Items 1 to 10 of 2597 total

By Dan Bergan

When singer Trinity Seely takes the stage August 10 at the newly re-named Jim and Linda Lee Performing Arts Center on the campus of Yavapai College, her footsteps echo 35 years of one of Prescott’s most popular and long-standing traditions—the Arizona Cowboy Poets Gathering.

Read More

Aug 26, 2013

Oral History
Interviewee: 
William Charles Jennings Jr.   (b. 9/14/1928 – d. xx-xx-xxxx)
Interviewer:  Susan Cypert         
Audio Number:  1636   
Duration:   00:57:19
Date:  May 10, 2023
Acquisition Number:  ACC#  2023.030
Topics Discussed:  Hayden, Arizona; Albert Jackson Jennings; Chihuahua, Mexico; Petra Cuen; Mexico; Port of Los Angeles; Mary Scobel, William Charles Jennings, Sr.; Piedras Verdes, Alamosa Sonora, Mexico; Clarkdale, Jerome, Hayden, Dewey; Blount-Scott; Casa Grande, Florence; Terminal Island, San Pedro, California; Charlotte McKay; Granite Dells Swimming Hole; The Courier; Studio Theater; Smoki Dances; Mexican Dance Group; Whiskey Row; 4th of July Parade; Community Sings; Clarkdale; Washington School; Southern Pacific Railroad; Korean War; Allstate Insurance Company.
 

Read More

By Bradley G. Courtney

In part 1, the question was raised regarding the veracity of the beloved legend of the Palace Saloon’s bar being pulled out to the Plaza and saved during Prescott’s Great Fire of 1900. We left off with the story of how the Palace experienced a fire in its interior in late 1897 and was destroyed only within, including its solid walnut wood bar that had been installed in 1884.

Read More

By Karen Kamradt

Continued from Part 1 published on 7/2/2023


Throughout his five years as Chief and Tribal Leader, Sam traveled on many delegations to Washington on behalf of the Yavapai People. Sam and his wife Viola were also instrumental in organizing and lobbying Congress for Tribal recognition, working closely with national and local leaders including Grace M. Sparkes, Sharlot M. Hall, Grace L. (Genung) Chapman and Arizona’s senior Senator Carl Hayden. On June 7, 1935, the current Yavapai-Prescott Indian Reservation was established on 75 acres transferred from the Old Fort Whipple Military Reserve to the Interior Department. In 1956, 1,320 acres were added to the Reservation.

Read More

By Bradley G. Courtney

Prior to the release of the book Prescott’s Original Whiskey Row in 2015, there’d been some debate between local historians and Whiskey Row business owners and regulars as to whether Prescott’s most famous and cherished legend was true. That is, the story of Palace patrons pulling the saloon’s bar—the same bar used in the Palace today—out to the courthouse plaza while the inferno raced north up Montezuma Street. Some local historians concluded that it’s nothing more than a tall tale. 

Read More

By Bob Baker

On October 5, 1869, James O. Grant, owner of the Arizona Stage Line, arrived in Prescott on his stagecoach pulled by six mules. His arrival heralded the first scheduled public passenger service from Prescott to San Bernardino, California. The stage route ran through Yavapai County and included stops at American Ranch, Skull Valley, Date Creek, Wickenburg and La Paz. Later, stage service to Phoenix was added. 

Read More

By Karen Kamradt

Eighty-eight years ago on May 9, 1935, Sam Jimulla (pronounced gee-mew-lah’) was appointed Chief of the Prescott Yavapai by the U.S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs, John Collier (1933-1945). At the same time, Sam was officially elected by his people to be their leader and Chief.

Read More

By Bradley G. Courtney

Dating back to 1874, the oldest saloon in Arizona began with the man who probably had more influence upon early Whiskey Row history than any other: Dan Conner (D.C.) Thorne. It takes some explaining, but D.C. Thorne must be considered the original founder of the Palace Saloon.
   
A New Yorker, he moved to Prescott in 1867 and quickly invested in several nearby mines. In the summer of 1874, Thorne began making his mark on Whiskey Row. He was seeing profits from his mining ventures in the early 1870s, which enabled him to explore other entrepreneurial endeavors. He, along with William Hutchinson, opened the Cabinet Saloon on lot 19, 118 Montezuma Street, where the northern portion of today’s Palace Restaurant and Saloon operates.

Read More

By Bradley G. Courtney

Prescott’s Palace Restaurant and Saloon is an iconic piece of Old and Wild West history. As time goes on and more of its history is revealed, its importance grows. Hence, it’s essential that its origin story is correctly told. 

In a Days Past column on September 12, 1999, it was stated that, “The exact age of the Palace Saloon is somewhat of a puzzle.” The historical plaque fastened in front of the Palace today uses these exact words. Happily, they’re no longer true. After a chronological study of every Prescott newspaper from the first one in 1864 through the rebuild that followed Prescott’s Great Fire of 1900, coupled with examining related documents and records along the way, the puzzle pieces have fallen into place. The Palace’s roots reach back to 1874.

Read More

by John L. Vankat

Repeat photography is an eye-catching way to bring history alive. It involves collecting historical photographs, finding the sites where the early photographers stood and reshooting the same scenes. Each repeat photograph is then compared to the historical photograph to reveal how the site has changed from the past to the present. This helps us understand both the past and present, as well as predict and plan for the future.

Over the last 8 years, I precisely repeated 125 historical photographs of landscapes on and around northern Arizona’s beautiful San Francisco Peaks. These pairings of historical and repeat photographs are presented in my recently published book, The San Francisco Peaks and Flagstaff Through the Lens of Time (Soulstice Publishing).  

Read More

Items 1 to 10 of 2597 total

Close