Ida Genung & Sharlot Hall


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Unknown Unknown 1928-0001-0258.jpg MS-12, Box 20, Folder 10 B&W 1928-0001-0258 1928-0001-0258 Print 5x7 Manuscript Collections 1930s Reproduction requires permission. Digital images property of SHM Library & Archives

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Ida Genung & Sharlot Hall

 

SHARLOT MABRIDTH HALL (b. October 27, 1870, d. April 9, 1943) moved from Lincoln County, Kansas to Arizona in 1882. She moved twelve miles southeast of Prescott, Arizona at Lynx Creek, with her father, James Knox Hall, her mother, Adeline Susannah Hall, and her brother, Edward "Ted" V. Hall.

Sharlot became a poet, a writer, a journalist, an associate editor of "Out West" magazine, and served as Arizona's Territorial Historian from 1909-1912. In addition, she became the first steward and curator of the Arizona Governor's Mansion in Prescott, which she eventually turned into a Museum beginning in 1928. Today, she is the namesake of the Sharlot Hall Museum.

IDA ELIZABETH SMITH GENUNG (b. October 7, 1848 - d. November 11, 1933) was the wife of early Yavapai County pioneer settler Charles Genung.  She and her husband homesteaded and ranched in Peeples Valley and had tremendous influence on the development of the area.  At the time of her death, she was believed to be the last surviving pioneer woman who had been in the Arizona Territory from its inception in 1864.

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