By Mary Melcher, Ph.D.
Volunteers have always been the backbone of the Sharlot Hall Museum. From the time that the museum was founded in 1928 to the present, volunteers have been needed to keep the Museum alive.
Read MoreBy Mary Melcher, Ph.D.
Volunteers have always been the backbone of the Sharlot Hall Museum. From the time that the museum was founded in 1928 to the present, volunteers have been needed to keep the Museum alive.
Read MoreBy Al Bates
The building known as the Governor's Mansion started as and remains the centerpiece of the Sharlot Hall Museum campus. It also is the subject of a classic piece of Prescott lore.It was long held that the request for proposals for the mansion's construction was published in the Arizona Miner in June 1864.
Read MoreBy David Stephen
Yavapai County Road 68 is a 46-mile unpaved back-country route that originates near Bagdad and comes to an end at Williamson Valley Road north of Prescott. Also known as Camp Wood Road, it carries a compelling legacy that interweaves Native American history and prehistory, forestry, homesteading, military campaigns, mining, ranching and tourism.
Read MoreBy Al Bates
Charles DeBrille Poston was not the only early Arizona pioneer to be pushed aside by newcomers and changing circumstances, but he certainly was the best known-shoved aside unceremoniously and unexpectedly by others who had arrived to fill appointed territorial offices.
Read MoreBy Brenda Taylor
“Bail out!” yelled the pilot to his flight crew. “One engine is lost to fire and the others have conked out, bail out – NOW!” At this order, the bomb bay doors dropped open and three of the crewmen jumped into the moonless night. Surprisingly, before the co-pilot and radioman could jump, the pilot was able to bring the windmilling propellers to life and the bomber limped away to make an emergency landing at the Kingman Army Air Field.
Read MoreBy Mick Woodcock
What follows are excerpts from articles about Christmas in Prescott from selected years during the 1870s. We hope this will give you an idea of what our predecessors thought of the holiday and how they observed it.
Read MoreBy Al Bates
When Arizona’s third territorial governor, Anson P. K. Safford, arrived at the Territorial Capital of Tucson in July 1869 he was met both by an enthusiastic citizenry and by a legal firestorm that threatened extended chaos in the territory. The eventual solution would include giving the new governor temporary dictatorial powers.
Read MoreBy Al Bates
The portability of Arizona Territory’s seat of government—Prescott to Tucson to Prescott to Phoenix—earned it the nickname of “Capital on Wheels.”
Read MoreBy Al Bates
This article ends the Days Past sesquicentennial series covering Arizona Territory’s earliest two years from a Prescott perspective.
The first Arizona Territorial Legislature adjourned on November 10, 1864, leaving behind a solid record of accomplishment headed by adoption of the Howell Code, a comprehensive set of laws for the territory. A major part of that effort was establishment of the territory’s original four counties and providing for their administration.
Read MoreBy Elisabeth Ruffner
Among the myriad counties created in the United States over the earliest years of this democratic republic, Yavapai County in the Arizona Territory was the largest ever devised. Of the original 65,000 square miles designated when Arizona Territory was organized, other entirely new counties were later carved out.
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