Arizona Ghost Towns

Joel D. Valdez Main Library 101 N. Stone Ave., Tucson, AZ, United States

Ghost towns dot Arizona's landscape and provide unique insights into a diverse history. Some ghost towns tell a boom-to-bust story with few remaining traces of the people who once lived there, while others, like Jerome, have become thriving tourist destinations. Many are old mining locations that once bustled with life, while others tell more modern […]

Free

Adventurous Spirits: Arizona’s Women Artists, 1900-1950

Tohono Chul Park 7366 N. Paseo del Norte, Tucson, AZ, United States

Before WWII, the resident art community of Arizona was comprised mostly of women, and this talk explores these independent spirits. Kate Cory, one of the first to arrive in 1905, chronicled the Hopi mesas. Marjorie Thomas was Scottsdale’s the first resident artist. Lillian Wilhelm Smith came to the state to illustrate the works of Zane […]

Free

Arts and Culture of Ancient Southern Arizona Hohokam Indians

Red Rock State Park - AZ State Parks 4050 Red Rock Loop Road, Sedona, AZ, United States

The Hohokam Native American culture flourished in southern Arizona from the sixth through fifteenth centuries. Hohokam artifacts, architecture, and other material culture provide archaeologists with clues for identifying where the Hohokam lived, interpreting how they adapted to the Sonoran Desert for centuries, and explaining why their culture mysteriously disappeared. In this presentation Dart illustrates the […]

Free

Ancient Landscapes of the American Southwest

Arizona Western College 1109 Geronimo Ave., Parker, AZ, United States

The American Southwest is world-renown for its colorful and spectacular landscapes like Grand Canyon, Sedona, Monument Valley, the Superstition Mountains, and the Sonoran Desert. But how did these wonders come to exist and what can ordinary rocks tell us about their ancient origins? You’ll be amazed to learn that the Southwest was once the site […]

Free

Tombstone, Arizona: The Town Too Tough to die

Buckeye Public Library - Downtown Branch 310 N. 6th Street, Buckeye, AZ, United States

Tombstone, which had a reputation, as one of the West's wildest mining towns, owes its beginning to Ed Schieffelin, who prospected the nearby hills. From nearby Fort Huachuca, Schieffelin told a soldier that the mountains’ rich colors looked very promising for mineral wealth. The soldier said "All you'll find in those hills is your tombstone". […]

Free

Archaeology Café (Tucson): Fire, Climate, and Society—Past, Present, and Future

Casa Vicente Restaurant 375 South Stone Avenue, Tucson, AZ, United States

On March 1, 2016, Christopher Roos (Southern Methodist University) will present “Fire, Climate, and Society—Past, Present, and Future.” From Chris: In the Southwest U.S., a century of fire suppression has turned old growth forests into tinderboxes that burn in increasingly destructive ways as the climate warms. But do all fire-climate-society relationships conform to this story? […]

Free

History Alive! – Arizona’s Territorial Historian, Poet, and Activist Sharlot Hall

Arizona Humanities 1242 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ, United States

Sharlot Mabridth Hall was an unusual woman for her time: a largely self-educated but highly literate child of the frontier. Born October 27, 1870, she traveled with her family from Kansas to the Arizona Territory in 1882. Her impressions of this journey remained with her all of her life. She loved ideas and the written […]

Free

Arizona Kicks on Route 66

Ed Robson Branch Library 9330 E. Riggs Rd., Sun Lakes, AZ, United States

U.S. Route 66, known as the “Mother Road,” was built in 1926. It ran from Chicago to L. A. During the depression of the 1930s, it became the major path by which people migrated west, seeking work, warm weather and new opportunities. Shore shares the history of Route 66 in Arizona, including the impact it […]

Free

Adventurous Spirits: Arizona’s Women Artists, 1900-1950

Fairway Branch Library 10600 W. Peoria Ave., Sun City, AZ, United States

Before WWII, the resident art community of Arizona was comprised mostly of women, and this talk explores these independent spirits. Kate Cory, one of the first to arrive in 1905, chronicled the Hopi mesas. Marjorie Thomas was Scottsdale’s the first resident artist. Lillian Wilhelm Smith came to the state to illustrate the works of Zane […]

Free

Written in Thread: Arizona Women’s History preserved in their Quilts

Prescott Public Library 215 E. Goodwin St., Prescott, AZ, United States

Written in Thread: Arizona Women’s History preserved in their Quilts traces the history of Arizona through women who recorded pieces of their lives in their needlework.  The colorful patterns of women’s quilts added a spot of brightness to their homes and their lives. They also celebrated and recorded special events with their quilts. Beginning with […]

Free

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