Otowi Historic District

Otowi Historic District
Buildings at Otowi Crossing
Nearest city Santa Fe, New Mexico
Coordinates 35°52′31″N 106°8′31″W / 35.87528°N 106.14194°W / 35.87528; -106.14194Coordinates: 35°52′31″N 106°8′31″W / 35.87528°N 106.14194°W / 35.87528; -106.14194
Area 29 acres (12 ha)
Built 1886 (1886)
Built by Union Bridge Company
Architectural style Pueblo
NRHP reference # 75001170[1]
NMSRCP # 295
Significant dates
Added to NRHP December 4, 1975
Designated NMSRCP August 20, 1973

The Otowi Historic District is a 29-acre (12 ha) historic district in northern Santa Fe County, New Mexico, having four contributing buildings and three contributing structures including Otowi Suspension Bridge and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.[1]

Otowi (Tewa, p'otsuivi, “gap where water sinks”)[2] is a place on the west bank of the Rio Grande at the head of White Rock Canyon. Established in 1886 with the name White Rock Canon, it was little more than a station and river crossing on the D&RGW’s Santa Fe Branch, the narrow-gauge railroad popularly known as the Chili Line.

In 1923, nearby Los Alamos Ranch School requested a post office here using the ranch name. But a place near Las Vegas already had that name, so three other names were submitted and the U.S. Post Office Department chose Otowi. A single-lane, suspension road bridge was built in 1924. The railroad was removed and the post office closed in 1941. When Los Alamos Ranch School was taken over by the U.S. Government in 1943 to become the secret Los Alamos nuclear physics laboratory, virtually all of the traffic serving the town and laboratory travelled on New Mexico State Road 4 (now renumbered NM 502), crossing the river at Otowi.

This place is the setting for Peggy Pond Church’s historical memoir, The House at Otowi Bridge, (1960) which chronicles the life of Edith Warner from 1921 to 1951. She was postmistress and shopkeeper in the early years, and later the hostess of tea rooms which became popular with scientists from the Manhattan Project.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. http://www.ghosttowns.com/states/nm/otowi
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