Sierra County
NMGenWeb

Welcome!


Sierra County NMGenWeb is a free genealogical site about the history of the county. It is a member of NMGenWeb, which is a member of USGenWeb®. We hope you find helpful clues for your research of Sierra County ancestors.

Please consider contributing your pieces of Sierra county family history. Corrections, updates, and additions to this site are always welcome. Our combined efforts can keep this a great site for all who visit!

Co-County Coordinator: YOU? If you have a sincere interest in the genealogy of Sierra County, and if you are willing to help others along their family history journey, but website maintenance doesn't appeal to you, consider becoming a Co-CC. As Co-CC you would reply to email inquiries, contribute content, monitor the website, .... Contact us to give it a try.

County Coordinator: Norma Hass normahass01@gmail.com

COUNTY FORMATION

In the early to mid-1800s, Sierra County was populated by Spanish and Mexican citizens as well as the Chiricahua and Membreno Apaches. Mexico gained its independence in 1821 and the US acquired the New Mexico Territory in 1850, then acquired a bit more land in the south through the Gadsden Purchase in 1854. The Arizona Territory was created in 1863, basically cutting the New Mexico Territory in half. New Mexico sits on the "left shoulder" of Texas with El Paso, Texas, being located just south of White Sands Missile range and Holliman Air Force Base.

Sierra County was created in 1884 from Socorro and Dona Ana counties, two of the original counties created by the Territorial Government in 1852. Sierra was named for the Sierra de los Caballos range of mountains in the county.

The first county seat was Hillsboro, a mining town that declined in the 1930s, and the seat was moved to Truth or Consequences. Truth or Consequences (locally called T or C) was originally called Palomas Hot Springs or Palomas Springs and later, simply Hot Springs. It was renamed in 1950 for a radio show that offered a free festival (and free advertising) for any town that would change its name. At present, Sierra County's far east side is covered by the White Sands Missile Range and its far west side by the Gila National Forest. IH 25 and the Rio Grande split the remainder of the county almost in half just west of Elephant Butte Lake and the Caballo Reservoir, the first and fourth largest lakes in the state, both man-made.


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This page was last updated 08/25/2025