Kingston's The Percha Bank

Kingston's schoolhouse turned museum

During the 1880s, Kingston became the center of a thriving mining district that included Hillsboro and Lake Valley, when rich silver strikes attracted thousands of prospectors from all over the world to the region, seeking their fortunes.  With blood, sweat and tears, miners dug hundreds of holes in the ground, and produced millions of dollars worth of silver.

Soon this wild-west boom-town was populated with merchants, saloon-keepers, and madams. Kingston boasted an opera house, a church, a school, a bordello (on Virtue Street), three newspapers and twenty-some saloons.  Visited by the famous and infamous, such as Mark Twain, Lillian Russell, Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, Kingston became known as “the Gem of the Black Range.”

But life was not easy – the fledgling community suffered from Apache raids, hunger, illness, and each other.  Some did strike it rich, some were swindled, and when silver was demonetized in 1893, the price of silver collapsed, and the boom went bust.  From thousands of residents, just a few hundred remained in Kingston by the turn of the century.

In 1924, an act of Congress declared the magnificent forested mountains to the west “The Gila Wilderness,” as the world’s first designated wilderness.  Today Kingston is a gateway into the Gila National Forest, Wilderness, and the Gila Cliff Dwellings.

A walking tour of Kingston includes the handsome stone Victorio Hotel and the brick Assay Office (now both private homes) and the Percha Bank Museum and Gallery, open on weekends and by appointment. There is a new museum in its c.1891 Schoolhouse. Relive its early days through artifacts, old photos and stories.

The Black Range Lodge bed-and-breakfast offers comfortable accommodations, including stargazing from an outdoor hot tub, with massage and spa treatments available.

To the west, the Gila National Forest is just a short walk or mountain bike ride up Main Street.  A longer hike along the Crest Trail leads to Hillsboro Peak.  Hop in your car for a scenic drive up to Emory Pass, where a spectacular view awaits the explorer, just off the beaten path.

What's Nearby 

  • 50 Kingston Main Street
  • 575-895-5652

In the 1880s, Kingston was a silver-mining boomtown and the Black Range Lodge housed prospectors, adventurers and cavalry. When the silver boom was over, the Black Range Lodge remained and grew with the addition of massive stone walls and log-beamed ceilings. Today, you will feel…

  • 168 Elenora Street
  • (575) 895-5000

Black Range Vineyards is a family owned and operated vineyard, located on the edge of the Black Range, a three million acre mountain wilderness. Here we grow grapes and make wine. Find us at NM wine festivals, where we sell our bottles and lavender products, our latest passion…

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