Prescott Valley: Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
Autor Jean Crossen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 2009
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780738570709
ISBN-10: 0738570702
Pagini: 127
Dimensiuni: 163 x 231 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
ISBN-10: 0738570702
Pagini: 127
Dimensiuni: 163 x 231 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
Descriere
When gold was discovered along Lynx Creek in 1863, the area that would later become Prescott Valley began to attract attention from the outside world. Miners came and so did the military, which established Fort Whipple in nearby Prescott but made use of Glassford Hill as part of a communication system. By the early 1900s, homesteaders, merchants, freighters, and ranchers had also arrived. As the 20th century progressed, what had been a peaceful stretch of grazing land known as Lonesome Valley gave way to a budding town finally incorporated in 1978 with 1,520 citizens. On the land where a volcano erupted long ago, mammoths once roamed, prehistoric people hunted, miners sought their fortunes, and ranchers herded cattle, Prescott Valley is today a thrivingaand rapidly growingatown of more than 35,000 residents that has retained much of its small-town character and charm.
Recenzii
Title: Local author writes hitory of Prescott Valley
Author: Sue Tone
Publisher: The Prescott Valley Tribune
Date: 12/26/2008
Local historian Jean Cross figured it was too hot this past summer to be out and about, so she toiled indoors on a laptop and completed the manuscript for a book about Prescott Valley.
Cross, a PV resident for four years, but local since 1980, contracted with Arcadia Publishing to write the history of Prescott Valley.
Arcadia puts out the popular Images of America series, which chronicles the history of communities from Maine to California. Each title celebrates a town or region, bringing to life the people, places and events that defined the community, and usually includes about 200 vintage black-and-white photographs.
The publishers told Cross to limit her book to 180 photos, but she said she submitted 209, which Arcadia accepted.
One photo she was sorry not to have was the very beginning of PV's history - the volcanic eruption of Glassford Hill some 10 million years ago.
"Although I sort of do," she said, describing a sunset with clouds on either side of the hill and the sun setting in the center.
"It almost looks like an explosion," she said.
Included in the book are many of the articles she wrote over the past few years for the Prescott Valley Tribune.
In 1984, Cross helped to excavate mammoth bones in the area which surprises many people, she said.
Some of her information came from Sharlot Hall Museum where she volunteered in the collections area. Many of the photographs came from the Fain family, which settled in the Verde Valley in 1872.
"I tried to emphasize theranching that took place here. Lonesome Valley was a ranch. The Fain ranch was the Rafter 11."
Dan Fain, an early rancher, used the first name Dan because he did not like to be called by his given name, Granville, Cross said. Today, the Granville housing subdivision exists on both sides of Glassford Hill Road.
Mining is another part of Prescott Valley history, and Cross, along with John Munderloh, helped preserve the display of mining equipment at Fain Park.
"I didn't think people knew there was much history here. Most people think it's in Prescott. I knew there was lot here."
The book is at the printers now, and should be available to the public in early March.
"I hope the people will enjoy this. It was kind of fun to do. I look back now and wonder how I got it done," Cross said.
Author: Sue Tone
Publisher: The Prescott Valley Tribune
Date: 12/26/2008
Local historian Jean Cross figured it was too hot this past summer to be out and about, so she toiled indoors on a laptop and completed the manuscript for a book about Prescott Valley.
Cross, a PV resident for four years, but local since 1980, contracted with Arcadia Publishing to write the history of Prescott Valley.
Arcadia puts out the popular Images of America series, which chronicles the history of communities from Maine to California. Each title celebrates a town or region, bringing to life the people, places and events that defined the community, and usually includes about 200 vintage black-and-white photographs.
The publishers told Cross to limit her book to 180 photos, but she said she submitted 209, which Arcadia accepted.
One photo she was sorry not to have was the very beginning of PV's history - the volcanic eruption of Glassford Hill some 10 million years ago.
"Although I sort of do," she said, describing a sunset with clouds on either side of the hill and the sun setting in the center.
"It almost looks like an explosion," she said.
Included in the book are many of the articles she wrote over the past few years for the Prescott Valley Tribune.
In 1984, Cross helped to excavate mammoth bones in the area which surprises many people, she said.
Some of her information came from Sharlot Hall Museum where she volunteered in the collections area. Many of the photographs came from the Fain family, which settled in the Verde Valley in 1872.
"I tried to emphasize theranching that took place here. Lonesome Valley was a ranch. The Fain ranch was the Rafter 11."
Dan Fain, an early rancher, used the first name Dan because he did not like to be called by his given name, Granville, Cross said. Today, the Granville housing subdivision exists on both sides of Glassford Hill Road.
Mining is another part of Prescott Valley history, and Cross, along with John Munderloh, helped preserve the display of mining equipment at Fain Park.
"I didn't think people knew there was much history here. Most people think it's in Prescott. I knew there was lot here."
The book is at the printers now, and should be available to the public in early March.
"I hope the people will enjoy this. It was kind of fun to do. I look back now and wonder how I got it done," Cross said.
Notă biografică
Local author Jean Cross serves on the Prescott Valley Old Town Board and has received the Heritage Award from the Prescott Valley Chamber of Commerce to acquaint the public with the history of Prescott Valley. For this retrospective volume, Cross has gathered over 200 images from such sources as the Sharlot Hall Museum in Prescott, the Town of Prescott Valley, and the private collections of local residents.