Ratón Pass is a 7,834 ft (2,388 m) elevation mountain pass on the Colorado–New Mexico border in the western United States. It is located on the eastern side of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains between Trinidad, Colorado and Raton, New Mexico, approximately 180 miles (290 km) northeast of Santa Fe. Ratón is Spanish for "mouse". The pass crosses the line of volcanic mesas that extends east from the Sangre de Cristo Mountains along the state line, and furnishes the most direct land route between the valley of the Arkansas River to the north and the upper valley of the Canadian River, leading toward Santa Fe, to the south. The pass now carries Interstate 25 and railroad tracks.

The pass is a historically significant landmark on the Santa Fe Trail, a major 19th-century settlement route between Kansas City, Missouri and Santa Fe. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960 for this association.

History

In 1846, during the Mexican–American War, Stephen W. Kearny and his troops passed through the pass en route to New Mexico. During the Civil War, it was the primary path into New Mexico since it avoided Confederate raiders.

The route is now owned by BNSF, which absorbed the AT&SF in 1996. While it is still used by Amtrak's Chicago–Los Angeles Southwest Chief, freight traffic shifted from Raton Pass to the Belen Cutoff (1908), whose gradients do not exceed 1.25%. As a result, with Raton Pass having little to no freight traffic, BNSF said in 2012 that they could not justify maintenance of the route to Amtrak's standards between La Junta, Colorado, and Lamy, New Mexico, placing the future of rail transportation over the pass in jeopardy.

Highway route

In the 20th century, the pass was used as the route of U.S. Routes 85 and 87, and later, Interstate 25 between Denver and Albuquerque. At above sea level, the highway is subject to difficult driving conditions and occasional closures during heavy winter snowfalls.

Clint Black makes reference to the Raton Pass in the song "The Goodnight-Loving" from the 1990 album "Put Yourself in My Shoes."

:Ridin' against the wind in east New Mexico,

:His skin is dry and worn as the Texas plains.

:He's headed where the air is thin and the cold blue northers blow,

:Up through the Raton Pass, but he'll have to beat the early snow

Townes Van Zandt features Raton Pass in the chorus to his song "Snowin' on Raton" from the 1987 album "At My Window."

:It's snowin' on Raton.

:Come morning I'll be through them hills and gone.

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File:Raton Pass 1.jpg|Amtrak's Southwest Chief entering the north end of the tunnel

File:Raton Pass 2.jpg|Sign marking the elevation of the Raton Pass tunnel

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See also

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Las Animas County, Colorado
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Colfax County, New Mexico
  • List of National Historic Landmarks in Colorado
  • List of National Historic Landmarks in New Mexico

References

Further reading

  • Raton Tunnel
  • “Glorieta and Raton Passes: Gateways to the Southwest”, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
  • Raton Line: The Original Santa Fe Transcontinental, a railroad history of Raton Pass