By John P. Langellier, Ph.D.
Prescott, named after the author of the epic Conquest of Mexico, can trace more than street names of Cortez, Montezuma and Marina to its storied past. In fact, the Spanish also came north from Mexico.
Read MoreBy John P. Langellier, Ph.D.
Prescott, named after the author of the epic Conquest of Mexico, can trace more than street names of Cortez, Montezuma and Marina to its storied past. In fact, the Spanish also came north from Mexico.
Read MoreBy Jan MacKell Collins
Of all of the wild women serenaded by the famous Earp brothers and Doc Holliday, Big Nose Kate was the first to woo the men who would later find fame in Tombstone. Born in Hungary in 1850 as Mary Katharine Haroney, Kate immigrated with her family in 1860. They were living in Iowa when Kate’s parents died in 1866. She and her siblings were sent to a farm, where grueling work conditions enticed Kate to run away. She stowed away on a steamship for New Orleans where she entered the Ursuline Convent.
Read MoreBy John P. Langellier, Ph.D.
John Charles Frémont’s first view of the world occurred on January 21, 1813 in Savannah, Georgia. He was the son of a young Southern belle married to a man far her senior, and who was not John’s father. In fact, his father was a tutor for the young unhappily married woman. Their liaison would result in John’s birth out of wedlock. This fact proved a serious social handicap at that time, and made for a difficult upbringing. His quick mind, however, aided him albeit he was less than a model student.
Read MoreBy Parker Anderson
(This article was originally published in the Prescott Courier on February 20, 2005)
Last week, we learned how the Prescott Elks Lodge #330 raised funds to construct the Elks Building with an added opera house. This week the story continues.
Read MoreBy Parker Anderson
(This articles was originally published in the Prescott Courier on February 20, 2005)
Many long-term Prescottonians have fond memories of movies and events in the auditorium, and it has played an important role in local entertainment throughout its history. Those familiar with its history know that it has been rocky at times, but the Elks Theater has proven itself to be a survivor, and it is still with us when many other theater of its age around the country have long closed their doors and/or met with the wrecking ball.
Read MoreBy Dr. Richard S. Beal, Jr.
There are very few pastors who have had two cities named after them. Nevertheless, this is true of one of Prescott’s early pastors at the Lone Star Baptist Church, now First Baptist Church.
In 1900, the church was located on the west side of South Cortez Street, south of the present Yavapai County Courthouse and city post office, the congregation having moved the church in1885 from its location on Fleury Street, where the Catholic Church now stands. In 1898, the tiny Baptist congregation had fewer than forty-five members. The previous pastor, the Reverend G. W. Cram served less than four months. Who could be persuaded to become the next pastor? How does a congregation in a pioneer town get a pastor?
Read MoreBy Mick Woodcock
In 1863, Christmas was new to the list of celebrations for most people in the United States. Popularized in part by the drawings of Santa Claus and Christmas done by Thomas Nast for Harpers Weeklymagazine, much of the tradition as we know it today was in place by the time of the founding of Prescott. That particular Christmas was remembered and recorded by a number of people. No doubt the fact that this was the formation year of the Territory of Arizona had much to do with it.
Read MoreBy Judy Stoycheff
The Fitzmaurice Ruin, a multi-room prehistoric stone pueblo sits on a hill overlooking Lynx Creek in what is now Fain Park in Prescott Valley. Over 900 years ago, this pueblo complex was constructed and inhabited by up to as many as 100 people at any given time beginning around A.D.1100 and continuing for 250 years. Indiscriminate digging or “pot hunting” has caused considerable physical damage to the site and made it difficult for legitimate scientists to gather valid data. Avocational and professional archaeologists use the artifacts found at such sites to date the habitation era and piece together what activities took place there. Questions as to the religious practices, food types and gathering methods, hunting and/or farming tools as well as trade items and possible trader identification can often be answered using the artifacts found at a site.
Read MoreBy Judy Stoycheff
In 1936, according to a published report, some of the members of the Yavapai County Chamber of Commerce (YCCC) took a tour to one of Prescott Valley’s timeless treasures. They traveled by automobile eleven miles east of Prescott to Black Canyon Highway and then by mountain road to the Fitzmaurice property on Lynx Creek in Prescott Valley where Fain Park is now located. On foot, they climbed a hill overlooking the mining operations on Lynx Creek to the prehistoric ruin known as the Fitzmaurice Ruin.
Read MoreBy Dr. Richard S. Beal, Jr.
It was 1879 and Romulus Adolphus Windes, just having completed his education at the Baptist Union Theological Seminary in Chicago, was faced with a problem. His wife, Magdalene Ann, suffered terribly from asthma. A physician advised a move to the dry climate of Arizona. The American Baptist Home Mission Society was happy to appoint him to the town of Prescott, the capital of the Territory where gold had been discovered sixteen years before. Windes felt it was the call of God, but how could he possibly move his wife and their two small children to such a remote place?
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