Northern Taos County · Sangre de Cristo Mountains · New Mexico

Where to donate books in Red River

Red River Public Library, 1892 Mallette brothers homesteading, 1895 gold-rush boom (~3,000 peak population), modern Red River Ski Area year-round resort, and NMLP volume-justified pickup from 175 miles south.

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Why the Red River donation map is shaped by the Mallette brothers, an 1895 gold rush, and a 20th-century ski-resort transformation

Red River is a small mountain village in northern Taos County, sitting at approximately 8,750 feet in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains on NM-38, 12 miles east of Questa. The village's identity rests on three intertwined late-19th- and 20th-century stories that distinguish it sharply from Taos and Questa and shape what shows up in local estate libraries today.

1892 — the Mallette brothers arrive. The town's modern history begins in 1892, when the Mallette brothers arrived in the Red River Valley to homestead and prospect for minerals. Their arrival established the settlement foundation amid a regional gold-rush onset. Multi-generation Mallette-era / late-19th-century homesteading family papers from Red River estates have meaningful archival value.

1895 — the gold-rush founding. Gold had been discovered in locations around Taos County around the time of Lee's surrender at Appomattox (1865), but the gold boom of 1895 marked the formal founding of Red River City. By 1895, Red River was a booming mining camp with gold, silver, and copper in substantial abundance, and a population estimated at approximately 3,000 — at the time, larger than today's resort-era population. The 1867-1905 mining era is the documentary backbone of Red River's first 40 years. The Red River Historical Society (redrivernmhistoricalsociety.org) maintains the canonical local mining-era archive.

20th-century resort transition. After the mining era ended in the early 1900s, Red River gradually transformed into a year-round mountain vacation destination. The Red River Ski Area is the principal winter draw; summer hiking, camping, biking, and fishing fill the other three seasons. Today's village population is small (approximately 470 year-round) but the seasonal visitor population is many times larger. Multi-generation Red River resort-era estate libraries can include early-Lodge guest registers, ski-area founding documentation, period photographs of mid-20th-century resort development, and contemporaneous regional tourism press.

The donation map reflects the village's small year-round population and the layered heritage. The principal public library is the Red River Public Library at 702 E Main Street. The 175-mile drive each way puts Red River in deep volume-justified territory for NMLP. Routes always pair with Questa (12 miles west on NM-38) and Taos (40 miles southwest) on combined Sangre-de-Cristo / NM-38 / NM-522 corridor runs. Logistics note: Red River's high elevation and the Sangre de Cristo passes mean winter pickup access depends on weather conditions.

Red River Public Library

Address: 702 E Main Street, Red River, NM 87558 (mailing: P.O. Box 1020)

Phone: (575) 754-6564

Hours: Monday 1:00-7:00 PM; Tues / Wed / Fri / Sat 9:30 AM-12:30 PM & 1:00-5:00 PM; Thursday 1:00-7:00 PM; Sunday closed

System: Town of Red River public library serving Red River and the surrounding northern Taos County

Source: Red River NM — LibraryLibrary 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 a small library can absorb, NMLP free pickup is the answer.

When NMLP free pickup makes sense in Red River

Logistics: Call or text 702-496-4214. Routes pair with Questa (12 mi west on NM-38) and Taos (40 mi SW). Winter pickup access depends on Sangre de Cristo pass weather conditions.

Decision shortcut for Red River

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Last reviewed 2026-05-08. NMLP is a for-profit New Mexico business; donations are not tax-deductible. Library address, phone, and hours, 1892 Mallette brothers homesteading, 1895 formal founding during gold rush, ~3,000 peak mining-era population, and 1867-1905 mining era verified against official sources cited above; report corrections to [email protected].