By Marjory J. Sente

Hearing the words “Sharlot Hall,” one usually thinks ”museum,” because it is the most visible legacy of Sharlot M. Hall, who leased the Old Governor’s Mansion in 1927 and went on to establish a museum to house “Indian and historical objects and a library of Arizoniana”. Sharlot, however, has another enduring legacy, her poetry.

 

Composing poems at a young age, Sharlot admitted that, while attending a school near what is now Dewey, she spent her days composing verses rather than studying. Writing poems to please her mother, Adeline Hall, Sharlot dedicated the second edition of Cactus and Pine: Songs of the Southwest, published in 1924, to her. In it she noted the first edition of Cactus and Pine, published in late 1911, was hurriedly printed so her mother could enjoy it before she died. Mrs. Hall died on August 24, 1912.

 

Read More