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Logan was born when the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad constructed a bridge over the Canadian River. Eugene Logan was a well-known Texas Ranger who came to work on the bridge. [4] In 1963 and 1964, Ute Dam, its reservoir, and Ute Lake State Park were built west of Logan.
State Road 469 (NM 469) is a 43.553-mile-long (70.092 km) state highway in the US state of New Mexico. NM 469's southern terminus is at NM 209 in Grady , and the northern terminus is at U.S. Route 54 (US 54) in Logan .
SH 83 at New Mexico–Texas state line — — Replaced section of NM 83 in the 1988 renumbering. Section from NM 18 east renumbered NM 218. NM 133: 3.600: 5.794 NM 132 near Knowles: FM 1757 at New Mexico–Texas state line — — NM 134 — — US 70 in Las Cruces: US 85 in Fort Selden (now I-25) — 1944 became part of NM 28 NM 134: 22.470: ...
Ute Dam (National ID # NM00293) is a dam at Logan, New Mexico in Quay County, about 20 miles (32 km) west of the Texas state line. The reservoir it creates, Ute Reservoir , has a water surface of 8,200 acres (3,300 ha) and has a maximum capacity of 403,000 acre-feet (497,000,000 m 3 ). [ 1 ]
It forms a deep canyon south of Springer, New Mexico. The Sabinoso Wilderness area is located in side canyons near the river. At its first dam at Conchas Lake, the river turns eastward. It is also dammed at Logan, New Mexico, where it forms Ute Lake. From there it crosses the Texas Panhandle, dammed at Sanford, Texas, where it forms Lake Meredith.
State Road 163 (NM 163) is a 40.100-mile-long (64.535 km) state highway in the US state of New Mexico. NM 163's southern terminus is at the end of state maintenance at the former NM 61 , and the northern terminus is at NM 52 .
State Road 39 (NM 39) is a state highway in the US state of New Mexico. Its total length is approximately 93.7 miles (150.8 km). NM 39's southern terminus is at U.S. Route 54 (US 54) in Logan, and the northern terminus is at US 56 and US 412 in Abbot.
In the U.S. state of New Mexico, US 54 extends from the Texas state line by Chaparral, New Mexico, and ends at the Texas state line by Nara Visa, New Mexico. The highway runs for 356.176 miles (573.210 km) in New Mexico. Nationally an east–west route but is signed as a north–south route through the state.