Items 1 to 10 of 1347 total

By Judy Stoycheff

In response to the Depression that hung over the nation in the early 1930s, newly-elected President Franklin D. Roosevelt created many programs designed to put Americans back to work. One of those programs was the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). It was designed to bring together the nation’s young men and the land in an effort to save them both.

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By Randi Wise

As a newcomer to Prescott, I was curious about that big brick building on the top of the hill just a short distance southwest of the plaza. I thought at first it might be a hospital. It wasn’t long before I learned that it was a state run home for the elderly, commissioned by an act of the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona on March 10, 1909.

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By Carol Powell

Fred Haas (aka Johann Friedrick Haas) and Minnie Miller were married on January 15, 1896. Prescott’s Sheriff George C. Ruffner signed their marriage certificate as a witness. They were model citizens, living first in Prescott, then Jerome and finally, the Bisbee/Douglas area. But accidents or tragedy can reduce model citizens to degradation. This is the story of Fred and Minnie.

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By Parker Anderson

The solemnity of honoring our deceased military veterans on Memorial Day has been weakened a bit in recent years by weekend parties to mark the beginning of summer. However, there was indeed a time when entire communities banded together to pay tribute to our brave soldiers. Prescott was one of them.

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By Carol Powell

When the Spanish flu began to cut its deadly path across the country in 1918 it did it with such efficiency that some believed sinister forces to be at work. In March of 1918 an Army private at Fort Riley, Kansas reported to the camp hospital complaining of a sore throat, fever and a headache. As the day advanced more soldiers became sick. The U.S. was at war, which provided a convenient target upon which to heap suspicion. Had the Germans used germ warfare?

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By Zach Hirsch

(Ed. Note: Rotary International is an organization of service clubs located world wide. The first club was formed in Chicago by attorney Paul P. Harris on February 23, 1905, meeting with three business friends and choosing the name Rotary because they rotated club meetings to each member’s office. By 1910, the clubs were nationwide and, in 1922, because branches had been formed in six continents, the name was changed to Rotary International. By 1925, Rotary had grown to 200 clubs with more than 20,000 members. Today, there are more than 32,000 clubs and over 1.2 million members world-wide.)

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By Parker Anderson

Jody Drake originally organized a theater troupe by the name of "Cold Turkey" and performed western plays and skits at the Riata Pass Steakhouse in Dewey. The name of the theater was changed when she picked up a rose-shaped pine cone that had dropped into a bucket of blue paint. Blue Rose Theater, under her direction, formed a partnership with the Sharlot Hall Museum in 1994.

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The Briggeman House

Apr 25, 2009

By Nancy Burgess

On March 19, 2007, the house at 309 East Goodwin Street in Prescott was severely damaged in a fire. This was the home of George E. and Elsie Briggeman from 1949 until 1964. This small, classical bungalow has an interesting history.

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By Edna Ballew Patton

In Skull Valley, people used to get together and help each other. Thirty or more people gathered at Bill and Martha Overton's one Sunday and built a room onto their house. We built a tennis court at the school, shoveling sand by hand. It took several Sundays and a lot of beer! We got together and poured the cement for Barney and Annie's house (where Charlie and Diana Taylor live now).

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By Edna Ballew Patton

(Edna Mae Ballew Patton lived in Skull Valley for over 60 years. In the late 1990s, she committed many of her memories to paper. Her first published memoirs appeared in the Days Past issue of November 20, 2008 and can be read there. Mrs. Patton died on July 31, 2008, five days after giving Sharlot Hall Museum permission for her memoirs to be published.)

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