By James F. Vivian
Captain John G. Chandler, according to the Arizona Journal-Miner on June 26, 1915, was presented as the “first man known to suggest that the first capital of Arizona be christened Prescott.”
Read MoreBy James F. Vivian
Captain John G. Chandler, according to the Arizona Journal-Miner on June 26, 1915, was presented as the “first man known to suggest that the first capital of Arizona be christened Prescott.”
Read MoreBy James F. Vivian
In 1864, the town of Prescott was named in honor of Massachusetts-based historian William Hickling Prescott, who was already deceased at the time and had never set foot in the west. Even in the 19th century it was unusual for towns to bear the names of people who were not involved with their founding, and thus the question has been raised as to which of our earliest territorial pioneers suggested the honor for Mr. Prescott.
Read MoreBy Bob Cornett
The western half of the North American continent contained a million square miles in 1800, all unknown to the U.S. citizens in the eastern half. For expansion westward, maps and handbooks were needed.
Read MoreBy Bob Cornett
Next to the west door of the Sharlot Hall building on the museum grounds in Prescott is an 1859 map of the United States commissioned by Col. Carlos Butterfield. It shows ocean shipping routes, mail and stage routes, and four proposed railway routes west.
Read MoreBy Marjory J. Sente
On Oct. 27, 1948, the Prescott Post Office opened to a very special day of business. The issuance of the Rough Riders Commemorative Stamp made the post office look like a land office during a gold rush. While the local public bought the new commemorative stamp at the counter, more than 50 special employees worked behind the scenes to process the requests for first-day covers.
Read MoreBy Marjory J. Sente
October 27, 1948. What a day for Prescott: Navy Day, former President Theodore Roosevelt’s 90th birthday anniversary and, yes, the first day of issue of the Rough Riders commemorative postage stamp at Prescott, Arizona. For that one-day in October of 1948, the eyes of the stamp collecting and first day cover world were focused on Prescott.
Read MoreBy Katherine Krieger Pessin
Medora had finally achieved her longtime goal of becoming a field geologist with the USGS and was assigned to Prescott, Ariz., in 1947. She spent the next 35 years mapping in the State of Arizona, a total of 12 quadrangles, including those of Prescott and Paulden. She has to her credit many professional papers for publication with the USGS as well as other scientific organizations.
Read MoreBy Katherine Krieger Pessin
My mother, Medora Hooper Krieger, was one of the most prolific geologic mappers at the USGS during the twentieth century. Although her early training and work was in the eastern United States, particularly in the Adirondack Mountains of New York, she is known mostly for her 35 years of mapping in the State in Arizona, where she did what was considered a man’s job in a world that was considered a man’s world.
Read MoreBy Richard Cunningham McCormick
(Edited by Parker Anderson)
I was at Washington at the first inauguration of Mr. Lincoln, and saw much of him. It was difficult, even in view of the Baltimore plot, to make him think that anyone sought to injure him, or that his life was in danger. The intention of that plot, by the by, suggests a correction of the common impression that Mr. Lincoln passed through Baltimore in disguise.
Read MoreBy Richard Cunningham McCormick
(Edited by Parker Anderson)
(Richard McCormick was the second Territorial Governor of Arizona who lived in the Governor’s Mansion in Prescott with his wife Margaret. Previously, he had been a prominent politician on the East Coast and, in 1866, wrote a series of articles for the New York Evening Post. One detailed his own personal memories of President Abraham Lincoln, who had been assassinated the year before. On March 14, 1866, the Arizona Miner printed a few excerpts from this lengthy article. These are reprinted below; probably the first widely circulated reprinting of Governor McCormick’s comments since 1866. – ed)
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