Lordsburg was founded in 1880 on the route of the
Southern Pacific Railroad. The
Continental Divide Trail starts at the Crazy Cook Monument and travels through Lordsburg.
New Mexico state song Lordsburg is the birthplace of the official New Mexico state song, "
O Fair New Mexico". It was written by Lordsburg resident
Elizabeth Garrett, the blind daughter of famed sheriff
Pat Garrett. In 1917, Governor
Washington Ellsworth Lindsey signed the legislation making it the official state song. In 1928,
John Philip Sousa presented Governor
Arthur T. Hannett and the people of New Mexico an arrangement of the state song embracing a musical story of the Indian, the cavalry, the Spanish and the Mexican.
Lordsburg Municipal Airport The Lordsburg Municipal Airport (KLSB) began operations in the mid-1920s and was the first airport in New Mexico. Initially the airfield was a cleared parcel of land where pilots could take off and land in any direction. Dirt runways were later constructed. In 1927, Lordsburg was one of the stops on
Charles Lindbergh's transcontinental
Spirit of Saint Louis air tour. In the early 1950s the airport was served by the original
Frontier Airlines (1950–1986), which flew DC-3s on a route from
El Paso to
Phoenix that included stops at
Las Cruces,
Deming, and Lordsburg, as well as
Clifton,
Safford, and
Tucson, Arizona. In the mid-1970s one runway had to be relocated to permit the construction of Interstate 10 around Lordsburg and a new paved runway was then constructed. The airport is owned by the City of Lordsburg and is southeast, about one mile outside the city limits.
World War II Lordsburg held as many as 1,500 Japanese Americans in a
Japanese American internment camp operated by the U.S. Army during World War II. On July 27, 1942, shortly after the Lordsburg Internment Camp was opened, Private First Class Clarence Burleson, a sentry at the facility, allegedly shot two Japanese American internees under questionable circumstances. One of the victims, Hirota Isomura, apparently died instantly. The other, Toshiro Kobata, died before dawn. After a military investigation and
court-martial, Burleson was found to have lawfully killed the two men. The camp operated until July 1943. The incident inspired an episode of the new
Hawaii 5-0 series, "Ho'oani Makuakane", Episode 4/9 (original air date December 13, 2013). The camp at Lordsburg also held captured German and Italian soldiers.
Rest stop For many years, Lordsburg has been a popular rest stop for people traveling to and from the
West Coast by car on
Interstate 10 and its precursor highway,
U.S. Route 80. At from downtown
Los Angeles, Lordsburg can comfortably be reached by car in less than one day. As Lordsburg had one of the few motels in the Southwest that would accept
black guests (
El Paso being a notable exception), it was especially popular with black travelers in the mid-20th century during the end of legal
segregation. There are 12 motels and hotels in Lordsburg. Over 300 rooms are available to guests. ==Geography==