I have to admit that when I looked at this card, my first thought was, "Where are the old pigeons?" Well I did a little homework and found that Frenchman Alexander
Valle built Pigeon Ranch in the early 1820's. The ranch got its name
because of the "pigeon-English" (broken-English) that Valle spoke.
The ranch became a very important site along the Santa Fe Trail, serving as a stagecoach
stop, U.S. Post Office and a trading post. In March of 1862, Pigeon Ranch
and the surrounding area was the site of the biggest and bloodiest battle of
the Civil War in the Southwest.
In
1924, Thomas "Tommie" Greer bought the Pigeon Ranch and turned it
into a tourist attraction. Greer, being the "showman" that he was,
claimed that the well on the ranch was "the oldest in the U.S.", a
claim that is unfounded. He added trained bears (looks safe to me!) to the ranch to try to lure
even more tourists.
By the 1940's the Tommie and his bears were gone. Today all that's left of the ranch is one building that sits precariously close to New Mexico's Hwy 50.