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Aragon Farm, Aragon, NM 87820
Description
Supplements: The field is currently planted in fescue. The farm is a great place to run cows, yearlings or horses. The property has a high fence around that portion of the farm that is irrigated. Elevation is 6,650 feet and the latitude is 33.88 N, longitude 108.54 W. Property Taxes for 2022 were $14.26 The property has Native American Ruins on it. This property is right in the middle of the beautiful Aragon Valley. The Tularosa river runs through this property. It has scenic views all around of mountains, farmland, ponderosa pine, cottonwood, and oak trees. Almost every evening you can see elk, deer, and many other wildlife in the property area. Some of the most sought-after trophy hunting in the United States are located in this area, NM Game management unit 16D. Aragon is a community of private land and farming that is near the Gila National Forest. The Gila National Forest is a United States National Forest in New Mexico. Established in 1905, it now covers approximately 2,710,659 acres, making it the sixth largest National Forest in the continental United States. A little History of Aragon: Aragon is on the site of former Fort Tularosa, which was built in 1870 to protect the Apache Indian Agency from the Ojo Caliente Band of Apaches. The fort was abandoned when the tribe was moved back to the Ojo Caliente reservation in 1874. The fort was rebuilt in 1880 by Buffalo Soldiers led by Sergeant George Jordan. Jordan eventually received the Medal of Honor for leading 25 men to repulse a force of more than 100 Indians in the Battle of Fort Tularosa. The only remaining evidence of the Fort is a burial ground for soldiers who served in the Arizona Territory. The town was known as Joseph from 1887 to 1898 and 1901 to 1906. Since 1906 it has been known as Aragon, named for an old Spanish family who still lives in the area. Near Aragon, on the north side of Tularosa Canyon, a cave was occupied from 400 B.C. to A.D. 1100, containing pits and later masonry rooms.