Thursday, November 12, 2020

Prescott Population Perspectives

Arizona has seen explosive population growth throughout the past 150 years.  The first 50 years of Arizona's so-called "modern history" from 1870 to 1920 saw some truly eye-popping demographics.
Interestingly, Prescott's population trends showed some counter-intuitive numbers during that early time span.
Note that Prescott's population actually declined twice from 1880 to 1890 and again from 1910 to 1920.  During each of those same time periods, overall Yavapai County population growth mirrored statewide trends.
Note that while Prescott's population declined by 77 people between 1880-1890, Yavapai County's population expanded by over 3,000!  Again from 1910 to 1920, Prescott showed a decline of 82 people while the Yavapai County Census figures showed a gain from 15,996 to 24,016, a gain of over 8,000 people!
During those two decades when Prescott population was languishing, Arizona's explosive growth continued unabated.  From 1880 to 1890, Arizona grew by almost 48,000 people and in the go-go decade between 1910 and 1930 Arizona added almost 130,000 new residents, a whopping 63% increase.

Meanwhile, let's take a look at how Prescott stacked up compared to other Arizona cities, towns and "community zones."

Of course, the state's largest 1920 population winner was Phoenix with 29,053 people.  Throw in Mesa, Gilbert, Glendale and Tempe and The Valley could boast almost 37,000 residents.

The Bisbee-Douglas area was Arizona's second most populous area with around 20,000 people.  The Globe-Miami copper community numbered around 14,000. Prescott's nearby neighbors in the Jerome, Clarkdale and Cottonwood cluster tallied slightly over 10,000 in 1920.

By 1920 Prescott could perhaps have been described as a "medium-sized" city. For the truly curious here are the Yavapai County 1920 U.S. Census numbers by community and precinct.


Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Jerome's Little Daisy on Auction Block

For a very brief history of The Little Daisy Mine (which spawned the hotel) see:
https://azstateparks.com/jerome/about-the-mansion/period-history
Below is an abridged version of a © May 26, 2020, "Verde Independent" article describing the upcoming sale of The Little Daisy Hotel.  You can read the full article by purchasing a $1 one-day subscription to the newspaper at the link above.
JEROME -- Lisa Acker, owner of the former hotel that is now a mansion, and local real estate agent Donna Chesler at Russ Lyon Sotheby’s International Realty in Sedona, have partnered with Concierge Auctions to sell the historic building on the online market place.
The mansion is listed for $5.9 million. You can still buy it before the bidding starts June 26 at 6 p.m., according to Chesler. There is no reserve or minimum bid that will be accepted, she added.
“Anyone may sign up for an account on our website ConciergeAuctions.com and watch bidding live,” Bodiford said.
An auction representative from Concierge Auctions will be on-site in Jerome for the next six weeks.
Chesler said the virtual tour on her realty site had already gotten 825,000 views. “A lot people have seen it.”
But Chesler said the auction is generating a huge amount of additional interest.
The Little Daisy hotel was built in 1919 for guests of Douglas and for miners who worked in the nearby Little Daisy Mine.
To view 47 photos of the renovated, restored Little Daisy see:
https://www.abc15.com/entertainment/pricey_home_gallery/-the-little-daisy-hotel-in-jerome-transformed-into-home-for-sale#id2
In 1995, Lisa and her husband, Walter, purchased the Little Daisy and started renovations immediately. Walter passed away on Sept. 26, 2017, and now Lisa has decided to sell the Little Daisy, with an original selling price of $6.2 million. The price dropped a year ago to $5.9.
The couple worked for 10 years on renovating the historic structure, Acker said. Walter and Lisa built everything for the interior since the building was stripped and left in shambles.
The building now has eight bedrooms (four are large), seven marble bathrooms, two staircases, two laundry rooms, central hallways through the house and promenades down both sides of the building. It is 12,000 square feet of interior space and 2,700 square feet in porches, 3,000 of garage and workshop and 9,000 square feet of roof-top.
Chesler, who is the vice president of the Jerome Chamber of Commerce, said there’s a lot of excitement that comes with the auction process. Everyone in the Verde Valley will be watching on that last day.
You can bid on the Little Daisy at www.conciergeauctions.com

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

A tangent of trivia...

As any history enthusiast well knows, it's nearly impossible to stay "on topic" when studying the trivia of daze gone by.  Here is a typical example of how it goes: Central Avenue in Phoenix led us to a Rapid Shooting Story in Salt Lake City!

Tuesday evening, May 19, 2020, we decided to take a random virtual trip along Central Avenue, one of the main arteries of early Phoenix, Arizona. Fortunately, there are 300 photos of Central Avenue in The McCulloch Brothers collection at Arizona State University.

So, we're happily roaming along enjoying various views of Central Avenue when we come to this one.

Huh?  What the heck is this?  What are those banners?  What's going on here?  Well, luckily, Arizona State University made this digital photo available as a 24 megabyte TIF file.  So we dutifully downloaded the file and then enlarged it to look for tell tale details.  Below is the "gateway detail."
It says it right there on that banner: "Fiesta Del Sol."  Well, what the heck was Fiesta Del Sol?  Inquiring minds want to know.  Since the archive data only says "1938" for a date, we first had to confirm is really WAS 1938.  Often, archive data is very unreliable when it comes to providing dates.  So we zoomed in a little further on the photo.
Yep.  That classic Chevy's license plate clearly says 1938.  So, the next challenge was to find out whazzup with the Fiesta Del Sol. So we go to our trusty $150 annual subscription to Newspapers Dot Com and cue up "The Arizona Republic" and then search all 1938 issues for "Fiesta Del Sol."  Trust me, wading through all the hits that search produced was a real chore.

But we eventually determined Fiesta Del Sol was a football gig and clearly the forerunner of today's famed Fiesta Bowl.  It was a major hoop-dee-doo in 1938, that's for sure.  So, we became mesmerized by all the "doings" of Fiesta Del Sol and began reading various stories.  We were reading about the selection of the Queen (a young woman from Bisbee) in the November 13 Sunday edition.  It was a fun read so we thought we'd just flip to the next day's issue and see what happened next.  We began on Page One and turned the digital pages and that's when we saw it on Page 8.
 Well, as a former Grand Canyon River Guide, how could this NOT be enticing???
See: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/51733647/mighty-river/

So, we note that the Phoenix newspaper picked up this snippet from the November 13 Salt Lake newspaper.  Naturally, we go to the November 13 issue and scroll through the pages until we find the original article.  And so that's "the rest of the story."

Here's the full Salt Lake article:
https://www.facebook.com/pg/ArizonaHistoryStories/photos/?tab=album&album_id=167565154756789

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Fred Harvey Postcard Packet - 1946

 Postcard packets were popular in the 1940's and 1950's.  This one was mailed from Winslow January 29, 1946. Fred Harvey artist(s) and photographer(s) are unknown.
 Source of postcard packet:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Postcard-Souvenir-Folder-Arizona-Grand-Canyon-Navajo-Winslow-Train-pm45/333598991628








To view video rendition of this postcard packet see:
https://spark.adobe.com/video/mqsroj9kQDB82

Friday, May 15, 2020

Mule Pass captures Continental Divide

America's Continental Divide location is widely viewed as set in stone, so to speak.  Once upon a time, The Continental Divide morphed 100 miles east of its true course and took up residence in the Mule Mountains a few miles west of bustling Bisbee, Arizona.

For the better part of a generation everyone, including the federal government, believed The Continental Divide could be visited atop the challenging topography of Mule Pass.
Peter Corbett photo.

Today's savvy travelers guffaw at the antiquated notion Mule Pass split drainages of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.  Some folks even think it's an age old prank perhaps perpetuated by prisoners who helped transform a crude wagon road into a passable automobile route that eventually became highway US 80.

Harking back to the teens of the fledgling 20th Century, the nuances of geography and hydrology were scarcely known. People thought of the sprawling Lower Sonoran Desert landscape in broad Big Picture perspectives. The finer points of precisely where water flowed out in the far flung playas and dead end dry washes simply wasn't something people knew or cared about.

Meanwhile, the 6,030 foot elevation of Mule Pass was etched tall in everyone's mind.  To muleskinners hauling heavy loads to the Bisbee mining camps Mule Pass was a fearsome obstacle.  Even ordinary travelers harbored healthy respect for the steep-sided slopes of Mule Pass.  It was a place to be reckoned with.  Besides that, the route up and over Mule Pass was the highest point for hundreds of square miles around.

When the often outrageous monsoon storms pummeled the Mule Mountains, water rushed in torrents two ways off Mule Pass often swamping Bisbee with destructive and sometimes fatal results. Although the exact origins of Mule Pass as The Continental Divide are lost in the dust bin of history, it's reasonable speculation to presume local folks simply started calling the pass The Divide.  After all, it says so right on the topo map.

And so if it's The Divide, then why not The Continental Divide?  As far as local folks were concerned anything East of Bisbee was just a flat, gawd-forsaken desert that stretched to The Rio Grande at El Paso.
Sure enough when the feds created US 80 in the mid-1920's, the Bureau of Public Roads put out a 1927 news release describing the highway that said, "The road reaches the summit of the Continental Divide about three miles west of Bisbee, Arizona, at the Mule Pass - altitude 6,035 feet." Mule Pass was the highest point on US 80 from Savannah, Georgia, to San Diego, California.  What better site could there be to place The Continental Divide?

It was an accepted fact, even if it was off by over 100 miles. Former ADOT Public Information Officer Peter Corbett captured a quote that perfectly sums up how local folks felt about The Continental Divide's misplaced credentials: "Deloris Reynolds, Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum voluntary librarian, said she could find no evidence anyone ever tried to correct the mistake. “I suspect many (locals) did not know it was wrong and others probably didn’t care,” she said."

Modern visitors to Mule Pass justifiably roll their eyes and smirk at the stately stone monument marking The Continental Divide.  Considering the lack of knowledge and the "tenor of the times," such a misplaced belief is easy to understand and accept.

The actual location of The Continental Divide on old US 80 and today's I-10 is so obscure, so flat, so non-descript and so uninspiring as to be completely boring and unworthy of any attention from passersby.  As the majestic, soaring mountain crests that form The Continental Divide's iconic image in American mythology fade into the Lower Sonoran's vast expanse of desert scrub brush, so to does the actual dividing of the waters disappear in a jigsaw puzzle of playas and arroyos to nowhere.

As the author of the New Mexico Guide to the Continental Divide Trail says, ""The CDT's end, or beginning, will be, well, unassuming, at best.  Underwhelming, perhaps anticlimactic.  A wire fence, a dirt road, and miles of scrub and brush.  But that's okay. After all, on journeys such as these, the inner landscape is what's important."

It's little wonder that local folks and highway boosters bought into Mule Pass as The Continental Divide.  Why Not?  Who knew the difference?  And who cared?

We did quite a bit of study to compile numerous resources regarding Mule Pass and also the actual Continental Divide.  Commentary follows each photo or graphic below.

The first mention we can find of the Mule Pass monument is in a Page 9 article published September 6, 1914, by "The Bisbee Daily Review." Source: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/50938926/pulsating-machine-mule-pass/
Photo from Atlas Obscura. To read everything inscribed on monument see: https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=48552
It was common practice in early highway days to use convicts on road construction jobs.  An unknown number of convicts converted a wagon route into what was then called "The Hanging Road" because of the difficulty of construction. Photo Source:
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/mule-pass-not-quite-the-continental-divide


US 80 (and now I-10) actually crossed The Continental Divide at Separ, New Mexico, 100+ airline miles and ~143 highway miles from Mule Pass. App used to calculate distances:
https://www.mapdevelopers.com/distance_from_to.php
The far southern terminus of the CDT is located 100 airline miles practically due east of Mule Pass.  Finding this location appears to be a daunting challenge:

"Directions: To access the CDT’s southern terminus remote location take Interstate 10 east from Lordsburg, NM to Exit 49. Take NM 146 South to Hachita. In Hatchita, go east on NM 9 and then south on NM 81. Continue south for approximately 11 miles and just before the curve in the highway, turn left onto the graded dirt road (all roads beyond this point are dirt). Set your odometer, travel
approximately 3 miles, and turn right. Go another 3 miles and turn left. Follow this road around the base of the Big Hatchet Mountains for about 20 miles to a windmill and go east for 2 miles. Within 100 yards, you will be at the international boundary barbed wire fence. At the cattle guard, there is a
concrete monument commemorating the Crazy cook who murdered someone at this site. The Continental Divide National Scenic Trail is 200 yards north along the border fence from this monument." Source: https://continentaldividetrail.org/project/southern-terminus-of-continental-
divide-trail-and-the-big-hatchet-mountains/
Here is a view of the parking lot at the southern end of the CDT. For more location information see:
https://www.latlong.net/place/crazy-cook-monument-hachita-nm-usa-27705.html
Although the Hatchet Mountains are a prominent landmark on the horizon, the landscape upon which the Continental Divide sits is about as flat as flat can get.  Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Hatchet_Mountains

The twisty-turny trip up and over Mule Pass was a thorn in the side of Bisbeeans practically since the first wagon load of supplies dropped down the steep slopes into the ragged gulches of a frontier mining camp. After decades of clamor, lobbying and numerous fatalities, the Arizona State Highway Dept. began a two-year tunnel project that was the largest Arizona highway construction project of its kind ever undertaken up to that time.
A 1,400 foot tunnel cut six miles off a trip over The Mule Mountains. The new tunnel was dedicated with much fanfare on December 19, 1958.  For coverage & details of the dedication see these links:

https://www.newspapers.com/clip/51103942/tucson-version-of-tunnel-dedication/
https://www.newspapers.com/clip/51102228/tunnel-dedication/
https://azdot.gov/adot-blog/mule-pass-tunnel-has-eased-trip-bisbee-60-years

To take a look at a drive through the tunnel see this find dash cam video by the Cochise County Sheriff's Office: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=543285556153613

This Google Earth screen clip shows how the tunnel was created almost directly underneath "The Continental Divide" of Mule Pass.  The left arrow shows old US 80 joining the modern day highway west of the tunnel.  Middle arrow is the location of The Mule Pass monument.  Right arrow shows how old US 80 came into Upper West Bisbee.
Interestingly, Mule Pass wasn't the only location to be mislabeled "Continental Divide."
"Near Victorio siding (named from the Apache chief referred to on p. 147), which is in the middle of the valley, the rounded slopes of the Cedar Grove Mountains extend along the north side of the valley, and the more rugged outlines of the Sierra Rica rise prominently to the southwest.22 About 1-1/2 miles west of Continental siding there is a sign reading "Continental Divide," but this is a mistake, as the basin of Hachita Creek, to the west, empties into the Rio Casas Grandes in Mexico, which, like other streams east to Arena, drains into Lake Guzman."

This same publication describes the old railroad crossing of the actual Divide:
"The Continental Divide is crossed on the inconspicuous summit a few miles west of Playas siding, at an elevation of about 4,515 feet. To the west of this point the drainage flows into the Animas River, which empties into the playas west of Lordsburg. These playas, on the rare occasions when they overflow, drain into the Gila River, which empties into the Colorado River and thus into the Gulf of
California."

Source: https://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/geology/publications/bul/845/images/sheet20.jpg

Photo source: https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/mule-pass-not-quite-the-continental-divide
In closing, we believe the Mule Pass Continental Divide monument to be a sparkling gem of early Arizona's road building legacy.  Engineers and managers at the time worked with what they had and used what they thought was the best available information.  They cannot be faulted for a egregious 100+ mile geography error.  They no doubt believed they "had it right."  Meanwhile, Mule Pass was and remains a wonderful location to actually ponder The Continental Divide. It's hard to imagine anyone getting excited about standing in a flat barren desert while contemplating water flowing to the oceans.
Mule Pass is definitely one of the more evocative, unique and noteworthy remaining attractions of old US 80's wildly winding route through Arizona.  It deserves attention and a visit from any highway heritage tourist.

Additional source information:

The photo at the top of this post is almost certainly a Burton Frasher picture.  It is framed in classic Frasher style and the handwriting on the photo easily matched that of other Bisbee photos by Frasher.  Chances are very good that the photo was created in the 1940's when Frasher was visiting Bisbee to record other images.  To see some of Frasher's Bisbee photos simply go to this link and enter "Bisbee, Arizona" without quote marks: https://calisphere.org/

To learn more about The Legendary Burton Frasher see:
http://content.ci.pomona.ca.us/index_frasher.php

Actual source of the postcard view used here is:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Bisbee-Arizona-1940s-Continental-Divide-Top-RPPC-Photo-Postcard-Cook-11510/372860831054

Source of the CDT quote is from:
"New Mexico's Continental Divide Trail: The Official Guide" by Bob Julyan
Big Earth Publishing, 2001, 320 pages
https://books.google.com/books?id=Y4QGiYHpozwC

The U.S. Bureau of Public roads 1927 quote about the Mule Pass Continental Divide can be found here: https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/infrastructure/us80.cfm

Map clips were created using: https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/topoview/viewer/

Other source links are embedded in the post narrative itself.

For the US 80 Wiki see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Route_80

Note that on September 21, 2018 the Arizona Transportation Board designated the old alignment of US 80 as a state Historic Road connecting with the designation in California. The Tucson Historic Preservation Foundation led a six year battle to obtain the designation.  After the nomination was approved, Project leader Demion Clinco said: "“The designation of this uniquely American historic highway represents years of community advocacy and a long-term commitment of dozens of community groups and stakeholders."

We hope that someday soon, highway US 80 fans will seek to highlight and celebrate was has heretofore been a minor laughing stock atop Mule Pass.

Thank You for reading.  John Parsons, Editor.

Friday, April 3, 2020

AZ Memory Project Newspapers

This is a tutorial on how to use the AZ Memory Project's Digital Newspapers. We created this post to help anyone who might be daunted or confused by this rather larger database of old Arizona newspapers.  The very first to do is go to The AZ Memory Project: https://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/
Instructions are BELOW each screen capture.
 Once you click the AZ Memory Project link the screen above it what you will see.  Simply click the image for "Arizona Historical Digital Newspapers.
 The next screen you will see shows each of the Arizona Counties.  Pick you choice.  For this tutorial we used Pinal County.  Just click the County's name.
 The next screen will bring up all available digital copies of newspapers from that County. Bear in mind not all newspapers for any given County are digitized or available online.  This page will show you only what the AZ Memory Project has online.  In some counties there are many newspapers available so simply scroll down to find whichever newspaper interests you.  In this case we picked the "Arizona Weekly Enterprise" because we could see it was the oldest available Pinal County newspaper.  Simply click the link for the newspaper of your choice.
 Next you will see an excellent but short description of the history of that particular newspaper.  However, the important link is the large button that says "Browse and Search This Title.  Click that button.
Your next challenge is to pick a specific issue of the newspaper to browse and read.  The very earliest issues of "The Arizona Weekly Enterprise" are in very poor condition.  We therefore scrolled down until we found what looks like a clean copy of the newspaper.  It just so happened to be The April 1st, 1882, issue of "The Arizona Weekly Enterprise."  Naturally, click on the issue of your choice.
The next screen you will see shows Page 1 of the edition of your choice.  Obviously, you have a lot of choices on this screen.  The key choice is the button labeled "View." If you don't want to inspect Page 1, the other pages in this edition are in the right column and you can select any one of your choice.  Remember that for EACH page you bring you, you must press the "View" button.
Once you have pressed "View" then you can Zoom in for MUCH greater detail on any given page. The zoom feature is truly amazing! Zoom controls are faintly shown in the upper left of any given page.  I have found that I can also use the PC keyboard command "SHIFT +" and control the zoom increments to a finer degree than I can with the embedded zoom controls.
Now your individual challenge entails roaming around that issue of the newspaper of your choice looking for something that catches your attention.  In our case, we spotted this ad on Page 4 and then zoomed in on it.
This ad really caught our attention in a Big Way. So many things to ponder in this ad.  All of the classic questions: "Who, What, Where, Why, When & How?" come to mind when we see an ad such as this.  We'd never heard of "Butte, Arizona."

Once we find anything that captures our attention, we also capture it!  On our PC, we used the screen capture function.  Typically each PC had a slightly different keyboard command to enable a screen capture.  We use the freeware program "Irfanview" to crop and adjust the screen capture.  Many such programs and apps are available.

Of course, this is where the Real Fun begins!  How to answer all of our questions about Butte? 

We will write a separate blog post on the process (and journey) we followed to learn all about Butte.

Good Luck and Thanks for reading.  We certainly hope that you share whatever you find and investigate with the Facebook history group(s) of your preference(s).

Sincerely, John Parsons, Rimrock, Arizona