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The Pinery
The Pinery Station
has the distinction of being the only remaining station
ruin standing close to a major thoroughfare - only 200
yards off Highway 62/180, which generally follows the
original Butterfield route through Guadalupe Pass. As
such, it is accessible to millions who travel a similar
route, only at 50 to 60 miles an hour instead of five!
NPS Photo - Cookie Ballou
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The Pinery Trail

Travel the short .75 mile path
to the ruins of the old Pinery Station, once a favored stop
on the original 2,800 mile Butterfield Overland Mail Route.
Trailside exhibits describe Chihuahuan desert vegetation.
The trail is paved, rated easy, and wheelchair accessible.
Pets are allowed on leash.
Preservation of the Ruins
The ruin is fragile; climbing on the walls
can destroy this piece of history. It is preserved by the
National Park Service as a window to the past, in the relatively
unchanged, rugged setting that stage riders and Mescalero
Apaches saw more than one hundred years ago. With the help
of careful visitors to protect it, this historic location
will continue to reflect the spirit of courage and adventure
which commanded the senses of long-ago travelers, and still
stirs in those who ride this route today.
History of the Pinery
When the conductor, his driver, and their
sole passenger made their first call at the Pinery, there
was little to see: a stout corral built of pine that had been
cut and hauled from the mountains above, and the tents that
housed the station keeper and his men. But two months later
the station consisted of a high-walled rock enclosure protecting
a wagon repair shop, a black smith shop, and the essential
replacement teams of fresh horses. Three mud-roofed rooms
with limestone walls offered a double fireplace, a warm meal,
and a welcome retreat from the dusty trail of the plains below.
Pinery Station was built of local limestone,
in a fortress like pattern. High rock walls formed a rectangular
enclosure with a single entrance. The three mud-roofed rooms
were attached, lean-to fashion, to the inside walls, which
afforded safety and protection from Indian raids. These walls,
built of limestone slabs and adobe, were 30 inches thick and
11 feet high. The station's water supply came from Pine Spring
through an open ditch to a tank inside the station. A stockade
of heavy pine posts protected the main entrance on the south.
In the southeast corner of the enclosure, a thatched shelter
covered the wagon repair shop and smithy. Livestock were kept
in the stone-walled corral on the north end.
There was more activity about this station
than one might suspect. The station keeper was Henry Ramstein,
a surveyor from El Paso. He supervised six to eight men who
worked as cooks, blacksmiths, and herders. Four times a week
the distant sound of the conductor's horn announced the arrival
of the mail coach with up to nine passengers. Express riders
dashed through at all hours, road crews stopped off, and tank
wagons filled up at Pine Spring, rolling on to fill water
tanks along the dry stretches. Freighters and mule pack trains
added to the passing traffic.
There were fearful moments, as when an army
scout brought word that Indians were sighted in a nearby canyon.
All stock was quickly herded inside the station, bars were
secured across the entrance gate, and every man stood ready
with his Sharp's rifle. At times, soldiers were garrisoned
at the Pinery to guard against Indian attacks, which led to
stories that this ruin was once a government fort. There was
also news of tragic happenings. On one occasion a rider reported
that the three men who had built this station were murdered
with axes at a mail station in Arizona by three of their helpers.
Their construction foreman, St. John, was still living, but
had suffered an axe blow that severed his arm. On another
occasion an express rider brought news of an Apache attack
in Arizona which stopped the mail and left the station keeper
and a passing emigrant family massacred.
The Butterfield Mail Coach continued to
come through the Pinery for 11 months until August 1859, when
this route was abandoned for a new road that passed by way
of Forts Stockton and Davis. The new route better served the
chain of forts along the southern military road to El Paso,
and was better protected against Indian attacks. A total of
ten stations were abandoned along the Guadalupe route and
16 were added along the "Fort Trail." But long after
its abandonment, the old Pinery Station continued to be a
retreat for emigrants, freighters, soldiers, outlaws, renegades,
and drovers. It is now a fragile remnant of an early endeavor
to span the continent with the first reliable transportation
and communication system ever attempted.
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