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236 entries match your criteria. Entries 201 through 236 are listed. ⊲ Previous 100                                              

 
 

Historical Markers in Coconino County, Arizona

 
Clickable Map of Coconino County, Arizona and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Coconino County, AZ (236) Gila County, AZ (41) Mohave County, AZ (100) Navajo County, AZ (130) Yavapai County, AZ (150) Kane County, UT (118) San Juan County, UT (47)  CoconinoCounty(236) Coconino County (236)  GilaCounty(41) Gila County (41)  MohaveCounty(100) Mohave County (100)  NavajoCounty(130) Navajo County (130)  YavapaiCounty(150) Yavapai County (150)  KaneCountyUtah(118) Kane County (118)  SanJuanCounty(47) San Juan County (47)
Flagstaff is the county seat for Coconino County
Adjacent to Coconino County, Arizona
      Gila County (41)  
      Mohave County (100)  
      Navajo County (130)  
      Yavapai County (150)  
      Kane County, Utah (118)  
      San Juan County, Utah (47)  
 
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201 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Black and White Cleaners
Built by C. E. Boyce in 1907, this structure was a general merchandise and hardware store and shared a common wall with the Old Post Office to the west. In 1929 it became a dry cleaners with a huge array of belt driven machinery and an adobe . . . Map (db m33366) HM
202 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Caboose Jake 017
Manufacture Date: 1911 Manufacturer: Ray Consolidated Copper Company • Ray, AZ Original Owner: Ray & Gila Valley Railroad as R&GV 017 • Kelvin, AZ 2nd Owner: Kennecott Copper Corporation as KCC 017 • Hayden, AZ 3rd Owner: Copper Basin . . . Map (db m193232) HM
203 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Citizens Bank
This Neo-Classical Revival style building opened with much fanfare on Armistice Day, November 11, 1918. The bank was the financial center of the lumber, ranching and railroad operations in the area until it closed in 1958. The extensive terra cotta . . . Map (db m33381) HM
204 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Crowe-McCoy Building
One-story saloon of native stone ca. 1901-03. Second story of brick added in 1904 to house prostitutes' "Cribs". Storefront distinguished by classically designed pressed metal facade. Wrought iron balcony added in later years.Map (db m185230) HM
205 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — DelSue Motor Inn
This property has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m236368) HM
206 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Dime Store
In 1901, a great fire swept through Williams, burning 36 business buildings, 2 hotels and 10 homes in less than an hour. Major fires in 1903 and 1908 further dictated the need for fire-resistant stone, concrete, and brick buildings. Many of those, . . . Map (db m33392) HM
207 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Duffy Brothers Grocery StoreBuilt 1912
Has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior Cormick E. Boyce built this large brick structure intending it to be used as a bank, although it served as a grocery store during . . . Map (db m33417) HM
208 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Grand Canyon Drug Company
Bill Williams Mountain was named in 1851 after fabled mountain man William S. Williams, who is said to have trapped beaver in this area. In its shadow, this building circa 1912, served local needs with a pharmacy and soda fountain at the front of . . . Map (db m33389) HM
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209 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Grand Canyon Hotel
Built in 1892 by Samuel E. Patton for Cormick E. Boyce known as “the man who built Williams.” With its own water supply, it was the only surviving building of the 1895 fire. First-class hotel designed to appeal to travelers to the Grand Canyon. . . . Map (db m236382) HM
210 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Historic Williams
Williams was a touhh frontier town filled with cowboys, loggers, and railroad workers. Gambling and prostitution were legal in one area of town until 1907. It was also hone to civic-minded citizens who forged a community and created this . . . Map (db m236370) HM
211 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Last Town Bypassed By I-40
Last Town Bypassed By I-40 Williams, Arizona October 13, 1984 Map (db m237811) HM
212 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Lebsch Confectionery
The Atlantic and Pacific Railroad arrived in 1882, starting a stampede of commercial enterprise. The development of Williams as a community is indicated in part, by this ice cream and confectionery store built by Albert Lebsch in 1914. For a number . . . Map (db m33391) HM
213 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Negrette House
This property has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m236360) HM
214 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Old Parlor Pool HallCirca 1910
Has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places By the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m33390) HM
215 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Old Post Office
Beginning in 1926, this vintage 1907 building served as the U.S. Post Office for 36 years. This was one of the many structures built by Cormick E. Boyce, who arrived in 1881 as a freight hauler and became one of the area's leading merchants and . . . Map (db m33368) HM
216 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Pollock Building
Built of locally quarried volcanic rock in 1901, this edifice housed a bank and many businesses displaced by the 1901 fire. These included the local newspaper, telegraph office, and eventually Arnold's, a famous Route 66 eatery. In 1928, the Masonic . . . Map (db m33382) HM
217 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Red Cross Garage
Built of native rock with brick facades, this 1913 garage served travelers at the end of the wagon age and beginning of the automobile era. By 1930, automobiles carried more people to the Grand Canyon than did the railroad. The opposite end of this . . . Map (db m33380) HM
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218 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Rittenhouse Haberdashery
In 1901, a 60-mile long railroad spur line to the Grand Canyon secured Williams the title "Gateway to the Grand Canyon." Train tickets at that time cost $3.95 serving world travelers and locals alike, this pre-1910 structure was home to a men's . . . Map (db m33388) HM
219 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Rounseville Drugstore
In 1898 the forested lands around Williams were set aside as a forest reserve that supplied timber for the Saginaw-Manistee lumber mill and box factory, which operated from 1893 to 1942. Built by the Rounseville brothers about 1915, this . . . Map (db m236374) HM
220 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Route 66Gateway to the Grand Canyon
1925 - Williams had two car camps to service travellers along Route 66 and those going to the Grand Canyon. A car camp consisted of cabins that served as both a garage and sleeping quarters. 1936 - An early gas station on Route 66 after a . . . Map (db m193234) HM
221 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Santa Fe Railway Freight Depot
Built in 1901, this brick structure was the first train depot in Williams. After the Fray Marcos depot was built in 1908, this building took on freight arriving to and departing from Williams. It was moved here from across the railroad tracks in . . . Map (db m33379) HM
222 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Sultana Theater
This entertainment center opened in 1912 and boasted a theater and room for dances and other events. It featured silent movies until 1930 when the first "talkies" in northern Arizona were shown, drawing notadle visitors like Will Rodgers. The . . . Map (db m33385) HM
223 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Telegraph Office
Telegraph service came to Williams in 1894. The Postal Telegraph Co. was located here in 1910, when this office was built, until the 1940's. At some time the building was divided to share space with Ziriax Photo Shop. The town bandstand was located . . . Map (db m33387) HM
224 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Tetzlaff Building
This Victorian-Romanesque style building, designed as a saloon and bordello was built in 1897 by German tailor August Tetzlaff. Offering female company in eight cribs and an elegant parlor, it also boasted a two-story outhouse. Whiskey, pool tables . . . Map (db m33377) HM
225 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — The "World Famous" Sultana
Constructed of formed concrete block in 1912, this saloon and billiard hall included a buffet for the townspeople who used it as a gathering place. Named for the famous Sultana Ruby of India. During prohibition the basement speakeasy provided . . . Map (db m33386) HM
226 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — The Cabinet SaloonBuilt 1893
Has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior The Cabinet Saloon was a boisterous spot along "Saloon Row." Here railroaders, cowboys, loggers, and rowdy local residents came to . . . Map (db m33378) HM
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227 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Welcome to WilliamsGateway to the Grand Canyon
Welcome to Williams, Arizona, located in the heart of the Kaibab National Forest at an elevation of 6,770 feet. Founded in 1881, Williams was named for the famous trapper, scout and mountain man, "Old Bill Williams." A statue of "Old Bill" . . . Map (db m193233) HM
228 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — William Sherley WilliamsSculpture by B.R. Pettit
"Old Bill" was born January 3, 1787 in North Carolina. He died March 24, 1849. In that 62 year life span he did a heap of living, most of it in the wilderness. In the late 1700's and early 1800's the mountain men were trappers. In the quest of fine . . . Map (db m205150) HM
229 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Williams Methodist Church
. . . Map (db m236393) HM
230 Arizona, Coconino County, Williams — Williams, Arizona
The area around what now is Williams, Arizona, was first explored by a Mountain Man who came to this area in 1876, William Shirley Williams, who was called “Old Bill”. The town site was created by a cowboy named C.T. Rogers in 1879. . . . Map (db m48351) HM
231 Arizona, Coconino County, Winslow — Meteor City Trading Post, Winslow, ArizonaRoute 66 Roadside Attraction Reported missing
A Route 66 icon since the 1940's. Meteor City Trading Post is home to the "World's Longest Map of Route 66." Recognized by Hampton Hotels Save-A-Landmark program as a site worth seeingMap (db m194738) HM
232 Arizona, Coconino County, Wupatki National Monument — Community
This area seems quiet and lonely today - but not 800 years ago. This valley was used for farming and hunting by the people living in Citadel, Nalakihu, and other nearby pueblos, all inhabited at about the same time. (You can see the ruins of at . . . Map (db m41716) HM
233 Arizona, Coconino County, Wupatki National Monument — Nalakihu
Nalakihu - A modern Hopi name, "House Outside the Village" Farmers lived here about 800 years ago. (Roof beams gave tree ring dates in the late 1100s.) The way the walls join show this small pueblo was not built all at once, but was added onto. . . . Map (db m41713) HM
234 Arizona, Coconino County, Wupatki National Monument — The BallcourtA Mexican Idea at Wupatki
Ballcourts were common in southern Arizona from A.D. 750 to 1200, but relatively rare here in the northern part of the state. This suggests that the people of Wupatki intermingled with their southern Arizona neighbors - the Hohokam - who may have . . . Map (db m41696) HM
235 Arizona, Coconino County, Wupatki National Monument — The Blowhole
This blowhole - a crevice in the earth's crust that appears to breathe - is one of several found in the Wupatki area. It connects to an underground passage - size, depth, and complexity unknown - called an earthcrack. Earthcracks resulted from . . . Map (db m41701) HM
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236 Arizona, Coconino County, Wupatki National Monument — Where Were The Fields?
Farming then did not mean vast fields like we use today. Anasazi and Sinagua people modified these small terraces to grow hand-tended corn, cotton, beans, and squash. We know the climate was about what it is now, very dry for farming. The terraces . . . Map (db m41715) HM

236 entries matched your criteria. Entries 201 through 236 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100
 
 
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Apr. 30, 2024