine with East Mountains corridor activity.

Decision shortcut for Moriarty

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Last reviewed 2026-05-08. NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business; donations are not tax-deductible. Library address and phone, 1887 Michael Timothy Moriarty homesteading and Iowa-relocation context, 1903 post office and Santa Fe Central Railroad founding, 1908 NM Central renaming, and 1937 Route 66 re-alignment verified against official sources cited above; report corrections to [email protected].