Georgetown Cabins, High-Tech Hideaway
by Pat Young
If former inhabitants could see
Georgetown today, they wouldn’t recognize the high-tech,
innovative community called Georgetown Cabins that has
sprung up overlooking the original townsite. (Maybe some of
them do
visit – the Georgetown Cemetery is
only a mile down the road.)
Once a thriving silver mining community
of "1200 hardy folk," Georgetown declined in the 1890’s,
leaving behind a few foundations and mine shafts tucked in
the hills on Georgetown Road to tell its story.
A traveler near the turn of that century
commented in an article, "It was sad to see the once
bustling silver town quiet." The writer noted that maybe the
town could be given another chance to prosper as a resort
for people to enjoy.
Along came Jon and Susie Eickhoff to
fulfill that prophecy 100 years later. He has a mechanical
engineering degree. She has a Ph.D. in industrial
organizational psychology. They owned a fast-track computer
engineering service company in Michigan that was once
featured in Fortune Magazine, but when he had a heart attack
in 1996, their lives changed.
Jon attributes the "better business
skills" to his wife, who began running the company. To keep
his engineer’s mind busy, he built an amusement park for the
employees’ kids called "Susieville." After a few years they
started migrating occasionally to New Mexico’s sunshine,
working remotely from their laptops.
Jon says one day they woke up and said,
"What are we waiting for?" They sold the business and moved
to Silver City eight years ago. Then they told their real
estate agent, Tim Donovan, that they also wanted a little
getaway spot bordering the forest. He showed them an
historic 10-acre parcel on Georgetown Road. After wading
through haphazard old surveys with "next to the fencepost"
language and old mining claims, they purchased the property
in 2007.
Susie says they discovered that many
people come out to the Georgetown area for recreation or to
search the Georgetown Cemetery for family histories. They
decided to do something with their newly purchased property
that others could enjoy, too, and that’s when they initiated
"another creative outlet" for their skills.
Relaxing in the first of three cabins
built so far (they "test" each cabin with a stay
themselves), the down-to-earth couple talk about their
plans. They also talk about the difficult task of collecting
history on a town that basically disappeared before the
territory became a state, making records almost
non-existent. But memories live on, and a lot of locals have
shared family stories and bigger-than-life legends with the
Eickhoffs. (Much of the history and other information
gathered for their project is available at
georgetowncabins.com)
Georgetown was named in 1877 by John
Magruder in memory of his brother George, who died in a
mining accident. The Magruder’s mining claim became the
townsite. The historic town was laid out in a "V" shape,
with a "better site," a "bawdy side," and a business
district in the middle. The parcel purchased by the
Eickhoffs was the site of the McGregor Mine, and in fact
they purchased the property from McGregor descendants.
The first cabin they built is named the
Jolly-McGregor after Malcolm McGregor, miner and prominent
Grant County citizen. It features southwest furnishings and
décor, right down to the chili ristra hanging on the wall.
The second cabin is called the Lindauer
after a prominent Georgetown mercantile owner, Sigmund
Lindauer, who kept a book of IOU’s for residents who
couldn’t afford to pay. (Stroll down the historic
storefronts at the Deming Museum and you will discover a
likeness of the haberdashery he eventually owned in Deming.)
This board and batten cabin has a western theme to it.
The third completed cabin, a Victorian
cottage, is named Storz after John M. Storz, butcher and
livery stable owner. Solid ash flooring and cabinets with
coordinating floral, stripe and damask wallpaper give the
cabin a feeling right out of the last century.
A fourth cabin under construction will be
named after Judge James A. Lucas, who had a reputation for
the same "frontier justice" that Judge Roy Bean was famous
for. The fifth cabin will be named for mule
skinner-turned-miner Stanton S. Brannin, and the sixth cabin
will be called the Ailman, a name familiar to anyone in the
Silver City area. Ailman was the discoverer and owner of the
Naiad Queen, the richest silver producing mine in the area.
Ailman later opened a banking operation in Silver City, and
his historic red brick home now houses the Silver City
Museum.
All six high-efficiency cabins feature
similar one-bedroom, open space floor plans with kitchens,
gas fireplaces, high-definition televisions with DVD, Wi-Fi,
private decks with forever views and gas barbeques. All are
furnished right down to the plush robes sporting Georgetown
Cabin logos hanging in the closets.
This "prototype community," as Jon
describes it, is totally off the grid and eco friendly. A
large solar system as well as LP gas and water systems are
shared by all of the cabins.
Driving to this scenic spot from the
Mimbres Valley, winding through the Gila National Forest
with the Gila Wilderness and Black Range as a backdrop, it
seems an anomaly to suddenly come upon this little community
of cabins studding the hillside above the road. It is even a
bigger surprise to enter the property by driving past the
huge, high-tech solar panel array.
A colorful history (Billy the Kid was
said to hide out here, and Miss Kitty from the TV series
Gunsmoke was said to have been fashioned after one shady
local named Lottie Deno) plus a serene setting only 18 miles
from Silver City give the Georgetown Cabins a unique
character.
One guest, a retired geologist, said,
"This place offers everything … solitude, wildlife, views
and rocks." Another guest said the cabins reflected
"engineering excellence." Yet another guest summed up the
Georgetown Cabins by saying, "If we build a cabin someday,
we would love it to be like this."