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A History of Holbrook and the Little Colorado Country (1540-1962)
A history of Holbrook and the Little Colorado Country (1540-1962) Item Type text; Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Wayte, Harold Columbus, 1926- Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 10/10/2021 18:31:37 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/551586 A HISTORY OF HOLBROOK AND THE LITTLE COLORADO COUNTRY . (1540-1962) A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the Department of History in Partial Fulfillment'of the Requirements for the Degree of M aster of Arts b y Harold C. Wayte, Jr. In the Graduate College UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA 1962 STATEMENT BY AUTHOR This thesis has been submitted in partial fulfillment of require ments for an advanced degree at The University of Arizona and is deposited in The University Library to be made available to borrowers under rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknowledgment of source is made. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the head of the major department or the Dean of the Graduate College when in their judgment the proposed use of the m aterial is in the interests of scholarship. In all other instances, however, permission must be obtained from the author. -
Journal of Arizona History Index
Index to the Journal of Arizona History, K-L Arizona Historical Society, [email protected] 480-387-5355 NOTE: the index includes two citation formats. The format for Volumes 1-5 is: volume (issue): page number(s) The format for Volumes 6 -54 is: volume: page number(s) K Ka-ah-te-ney (Apache warrior) 42:102 Kabotie, Fred, autobiography of, reviewed 19:429-30 Kachina and the Cross: Indians and Spaniards in the Early Southwest, by Carroll L. Riley, reviewed 42:110-11 Kachina and the White Man: The Influences of White Culture on the Hopi Kachina Cult, by Frederick J. Dockstader, reviewed 28:314-16 Kachina dances 30:441 Kachina Dolls: The Art of Hopi Carvers, by Helga Teiwes, reviewed 34:327-28 Kachina Heights Ski Area See Arizona Snowbowl Kachina Peaks Wilderness 47:184 Kadota Fig Cannery 32:277 Kadota fig industry 33:280 Kaedine (Apache Leader) 27:80, 90 n. 4 Kaemlein, Wilma, book coedited by, reviewed 28:202-4 1 Index to the Journal of Arizona History, K-L Arizona Historical Society, [email protected] 480-387-5355 Kaestle, Carl 46:100 Ka-e-ten-a See Kayetenna Kah-a-mana (Hopi Indian) 52:27 n. 16 Kahlenberg, Mary Hunt, book coauthored by, reviewed 19:335-37 Kahn, Ava F., book edited by, reviewed 45:325-26 Kaibab 54:360 Kaibab Estates 39:172 Kaibab Limestone 17:24-25, 47 Kaibab Lodge 54:372; See also V.T. Ranch Hotel Kaibab Lumber Company 44:382 Kaibab National Forest 29:75, 76; 43:41-64, 216; 44:5; 50:213; 51:365; 54:360, 368 Kaibab Plateau 19:362, 379-80; 40:417; 41:11; 45:5; 51:151 nn. -
Territorial 2.22.12 Page 1
Territorial News www.territorialnewspapers.com Vol. 20, No. 9 Your Connection to the Old West May 1, 2013 Next Issue Wednesday Commodore May 15 Play Perry Owens Arizona Trivia See Page 2 for Details ommodore Perry two Indians who were Owens was the hero in attempting to steal some Ca bloody chapter of horses that he was guarding. Arizona history, helping bring This episode supposedly This Week’s law and order to Holbrook, a resulted in Owens earning the Question: tiny northeastern Arizona nickname “Iron Man.” town known to be “too tough Owens had a homestead for women and churches.” near Holbrook, Arizona, What lake was Owens became the called the Z Bar Ranch, and sheriff of Arizona’s Apache in 1866 was elected as sheriff created by the County in 1886. As sheriff he of Apache County. Many construction of helped bring peace to an area people thought he was Glen Canyon Dam? filled with lawlessness and eccentric because of his name (10 Letters) became involved in the and his appearance. He wore notorious Pleasant Valley War. a fringed buckskin jacket and Owens was born in silver-studded leather chaps Tennessee in 1852. His and a wide-brimmed felt top parents named him after the hat. His long hair was quite out legendary British war hero, of fashion and men thought he Index Oliver Hazard Perry, whose was too girly looking. He also exploits they admired. The had a strange habit of taking Arizona Kid...................12 family later moved to Indiana, a bath once a week. The ladies Arizona Trivia................2 and it was there that young thought he was quiet and Business Directory........14 Owens gained a reputation as mannerly. -
Adopted Budget Fiscal Year 2012-13
Adopted Budget Fiscal Year 2012-13 Navajo County Arizona From the mountains to the monuments Navajo County is Proudly Serving, Continuously Improving 2 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK 3 NAVAJO COUNTY FY 2012-13 DISTINGUISHED BUDGET PRESENTATION AWARD The Government Finance Officers Association of the United State and Canada (GFOA) is pleased to announce that Navajo County, Arizona has received the GFOA’s Distinguished Budget Presentation Award for its budget. The award represents a significant achievement by Navajo County. It reflects the commitment of the governing body and staff to meeting the highest principles of governmental budgeting. In order to receive the budget award, Navajo County had to satisfy nationally recognized guidelines for effective budget presentation. These guidelines are designed to assess how well an entity’s budget serves as: a policy document, a financial plan, an operations guide, and a communications device. This is the third consecutive year that the Navajo County Finance Department has received this award. 4 NAVAJO COUNTY FY 2012-13 BUDGET RESOLUTION 5 NAVAJO COUNTY FY 2012-13 COUNTY SUPERVISORS David Tenney Jesse Thompson District 4 District 2 Jerry Brownlow J.R. DeSpain Jonathan M. Nez District 5 District 3 District 1 James G. Jayne County Manager Homero Vela Interim Assistant County Manager BUDGET TEAM James Menlove, Finance Director Mary Springer, Deputy Finance Director Cris Parisot, Senior Accountant Bill Chaddick, Accountant 6 NAVAJO COUNTY FY 2012-13 NAVAJO COUNTY DISTRICT MAP Navajo County Map -
The Arizona Historical Review
Arizona Historical Review, Vol. 4 No. 3 (October 1931) Item Type text; Article Publisher Arizona State Historian (Phoenix, AZ) Journal Arizona Historical Review Rights This content is in the public domain. Download date 04/10/2021 15:27:04 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623324 THE ARIZONA HISTORICAL REVIEW Vol. IV. October, 1931. No. 3. CONTENTS The Pleasant Valley War _ 5 Its Genesis, History and Necrology BY WILL C. BARNES Captain Thomas H. Rynning 3 5 BY JOE CHISHOLM Some Unpublished History of the Southwest 50 Containing the Diary of Mrs. Granville H. Oury, Wife of the First Delegate from Arizona to the Confederate Congress, Kept as She Fled with Her Husband into Mexico following the Civil War, after Refusing the Oath of Allegiance BY COL. CORNELIUS C. SMITH Apache Misrule _64 BY JOHN P. Cwm Arizona Museum Notes 72 BY ELIZABETH S. OLDAKER Book Reviews _73 Editorial Notes 79 Contributors 79 Last Frontier 81 Published Quarterly by the ARIZONA STATE HISTORIAN EFFIE R. KEEN SIDNEY KARTUS Editor Managing Editor Associate Editors Contributing Editors JOHN P. CLUM GOLDIE WEISBERG WILL C. BARNES RUFUS KAY WYLLYS EFFIE R. KEEN, STATE HISTORIAN JOHN ARTHUR NELSON Advertising and Circulation Manager Subscription $3.00 a year. Single copies MOO. Entered as second class matter at the Postoffice at Phoenix, Arizona, under Act of Congress, October 3, 1917, Sec. 395. ARIZONA HISTORY FOR SALE The following books, published by the state, are for sale at the office of the State Historian, Capitol Building, Phoenix, Arizona. Farish History of Arizona Volumes I and 2 Price $1.50 per volume A limited number of Volumes 5 and 6 of this History at $5.00 per volume A few unbound copies of Volumes Three and Four of the Farish History at $3.00 each. -
Commodore Perry Owens Owens Was Born in Tennessee on September
Commodore Perry Owens Owens was born in Tennessee on September 10, 1853. This date happened to be the 40th anniversary of Commodore Perry's victory over the British on Lake Erie during the War of 1812. Well, here we go again, as my hero Ronald Reagan once said. That is one of those errors that is repeated over and over again. I guess many of our writers accept that date and figure it is the reason for his name. Wrong and wrong. He was born on an east Tennessee farm on July 29, 1852, and he was named after his father who was named after the famous Naval hero. Very little is known about him prior to his years in Arizona. It is believed the family moved to Indiana for a while. In the 1870s he was a cowboy in Texas before migrating to New Mexico and then to Arizona. He was said to be an excellent shot and sometimes carried a .45-60 Sharps sighted to shoot accurately at one mile. It was two shootings that earned Owens his fame. The first was when he shot and killed two Indians that were part of a renegade band trying to stampede and steal his horse herd. One of the dead Indians was the son of a Navajo chief. A warrant for Owens arrest was issued and he was taken before a Federal District Court judge in Albuquerque. The judge immediately dropped the charges because the incident did not happen on Federal land, so there was no jurisdiction. When Owens was taken to the court in Holbrook, he was immediately cleared of the charges.