Grants, New Mexico Grants, New Mexico Location of Grants, New Mexico Location of Grants, New Mexico Grants, New Mexico is positioned in the US Grants, New Mexico - Grants, New Mexico State New Mexico The Grants Mining Museum, next to Historic Route 66 Grants NM aerial 2007.

Black Mesa is above town, and to the west Grants adjoins Milan, New Mexico.

Grants is a town in Cibola County, New Mexico, United States.

It is on the Trails of the Ancients Byway, one of the designated New Mexico Scenic Byways. Grants began as a barns camp in the 1880s, when three Canadian brothers Angus A.

Grant, John R.

Grant were awarded a contract to build a section of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad through the region.

The Grant brothers' camp was first called Grants Camp, then Grants Station, and finally Grants.

The new town/city enveloped the existing colonial New Mexican settlement of Los Alamitos and interval along the tracks of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad.

After the diminish of logging in the 1930s, Grants attained fame as the "carrot capital" of the United States.

Grants also benefited from its location, both being an airway beacon and later by U.S.

Perhaps the most memorable boom in the town's history occurred when Paddy Martinez, a Navajo shepherd, identified uranium ore near Haystack Mesa, sparking a quarrying boom that lasted until the 1980s (see Uranium quarrying in New Mexico).

The collapse of quarrying pulled the town into a depression, but the town has appreciateed a resurgence based on interest in tourism and the scenic beauty of the region. Recent interest in nuclear power has revived the possibility of more uranium quarrying in the area, and energy companies still own viable quarrying properties and claims in the area.

Grants is positioned in north-central Cibola County at 35 9 19 N 107 50 32 W (35.155269, -107.842099). Santa Fe Avenue (former US 66) is the chief road through the city, while Interstate 40 passes through the southwest side of the city, with access from exits 81 and 85.

The town of Milan borders the northwest end of Grants.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 14.9 square miles (38.5 km2), all of it land.

Grants is on the north end of the large and recent (youngest flows around 3,000 years old) lava field known as El Malpais ("the badlands"), part of which is preserved as El Malpais National Monument.

Climate data for Grants, New Mexico (1981 2010 normals) In the city, the populace was spread out with 28.8% under the age of 18, 9.3% from 18 to 24, 27.9% from 25 to 44, 21.7% from 45 to 64, and 12.3% who were 65 years of age or older.

Grants' only Catholic church, St.

Los Alamitos Middle School and Grants High School serve Grants.

Teresa of Avila Catholic School is the only private accredited school in Grants and serves grades Pre-Kindergarten through Eighth Grades.

There is a branch of New Mexico State University.

The National Park Service and the Bureau of Land Management operate the El Malpais Visitor Center at Exit 85 in Grants.

The visitor center highlights the many features of El Malpais National Monument and El Malpais National Conservation Area.

There is a quarrying exhibition in town, as well as the Western New Mexico Aviation Heritage Museum at the Grants-Milan Municipal Airport.

There is a Tibetan Buddhist stupa in the Zuni Mountains west of town, the Zuni Mountain Stupa.

Grants in prominent culture Author Robison Wells has stated in his novel On Second Thought that the town of Alamitos is based on Grants, which is the historical name before it was retitled after the quarrying camp. Wells lived in Grants amid the late 1990s.

Scenes from the movie 21 Grams starring Sean Penn and Naomi Watts were filmed in Grants.

In the Louis L'Amour book Flint, Los Alamitos (Grants) and the close-by El Malpais provided some of the settings for the chief character in the book.

"Swearing In Grants Officials".

"Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Grants city, New Mexico".

New Mexico Tourism Department.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grants, New Mexico.

City of Grants official website New Mexico State University - Grants Grants, NM - Uranium City USA Municipalities and communities of Cibola County, New Mexico, United States

Categories:
Cities in Cibola County, New Mexico - Cities in New Mexico - County seats in New Mexico - Micropolitan areas of New Mexico - Mining communities in New Mexico - Grants, New Mexico