Museum & Courthouse-Jail

Black Range Museum

The Black Range Museum is held in a historic adobe building in Hillsboro. Part of this building was built before 1883 for the Hillsboro Hydraulic Mining Company. By 1900 the famous madam Sadie Orchard had her first hotel here. Her Chinese cook, Tom Ying, came to be part owner until Sadie’s death in 1943.  From then until his death in 1959, he was the sole steward.

The Black Range Museum has been in operation in private hands since 1961. Because the building was deteriorating and the artifacts were inadequately maintained, the Hillsboro Historical Society bought the property in 2016.  The old building was restructured and remodeled to reopen on August 31, 2019.  The remodeled space includes themed rooms.  The Gift Shop area and first room are dedicated to the last resident, Tom Ying.  His belongings formed the core for the museum that Lydia Key opened there about a year after his death.  The gift shop was once Ying’s dining room.  The first exhibit room is Tom Ying’s kitchen.  This has always been the main attraction and the fascinating collection continues as a highlight today.

The adjacent room is dedicated to the other famous person associated with our building, Sadie Orchard.  Along with a collection of her personal items, we also highlight prominent persons representative of the law of her time (with which she had numerous interactions).  We display a small selection of artifacts concerning Nicholas Galles, the legislator who created Sierra County, Thomas Murphy, first sheriff of the county, Francisco Bojórquez, the beloved and famous cowboy-sheriff of the early 1900’s, and lawyer Edward Tittmann, who fought to prevent Hillsboro losing the county seat and the beautiful courthouse.

Other rooms include a ranch room which in its first display highlights the Ladder Ranch, a mining room, Native American room which highlights people from Mimbres civilization to the later Warm Springs Apache, including the famous Nana. One room is dedicated to rotating exhibits.

Find our historic adobe Black Range Museum at 3 Carro Lane, Hillsboro, NM.  The Museum is on Main Street close to the intersection of New Mexico scenic Highways 152 and 27.  

Hours for the Museum and Gift Shop are Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.  We hope you will visit us soon!

The transformation of our building:

Courthouse-Jail Site

When the New Mexico territorial legislature created Sierra County in 1884, Hillsboro was named the county seat. A beautiful and inspiring three-story red-brick courthouse was finally completed overlooking the town in 1892. In 1906 a secure stone jailhouse was added behind the courthouse.

A bid to move the county seat to Hot Springs (now named Truth or Consequences) was approved by county voters in 1936. After a two-year battle in the courts to overturn this vote proved unsuccessful, the beautiful old courthouse was sold and dismantling of the building began in 1939.

Special donations enabled the HHS to purchase the ruins of the historic old courthouse and jail in 2019.

Current photos:

For a more detailed story of the Courthouse and Jail click hereThe HHS Courthouse – Jail Site

Scroll to Top
Scroll to Top