Harding County Seat · NE NM High Plains

Where to donate books in Mosquero

No fixed library; served by NM State Library Northeast Bookmobile. 1908 founding by Benjamin F. Brown, Dawson Branch El Paso & Northeastern Railroad water-stop heritage, county seat of the least populated county in New Mexico, and NMLP volume-justified pickup from 195 miles southwest.

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Why the Mosquero donation map is shaped by an 1908 founder building a single home, a Dawson coal-mine railroad water stop, and the seat of New Mexico's least populated county

Mosquero is one of the smallest county seats in the United States — the seat of Harding County, the least populated county in New Mexico, with a 2020 census village population of 98. The Village sits on NM-39 in northeastern NM, 15 miles south of Roy and approximately 75 miles south of Springer.

1908 — founding by Benjamin F. Brown. The Village was founded in 1908 by Benjamin F. Brown when he decided to build a home in the area. After Brown completed his home, he added a store, a hotel, and a post office. The village grew to provide supplies to the surrounding homesteads.

Dawson Branch railroad water stop. Mosquero was a water stop for the Dawson Branch of the El Paso and Northeastern Railroad — the same Dawson-coal-fields-targeted railway (built 1902 from Tucumcari) that drove Roy's relocation. The early-20th-century railroad-and-homesteading family-business records are core to older Mosquero estates.

Harding County administrative center. Despite its tiny population, Mosquero serves as the administrative seat of Harding County. Harding County was carved out of Mora County in 1921 (named for President Warren G. Harding). The county-government paper trail traces back through that 1921 formation date — court records, county-clerk papers, and administrative correspondence have meaningful regional-history value.

The donation map reflects the Village's small size and Bookmobile-served status. The NM State Library Northeast Bookmobile is the primary library access point. The 195-mile drive each way puts Mosquero in deep volume-justified territory for NMLP. Routes always pair with Roy (15 miles north on NM-39) and frequently with Tucumcari, Springer, and Wagon Mound.

Library access in Mosquero — the Northeast Bookmobile

Service: NM State Library Northeast Bookmobile (no fixed library in Mosquero)

Schedule: Visit nmstatelibrary.org/bookmobiles for current schedule

Alternative public-library options: Tucumcari (~75 mi S on NM-39 + I-40), Springer Fred Macaron Library (~60 mi N on NM-39 + I-25), Las Vegas NM

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

When NMLP free pickup makes sense in Mosquero

Logistics: Call or text 702-496-4214. Routes always pair with Roy (15 mi N on NM-39) and frequently with Tucumcari (75 mi S), Springer (60 mi N), and Wagon Mound.

Decision shortcut for Mosquero

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Last reviewed 2026-05-08. NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business; donations are not tax-deductible. Mosquero's status as Harding County seat without a fixed public library, NM State Library Northeast Bookmobile service, 1908 founding by Benjamin F. Brown, Dawson Branch El Paso & Northeastern Railroad water-stop heritage, and 2020-census population of 98 verified against official sources cited above; report corrections to [email protected].