Items 1 to 10 of 1345 total

By Carol A. Powell

Adapted by Carol A. Powell from the book “From Oxen to Oxide” by John Fletcher Fairchild Jr., 2013, Sedona Historical Society

One day early in the 20th Century, young John Fletcher Fairchild Jr. was in his family home in Flagstaff when he heard chattering and laughter of other children.  Running to a window, he couldn’t believe his eyes as he viewed a small elaborate house on wheels.  It slowly and noiselessly glided by with several kids in hot pursuit.  He quickly joined the parade.

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by Linda Ogo and Sandra Lynch

Many American Indians have been popularized in books, documentaries, and provocative motion pictures.  The Yavapai Indians, however, have been largely absent from such published history.  Much of this is the result of a tradition that enabled the Yavapai to survive from prehistoric times to the present—that of preserving their culture within family groups.

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By Al Bates

Prescott’s Arizona Miner is rightly known as Arizona Territory’s first newspaper with its beginning at Fort Whipple in early 1864, but it was not the first newspaper in what is now Arizona. 

Let me explain. 

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by Jay Cravath

This article is a summary of a presentation Jay Cravath will give at the Eleventh Annual Western History Symposium that will be held at the Hassayampa Inn on Saturday, August 2nd.  The Symposium is co-sponsored by the Prescott Corral of Westerners and the Sharlot Hall Museum and is open to the public free of charge.  For more details, visit the Corral’s website at www.prescottcorral.org or call Fred Veil at 928-443-5580.

An ancient set of Native American paths and the natural flow of the Gila River created a major artery through pioneer Arizona. Born from the rain and snow of the Gila wilderness, this waterway carved a channel through New Mexico and along the southern edges of our state.  Its route became known as the California Trail—the southernmost version to hold that moniker.

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by Phil M. Blacet, Ph.D

The old Hillside Mine located deep in Boulder Creek Canyon, four miles northwest of Bagdad in far western Yavapai County, has been ghostly silent for many years.  Dating back to the 1880’s, this remote site quickly became a bustling mining camp with its own school and post office.  This bonanza gold-quartz vein system produced metals valued today at approximately $116 million, including $77 million in gold and $27 million in silver.  During its 61-year lifespan, the price of gold never exceeded $35 an ounce.

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By Al Bates

This article is one of a series that will appear in this space during this year on historic events relating to the Arizona Territory’s Sesquicentennial and the founding and establishment of Prescott as the Territory’s first capital.

With completion of the special territorial census in May 1864, the final impediment to the first territorial election was removed.  Details were set and the election date of July 18 was announced.  Up for grabs were seats in the bicameral legislature plus the big prize, selection of the territorial delegate to Congress.

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By John P. Langellier, Ph.D.

(John Langellier is the Director of the Central Division of the Arizona Historical Society located in Tempe. This article is a summary of a presentation he will make at the Eleventh Annual Western History Symposium that will be held at the Hassayampa Inn on August 2, 2, 2014. The Symposium is co-sponsored by the Prescott Corral of Westerners and the Sharlot Hall Museum and is open to the public free of charge.  For more details, visit the Corral’s website atwww.precottscorral.org or call Fred Veil at 928-443-5580).

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By Al Bates

This article is one of a series that will appear in this space during this year on historic events relating to the Arizona Territory’s Sesquicentennial.

One of the resolutions unanimously adopted at the May 30 meeting at Don Manuel’s store on the banks of Granite Creek was that a mass meeting be held at Prescott on Monday, July 4, 1864, at noon to celebrate the 88th anniversary of American Independence.

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by Heidi Osselaer

On February 10, 1918, four men died in a gun battle between lawmen and the Power family living in Rattlesnake Canyon in the Galiuro Mountains of southeastern Arizona.  This was not only the deadliest single gunfight in Arizona; it was probably the deadliest slacker battle during World War One.  At the time the Bisbee Daily Review called it the “only armed resistance in Arizona to the military draft.”

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By John P. Langellier, Ph.D.

During the Victorian era a publication called Outing: An Illustrated Monthly Magazine of Recreation exposed its many subscribers to the work of an up-and-coming new addition to the pictorial periodical scene.

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