When Orphan Trains Went West

Quartzsite Community Center 295 E. Chandler, Quartzsite, AZ, United States

Few people today know much about the largest child migration in history. Between 1854 and 1929 over 250,000 orphans and unwanted children were taken out of New York City and given away at train stations across America. Children were sent to every state in the continental United States; the last train went to Sulphur Springs, Texas in […]

Barbed Wire, Windmills and Railroads – The Technology that Really Won the West.

Quartzsite Community Center 295 E. Chandler, Quartzsite, AZ, United States

In Arizona and throughout the West, three innovations helped make farming and living possible: Windmills brought groundwater to the surface, barbed wire sectioned the vast landscape into parcels, and railroads moved men, women, families and materials from back east. In the old West, there were over 8 million windmills, a man caught cutting down a […]

Theodore Roosevelt Slept Here

Quartzsite Community Center 295 E. Chandler, Quartzsite, AZ, United States

Theodore Roosevelt exhibited a greater influence on Arizona than perhaps any other president. He was the first sitting president to visit Arizona, employed an executive order to preserve the Grand Canyon, established a variety of wildlife refuges and reclamation projects, and enjoyed outdoor recreation in the area. This program will share Roosevelt’s widespread influence in […]

The Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) of WWII

Quartzsite Community Center 295 E. Chandler, Quartzsite, AZ, United States

During World War II over one thousand women served as Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP), freeing male pilots for combat roles at a critical time during the war. The WASP ferried planes from factories to embarkation points; performed engineer test flying of repaired aircraft and did target towing for gunnery training. By the spring of […]

From “Chief” to Code Talker: Four Profiles of the Navajo Code Talkers

Quartzsite Community Center 295 E. Chandler, Quartzsite, AZ, United States

During WWII a group of young Navajo men enlisted in the Marines without knowing that they would be called on to develop a secret code against the Japanese military. This select group of Code Talkers devised a Navajo language code that was accurate, quick, never broken, and saved many American lives. This talk profiles 4 […]

Fill out the info below to sign up for our E-Newsletter.