Las Vegas National Wildlife Refuge

The Las Vegas National Wildlife refuge is situated within a unique ecological and cultural crossroads. Human history in the region traces back to earlier than 11,500 BCE, used by Paleoindian and Archaic period hunter-gatherers, and later Ancestral Puebloan and Plains Woodland cultural groups. While Spanish conquests targeted larger Pueblos, like the nearby Pecos Pueblo in Glorieta Pass, the area around Las Vegas National Wildlife Refuge was largely unsettled by Euro-Americans until the Mexican Territorial Period when the Republic of Mexico opened the Santa Fe Trail to trade with the United States, and a group of individuals petitioned for a land grant to settle east of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in 1835. The refuge is situated on a portion of the historic Las Vegas Land Grant, east of the Santa Fe Trail. The population of Las Vegas began to grow rapidly after the Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe railroad was completed in 1879. Las Vegas was the second largest town in New Mexico with 7,000 residents by the early 1900s. In 1906, 6 years before New Mexico became a State, an ambitious irrigation project was proposed to support new irrigated pasture and farmlands east of Las Vegas: The Storrie Project. Although it’s main irrigation canal would not be completed until 1923, the project rife with real estate scandals, and homesteads and farmsteads were plagued by drought, hailstorms, poor soils, it was this historic irrigation development around the natural and man-made playas and potholes, that made these lands a perfect location for a National Wildlife Refuge.

The refuge is located about six miles southeast of Las Vegas, New Mexico. From Interstate 25, take exit #345 and then turn east on State Highway 104 for one and a half miles. Turn south on State Highway 281 for about four miles and follow the signs to the refuge headquarters. The lat/long for the refuge’s headquarters is 35.508282, -105.167123.