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Steins, New Mexico: The Ultimate American Ghost Town

It concerns me that the gas station attendant has never heard of Steins. We are one stop away from Steins on New Mexico's Interstate 10. It's basically this gas station, flat desert, some yucca plants, then Steins. I could walk to my destination from here. Granted, I might get sunstroke and also scary close to the vultures on the fences, but the point is we're that close. "Sorry ma'am," he shakes his head. "I don't know that town."
I keep calm, knowing Steins doesn't fit everyone's definition of a town. Not since the mid-1940s has Steins had much street traffic. That was when the Southern Pacific Railroad switched from steam to diesel, shutting down this depot town virtually overnight. It's the classic ghost town tale – a settlement of transients and dreamers who fled as abruptly as they came – except that Steins was never completely abandoned.
There was always someone hanging on: first, the bordello madams, and later, a lone man who got his pick of the cluttered homes. For over 40 years, the adobes slouched and the barns blanched to gray, but Steins, unlike so many of the old boomtowns that dot the map of New Mexico, was never left to the elements, and never looted.
It's no small relief to see a woman on the porch of the old town store, under the chipped white letters, STEINS MERCANTILE. There's a cattle grate to bump over, and just past it, an outburst of prickly pear cacti, holding their pert needles up to the desert sun. It's just after 9 a.m. and already, the desert's cooking.
The woman stands and watches me pull up – apparently, I'm today's first guest. Steins, after a full year of closure, just reopened in May. I scoured the web for an official site to confirm its new hours, but all the search results led me instead to the story of Larry Link.
Gallery: Steins, New mexico
"He didn't want to entertain people," says Melissa Lamoree, Link's granddaughter, who just took over the family operation. A year prior, Larry Link walked out late one night to investigate a noise on his property. He was shot and killed. The murder, which remains unsolved, devastated the Link family. As for the ghost town, it looked as though history was about to repeat itself, with another sudden folding, until 30-year-old Melissa stepped in. It bristled her to think her grandfather's death might overshadow the place he'd spent years reviving. By the end of his life, Link had cleared paths in all but a few buildings. "He just wanted the history of this place to speak for itself."
Melissa stands off to the side as I duck through the low doorway of a pink brick house, into a room so thick with dust it has the murky feel of pond water. In a long slice of window light, I see what a commotion our entrance causes. A dust storm rises and settles. My first concern is knocking something over. My second concern is where to look.

Imagine an attic where your parents and their parents, and about four more generations of parents, have stacked lamps and novels and cowboy boots and old license plates. Imagine that no one, in this long line of hoarders, believes in spring cleaning. No dusters in the family, either. Imagine spider webs as thick as gauze. A few you mistake for cocoons.
My gaze settles first on a boxy wooden suitcase, cracked open to reveal the record player within, its needle resting partway across a grimy album. Next, I make out a pair of silver roller skates, sitting like a pair of toy cars on the counter. That's a horseshoe, I think; that's a tin for tobacco. I lift the cover of a children's book and what sounds like a pinch of sand hits the floor.
I turn around and cringe at Melissa, not because I've broken something, but because I haven't heard a word she's said since coming inside. "Could you start over?" I have to ask, hoping Melissa believes my reason. "I'm overwhelmed."
She smiles – I must not be the first dumbstruck guest – and rewinds. "Thirteen hundred people used to live here ... " In the early 1880s, Steins was a workstation for the railroad company aiming to connect California and the Gulf of Mexico. When a stone quarry was built nearby, 1,000 Chinese laborers arrived to lay gravel bed. "Only one Chinese man was allowed to live right here in town," Melissa tells me. "The cook." On the wall behind her, a half-corroded company sign warns townspeople "to avoid being struck ... by trains or cars." The railroad gave life to this town, and just over a half a century later, took it away.
"When things shut down, people were offered a ride on the train," Melissa pauses by an upright piano that looks straight out of a saloon.The piano's roof, like most surfaces in this 16-room maze, doubles as a display – in this case, for clocks, peacock feathers, a tarnished watering can. "They were told to take whatever they could carry." There was a lot the people of Steins could not carry – hence the attic-feel.

If Steins is haunted, it's by what was left behind – things too heavy or impractical to carry forward, pieces of this town's life that were never the starting ingredients for someplace else. The pie safe is crowded with still-full spice jars. A typewriter sits heavily on a table, spider webs bridging its blank-faced keys. Overhead, a cowboy hat hangs on a pair of elk horns, lanced right in its dimple. The handle of a dresser dangles off one hook, like it was yanked hard and quick.
It's the arrangement of things, more than the condition they're in, that makes the interior rooms of Steins so astonishing. You get the sense, creeping across the swollen floorboards and into the silent bedrooms, that these lanterns and suspenders and saddles are right where someone left them. That was why Melissa, when she was a little girl, trailing after her grandfather on summer visits, refused to go into the bathhouse. Everything by that cobwebbed, claw-foot tub looked left by someone.
Preserving that trace of the town's last settlers was the work of Larry Link. He wasn't precious about keeping the antiques in mint condition (the only relic I inspect through glass is the delicate skeleton of a horny toad), but seemed to believe that the way we leave things – however messy or unruly or vulnerable – tells a story.
Take the mason jars of Steins. Everywhere you look in this ghost town, there are long families of glass jars, their shoulders uniformly dusted. I see mason jars over doorways, across the piano, bloating cupboards. From the look of it, the people of Steins were America's first diehard recyclers. "The sheriff warned people not to throw away glass," Melissa tells me. "Because the Apaches might use the shards to make arrow heads."

I'd planned to weave through other old mining towns on my long ride home from Steins, but anywhere else is bound to feel like a Disney ride set after a place this heavy with history. At a nearby ghost town, reenacted saloon fights remind visitors of the lawlessness of the Old West. At Steins, that hint is in the bottles, every shade of sea glass, glowing in the corners of dim rooms.
"Every time I come through here," says Melissa, "I notice something new." I know she's not exaggerating; later, when I study my photos, I see all I missed. Completely different things pop: not the chipped white bed post, but the hanging silver scissors, their legs kicked open, gleaming in the backdrop. Not the broken china plate, but the sewing machine off to the side, looking somehow poised.
One thing, though, is impossible to look past in real time: the stuffed warthog.
"That's a javalena," Melissa corrects me. She sounds excited to introduce us: New Yorker and giant rodent of the desert. Her grandfather hung the javalena for precisely this occasion: so outsiders could learn about the desert habitat. Though I doubt it's the cactus-eating beast that's exciting Melissa. She brightens every time her grandfather comes up. I've heard about Larry Link in just about every chamber of this ghost town. Steins starts to feel like a layering of dreams and losses, all of them raw, but none more than the Link family's.
A train passes, its whistle like a pipe organ – all keys pressed down, let go. It's gone by the time we step outside, into the brightness. I follow Melissa through a yard where rusty barrels and wash pans look as organic as the barrel cacti. Steins has a fence but no real perimeter; it spreads and mingles with the desert scrub, as far as I can squint. This place refuses to let you get your bearings. It tugs at and teases your gaze, onward and deeper, into the next rusty puzzle. Off in the distance, a splotchy red truck that probably drove through the Great Depression rests with its hood popped open.
"Antique people sometimes come and tell me our most valuable things are out here, baking in the sun," Melissa says, sounding amused, not worried.
I squint over her shoulder, wondering what the high-ticket treasures are. The disintegrating wheelbarrow? The drooping stagecoach?
I give up, realizing it doesn't matter. Melissa may one day have to dismantle the dusty chaos of Steins, but for the moment, she's sticking to the vision of the rattlesnake farmer who put Steins back on the map. She's keeping a path clear, and stepping aside.
Filed under: North America, United States










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Charles Jul 31st 2012 11:24AM
A couple of reasons why the Gas Station Attendantmight not have known where Steins is.
A. It is pronouce "Steens" not Stines. Although a lot of people know it by both names.
B. It is actually a little ways away from any gas station.
C. It had been closed for a year or so.
D. The Attendant may have been from out of the area.
But Steins is a cool stop. It was the second best "Ghost Town" in Southwest New Mexico. Shakespeare, NM was better but it burned about 10 or so years ago, and was harder to get to.
Betty Aug 2nd 2012 9:11AM
I don't know where you're from, but Stines is correct for Steins. It's European, and "ei" is pronounced like the letter "I" and "ie' like the letter "E" . Get it????
Charles Aug 2nd 2012 10:16AM
Betty. The name SHOULD be pronounced Stines,, but in Southwestern New Mexico is has been pronounced Steens for at least the last 25 years. (And supposedly that pronunciation has been around since the settlement of the area in the late 1800's.)
Whiskey Jack Aug 2nd 2012 11:28AM
If I say "Stines", and he pronounces it "Steens", and he can't figure out that we both mean the same place, then that might explain why he's working as a gas station attendant. Apparently, he's not smart enough for McDonald's.
T-roy Jul 31st 2012 8:48PM
A whole article with 4 photos and not ONE single photo of a building or what the town looked like from the street? Please, I tried to read this but stopped when I knew I wouldn't actually get to see the town in any shots.
Mark Aug 2nd 2012 7:11AM
Go to Google Earth and type Steins, NM. The towm is a little to the west of where the pin marker is but then go to street view and you can essentially "walk" or "drive" through the town.
Amanda Aug 2nd 2012 7:57AM
There were 22 pictures of the town if you clicked into the photo gallery right in the middle of the article.
Clear Aug 2nd 2012 11:01AM
Oh I see,so you only read things with pictures in them...that says alot.
DennisTheMenance Aug 2nd 2012 1:00PM
It's about 30 Miles from the Mexican Boarder
And I have no dbout he was shot by either Some of them Illegals or Drug People passing thru
This whole area is Where God Left his Shoes , inbtween Nowhere and Anywhere
And Hot isn't the word for it.. double Seal aynthing Liquid it's So Dry.. I swear it felt like a (-) Negative humidity Level of about 0 to -20%
after getting out of the ARMY durning the Nam Yrs inf late 60's and passing thru this Part of the country, what a Dramatic Difference from the Jungles of Nam to the Desert Of AZ and the others..
Didn't appreciate Jungles and Grass until then..
Sorry, Don't see the Beauty In those states..and that kind of Living if you want to call it that..
They spend the same 6 mos a Yr Indoors in A/C as we do in Winter up here in the North..
LoriK Aug 2nd 2012 12:02PM
Exactly! The article was interesting, and I would be much more interested in some shots of the buildings and the layout of the town than of old bottles, cacti and broken plates.
Sue Aug 2nd 2012 6:12PM
Agree, these photos stink. Can't really tell what the town looks like. Photographer was trying to be too artsie-fartsie and lost the whole aspect of what could have made this piece shine.
DennisTheMenance Aug 2nd 2012 10:59AM
This and Many others Like it will be the Legacy of what was Once America
We had our Chance and did our Best, but We couldn't make it last
:-(
Takeanote2gijoe Aug 2nd 2012 8:26AM
Geeez and NOT involving Billy the Kid or UFO'S .... Amazing...
Bill Harnist Aug 2nd 2012 9:00AM
I traveled through Provo, South Dakota, this summer. It is still on the map, but is essentially a "ghost town." I saw two small trailers that looked inhabited, but I saw no one. It was the site of an ordnance depot during WW2, which was closed down in 1947 I believe, and it reason for existence slowly faded away.
Provo is in the southwest corner of SD, just south of Edgmont about 10 miles off of US Highway 18. It could prove to be an interesting side-trip for anyone passing through the area. If you are in the Black Hills/Badlands area, check it out.
Another interesting town is Scenic, SD, just outside of the Badlands. It does have a post office and a trading post, but not much else. Stop in the trading post and ask about the abandoned jail; it has an interesting story.
D.T.B. ROBERT Aug 2nd 2012 9:22AM
There is a place just like this in northeastern Ohio! It's called EAST LIVERPOOL, OHIO!
Karen Aug 2nd 2012 9:32AM
Thanks for the story and the pictures Ms Kinder. This was really fun!
Stacey Aug 2nd 2012 10:01AM
My husband and I have had the pleasure of browsing Stiens and meeting Larry Link and his wife. They were nice and told us about the town...His wife told me how her husband came home one day and said " Honey, I bought a ghost town"! and she thought...oh lord! I got a laugh out of that. There was also a white donkey that wanted attention and we were promptly introduced much to my daughters delight. That was Nov, 2006. Mr Links death saddened us because this man was almost single handedly preserving western history. KUIDOS to his grand daughter for keeping this dream alive. We WILL visit again.
Misty Aug 3rd 2012 6:43PM
I am friends of the family...I will pass your kind words to them.
Larry is sure to be proud of Melissa's hard work!
Misty
ExArmyMedic Aug 2nd 2012 10:09AM
Having the pleasure to drive from the east coast to the west coast I would at times when I used to drive stop at Stein'sstrech my legs from driving the tractor trailer and reflect on what it must have been like years ago there.
It is a great photo opportunity
And the cemetery is neat as well
I hope to make a wes coast trip and stop again there but this time in my pickup truck and really stop and take the time to smell the rose's per say on my journey west.
Kruiser Aug 2nd 2012 10:37AM
Betty, your'e an idiot. I don't know where you are from, but you have the audacity to critique Charles's comments, someone who is obviously familiar with the area around the town. Many locals have colloquial pronunciations for the names of their towns. Just stick to reading the articles and refrain from making comments that reflect on your misinformation.