Timeline of Arizona

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Important dates in Arizona's history
Flag of Arizona
Flag of Arizona
1539
Marcos de Niza explores Arizona
February 2, 1848
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo; Most of Arizona passes to U.S.
December 30, 1853
Gadsden Purchase; U.S. obtains rest of Arizona
February 24, 1863
Arizona Territory created
1877
Silver discovered near Tombstone
February 14, 1912
Arizona becomes 48th state
February 26, 1919
Grand Canyon National Park is created
November 3, 1964
Barry Goldwater loses the U.S. presidential election
September 21, 1981
Sandra Day O'Connor becomes the first woman on the U.S. Supreme Court
The Grand Canyon
West Mitten at Monument Valley

The following is a timeline of the

Tohono O'odham
.

The first European presence in the state were the

Sonora, Mexico, but most of current Arizona was transferred to the United States as a result of the Mexican–American War, with the rest transferring with the completion of the Gadsden Purchase in 1853. During the American Civil War, both sides laid claim to Arizona, although the North and South split the New Mexico/Arizona area differently: the South split the territory into north and south divisions, creating Confederate Arizona, while the northern section remained part of the United States as the New Mexico Territory; while the North in 1863, after driving Confederate forces from the Tucson area, created the Arizona Territory from the New Mexico Territory by splitting off the western section. Prescott
became the territory's first capital, which would transfer to Tucson in 1867, then back to Prescott in 1877, before settling finally in Phoenix in 1889.

Arizona achieved statehood in 1912, becoming the 48th state, with Phoenix remaining the capital of the new state. In the 1900s, the state, particularly the Phoenix Metropolitan area, has seen tremendous population growth. Phoenix currently ranks as the 6th most populous city in the nation.

Pre-Columbian and Spanish eras

Pre-Columbian

Arrival of the Spanish

  • 1539 – Marcos de Niza, a Jesuit Franciscan leads an expedition which passes through eastern Arizona.[18]
  • 1540–42 – Francisco Vázquez de Coronado leads an expedition, part of which explores Arizona.[19]
  • 1583 – Antonio de Espejo's explores eastern Arizona, discovers mines near present-day Jerome.[20]
  • 1598 – Juan de Ornate leads an expedition into Arizona, explores the Verde Valley.[20]
  • 1687 – Jesuit priest
    Tohono O'odham people along the Santa Cruz River.[21]
  • 1691 – Kino establishes the Mission Los Santos Ángeles de Guevavi.[22]
  • 1694 – Kino explores Arizona, discovers the ruins of Casa Grande.[19]
  • 1732 – Mission San Xavier del Bac founded by Jesuits near present-day Tucson.[23]
  • 1736 – Silver discovered on the ranch of the Basque settler, Bernardo de Urrea, near the Guevavi mission. The name of Urrea's ranch was Arizona, meaning "the good oak tree".[24]
  • 1751 – The O'odham people rebel against the Spanish, but the rebellion is put down.[25]
  • 1752 – In response to the rebellion, the Spanish construct a presidio at Tubac, the first permanent European settlement in Arizona.[25]
  • 1757 – Tumacácori Mission established.[26]
  • 1768 – Arizona becomes part of the
    Provincia de las Californias
    , under Spanish rule.
  • 1775 – Southern Arizona explored by Juan Bautista de Anza while leading an expedition from Mexico to San Francisco.[19][25]
  • 1776 –
    Presidio San Augustin del Tucson (military outpost) established, when the presidio of Tubac was relocated.[23][27]
  • 1779 – December 6: First Battle of Tucson.
  • 1781 – Yuma Indians
    massacre Spanish settlers and missionaries.[25]
  • 1782
  • 1784 – March 21: Fourth Battle of Tucson, Sonora, New Spain.
  • 1789 – One of the first Spanish land grants is bestowed to Toribio de Otero, a 63-acre ranch which remained in the Otero family until 1941.[28][29]
  • 1804 – The Spanish province of Las Californias is split, and Arizona becomes part of the new province of Alta California.
  • 1821 – Mexico achieves independence from Spain.
  • 1824 – The Alta California Territory was formed, which included Arizona, under the
    Mexican Constitution of 1824
    .
  • 1825 – The first people from the fledgling United States enter Arizona, the trapper Sylvester Pattie and his son James; trapping along the San Francisco, Gila, and San Pedro rivers.[30]
  • 1846
    • December 16: Capture of Tucson, Sonora, Mexico, by United States forces.
    • Kit Carson leads an exploration which passes through Arizona on their way from Santa Fe to California.[31]
    • Lieutenant Colonel Phillip Cooke led a group of Mormon settlers, known as the "Mormon Battalion" across Arizona on their way to San Diego.[31]
  • 1847 – Tucson occupied by "Mormon Battalion."[32]

U.S. possession and territory

Advertisement for Orozco & Vasquez, Phoenix, 1888[33]

1840s

1850s

  • 1853
  • 1855 – While surveying a road from New Mexico to California, Lieutenant Beale's company camps at the current site of Flagstaff. The location got its name when his men stripped a local tree and ran a flag up the staff.[37]
  • 1856 – August 29: Conference held to organize Arizona Territory.
  • 1857 –
    San Antonio-San Diego Mail Line
    in operation.
  • 1859 – Gold is discovered near the confluence of the Gila and Colorado Rivers, creating Arizona's first "gold rush".[38]

1860s

  • 1862
    • February 14: Confederate Arizona officially becomes a territory of the Confederate States of America, consisting of the portion of the New Mexico Territory below the 34th parallel, with Mesilla, New Mexico as the territorial capital.[39][40]
    • February: Tucson occupied by Confederate forces.[23]
    • May 20: Capture of Tucson by Union forces.[41]
    • Gold is discovered north of Yuma, and the town of La Paz is founded. By the end of the year, it would be the most populous settlement in Arizona, and the capital of Yuma County. The following year, it would be considered for the capital of the Arizona Territory.[38]
  • 1863
  • 1864
    • May 30: Prescott founded, and named the capital of the Arizona Territory.[46]
    • November 7: Arizona Historical Society founded by an Act of the First Territorial Legislature.[47]
    • Fort Whipple moved near Prescott (from Chino Valley, where it had been established the prior year).
  • 1865 – Camp McDowell (later Fort McDowell) is set up on the Verde River.[48]
  • 1866 – L. Zechendorf & Co. merchandisers opens in Tucson.[45]
  • 1867
    • November: Jack Swilling, resident of Wickenburg, establishes the Swilling Irrigating and Canal Company with the intent to develop the Phoenix area, which he became impressed with after viewing the area on a visit to Camp McDowell.[49]
    • December: Swilling leads a group of 17 miners from Wickenburg to the Phoenix area and begins the process of developing a canal system.[50]
    • Territorial capital moved from Prescott to Tucson.[46]
  • 1868
    • May 4: Phoenix is officially recognized by the Board of Supervisors of Yavapai County, which at that point contained Phoenix.[51]
    • June 15: First post office in Phoenix is established, in the Swilling homestead, with Swilling as postmaster.[52]
    • Swilling has completed almost 3 miles of his canals in Phoenix.[53]
    • Mary Adeline Gray, the first European woman settler in Phoenix, and her husband Columbus, arrive.[53]
    • Salt River floods for the first of many times during Phoenix's settlement.[53]
  • 1869 – St. Augustine Roman Catholic Church built in Tucson.[32]

1870s

  • 1870
    • October 20: Town site selected in what is currently downtown Phoenix.[51][54]
    • Phoenix is laid out,[55] original town site consists of 320 acres, or 0.5 square miles.[51][56]
    • Population of the Salt River Valley reaches 240, the Arizona Territory has 9,658 people.[53]
    • 1700 acres under cultivation in the Salt River Valley.[53]
    • Maricopa Canal completed.[53]
    • Arizona Citizen newspaper begins publication in Tucson.[57]
    • J.S. Mansfield news depot opens in Tucson.[45]
  • 1871
    • February 12: Maricopa County is broken out of Yavapai County, Phoenix becomes the county seat.[41][58]
    • July 4: First wheat ground in Salt River Valley at Birchard's Mill.[53]
    • First permanent building in Phoenix, the Hancock residence, is constructed at Washington and First Streets.[53]
    • The second building in Phoenix, a brewery, is constructed.[53]
    • The first store (Hancock's) and the first church (Central Methodist) open in Phoenix.[51][53]
    • The Tempe Irrigating Canal Co. is created.[53]
    • Tempe founded by Charles T. Hayden.[53]
    • Population of Phoenix reaches 500.[53]
  • 1872
    • September 5: Phoenix public school in session.[51]
    • December 19: Fort Grant is established at the foot of Mount Graham.[59]
    • Adobe schoolhouse constructed in Phoenix.[53]
    • Phoenix's first wedding, between George Buck and Matilda Murray.[53]
    • Phoenix's first Chinese settlers arrive.[53]
    • The first bookstore and newsstand in Phoenix is opened by Edward Irvine.[53]
    • Public School department in Tucson is organized.[32]
    • Population of Tucson is 3,500 (estimate).[32]
  • 1873
    • Hellings Mill in the Phoenix area expands to include a hog-slaughterhouse.[53]
    • San Diego-Tucson telegraph begins operating (approximate date).[60]
    • Fort Lowell built near Tucson.[23]
  • 1874
  • 1875 – Salt River floods.[53]
  • 1876
    • July 1: Territorial Prison built in Yuma. First prison in Arizona.[59]
    • Empire Ranch is founded in southeastern Pima County.[61]
    • Salero founded as a mining camp. Currently a ghost town, one of the best preserved in Arizona.[62]
  • 1877
    • Tucson incorporated.[23]
    • Maricopa Library Association organized.[55]
    • Lehi is founded by Mormon settlers (now part of Mesa).[63]
    • Territorial capital returned to Prescott, from Tucson.[46]
    • Copper deposits discovered in Bisbee and Jerome.[64]
  • 1878
    • Salt River Herald, Phoenix' first newspaper, begins publication.[65]
    • The first bank in Phoenix, a branch of the Bank of Arizona, opens.[66]
    • Population of Phoenix reaches 1500.[53]
    • Brick factory opens in Phoenix.[53]
    • Grand Canal completed.[53]
    • Mesa is founded.[53][63]
    • El Fronterizo newspaper begins publication.[57][67]
  • 1879

1880s

  • 1880
    • Arizona Gazette newspaper begins publication.[65]
    • Methodist church established in Phoenix.[55]
    • First legal hanging in Maricopa County.[53]
    • Southern Pacific Railroad begins operating in Tucson.[32]
    • Tucson Library Association organized.[32]
    • St. Mary's Hospital opens near Tucson.[32]
    • Terminus is renamed Casa Grande. Population by end of year was 33.[31]
    • Population of Phoenix reaches 1,800;[55] population of Tucson reaches 7,007.[23]
    • Bien/McNatt House is built in Casa Grande.[69]
    • Harshaw founded as a mining town. Currently a ghost town.[70]
  • 1881
    • February 25: Phoenix officially incorporated when Governor John C. Frémont signs "The Phoenix Charter Bill", and instituting a
      mayor-council form of government.[41][51]
    • La Guardia, Phoenix's first Spanish language newspaper, begins publication.[71]
    • May 3: John T. Alsap defeated James D. Monihon, 127 to 107, to become the Phoenix's first mayor.[51]
    • May 9: City Council begins meeting.[72]
    • June 24: Catholic church in Phoenix dedicated.[55]
    • Phoenix Rangers organized in response to hostile Apache activity in Tonto Basin.[53]
    • Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad begins operating in Tucson.[32]
    • Methodist Church built in Tucson.[32]
    • AT&SF's subsidiary, the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad constructs line from Albuquerque to California. The line passes through Flagstaff, and many towns in northern Arizona take their names from men working on the line: Kingman, Holbrook, Drake and Winslow.[36]
  • 1882
  • 1883
    • Cotton cultivation is brought to the Salt River Valley.[53]
    • Two smallpox outbreaks in Phoenix. City creates the position of Health Officer.[53]
    • Mesa City incorporates.[53]
    • Tucson chartered. Townsite is bounded by Speedway Boulevard on the north, 22nd Street on the south, 1st Avenue on the east, & on the west by Main Avenue from north of 18th Street, & 10th Avenue from south of 18th Street.[23]
    • First church, a Methodist congregation, established in Flagstaff.[75]
An aerial lithograph of Phoenix from 1885
  • 1884
  • 1885
    • Arizona Canal completed.[53]
    • Phoenix broken up into four wards, although city officials remain citywide offices.[53]
    • Destructive fire destroys major portions of Phoenix.[53]
    • Arizona Insane Asylum is awarded to Phoenix, while the state university is awarded to Tucson.[53]
  • 1886
    • A second major fire in Phoenix destroys several buildings and results in approximately $100,000 in damage.[53]
    • Phoenix Fire Department established, when bond issue passes establishing 2 fire companies.[53]
    • First private gas lighting company established in Phoenix.[56]
    • First telephone company opens in Phoenix.[66]
    • Phoenix Opera House is completed.[53]
    • Arizona Insane asylum's construction is completed.[53]
    • Casa Grande suffers from a devastating fire.[31]
    • Judge William T. Day House is built in Casa Grande.[69]
    • Fire destroys a major portion of Flagstaff on Valentine's Day.[78]
  • 1887
    • Maricopa-Phoenix railway and horse-drawn Street Railway begin operating.[79]
    • Public water system created in Phoenix.[66]
    • Public Health Department is established in Phoenix.[53]
    • Mule-drawn streetcar system established in Phoenix.[66]
    • Salt River Valley News begins weekly publication.[53]
    • Philanthropist Mary Tileston Hemenway sponsored an archeological expedition led by Frank Hamilton Cushing which explored the Casa Grande ruins.[19]
    • McMillan Building built in Flagstaff.[80]
  • 1888
    • Electric power company created in Phoenix.[66]
    • New city hall opens in Phoenix.[51]
    • November 4 – Phoenix Chamber of Commerce established.[81]
    • Peoria is founded.[53]
    • For the second time in 3 years, Flagstaff suffers a major fire.[78]
    • Babbitt Brothers building constructed in Flagstaff.[82]
  • 1889
    • Prescott incorporated.
    • Capital of Arizona Territory relocated to Phoenix from Prescott.[83]
    • Citrus cultivation is begun in the Salt River Valley by the Arizona Improvement Company.[53]
    • The Atlantic & Pacific Railroad constructs a freight depot in Flagstaff.[84]

1890s

  • 1890
    • Arizona Republican newspaper begins publication.[65]
    • Population of Phoenix reaches 3,152;[41] Casa Grande's population was 256.[31]
    • Walnut Grove dam bursts, 50 people killed.[53]
    • Ladies Benevolent Society formed in Phoenix.[53]
    • Shonessy House in Casa Grande is built.[69]
    • Dr. Alexander Chandler purchases 80 acres southeast of Phoenix, and establishes a ranch and trading post.[85]
  • 1891
  • 1892
    • June 22: Casa Grande Reservation is created by President Benjamin Harrison. The first prehistoric and cultural reserve in the United States.[19]
    • The Phoenix Sewer and Drainage Department is created.[56]
    • The Phoenix Indian School holds its first classes.[53]
    • Mesa Free Press begins publication.[87]
    • Flagstaff suffers another major fire.[78]
  • 1893
    • The Phoenix Street Railway switches over from mule-drawn to electrical streetcars.[56]
    • The Arizona Territory passes a law allowing cities, including Phoenix, to annex land surrounding the city, as long as it obtained the permission of the inhabitants of that area.
    • Arizona State Museum established in Tucson.
    • Casa Grande suffers its second major fire in 6 years.[31]
    • The Abineau building, a brick liquor store, was built in Flagstaff.[88]
  • 1894
    • Orangedale (later called Scottsdale) is founded by Winfield Scott.[53]
    • Phoenix passes an ordinance limiting prostitution to a single block area.[53]
    • Phoenix's speed limit is raised to 6 mph.[53]
    • Tempe incorporates.[53]
    • Lowell Observatory is established.[89]
  • 1895
  • 1896
  • 1897
    • May 24: Peoria founded.
    • The Friday Club begins a movement to open a public library in Phoenix.[53]
    • Cathedral of Saint Augustine (Tucson)
      built.
    • Flagstaff suffers its fourth major fire in 11 years.[78]
    • The
      Little Red Schoolhouse is constructed in Kingman.[93]
  • 1898
  • 1899
    • Phoenix Library Association created.[53]
    • Northern Arizona University (NAU) founded in Flagstaff.[94]
    • The second half of the Weatherford Hotel is constructed in Flagstaff, and the hotel would open on New Year's Day, 1900.[95]
    • Las Dos Naciones Cigar Company founded, the only cigar company in the southwest.[96]

1900–09

  • 1900
    • July 14: Most of downtown Prescott is destroyed by fire.[97]
    • Dorris Theatre opens in Phoenix (approximate date).[98]
    • Phoenix accesses unincorporated lands, area increases from .5 acre to over 2 acres.[53]
    • In spite of efforts by the Women's Temperance Union, Phoenix has 28 saloons and 18 casinos.[53]
    • First automobiles arrive in Phoenix.[53]
    • Population in Phoenix reaches 5,544,[41] population of Tucson is 7,531.[23]
    • San Rafael Ranch built south of Patagonia.[99]
  • 1901
    • February 25: The State Capitol building is dedicated, built at a cost of $130,000.[83]
    • Drought hits Phoenix.[53]
    • The Phoenix Women's Club is founded.[53]
    • The Carnegie Free Library opens in Tucson.[100]
  • 1902 – Evans School for Boys opens; later renamed Mesa Ranch School.
  • 1903
  • 1904
    • Chandler's ranch has grown to 18,000 acres.[85]
    • Riordan Mansion built in Flagstaff.[104]
  • 1905
    • The largest agricultural crop in Phoenix is alfalfa.[53]
    • Flooding once again causes issues in Phoenix.[53]
  • 1906
    • Construction begins on the Theodore Roosevelt Dam.[105]
    • Gambling is outlawed in Phoenix.[53]
    • A.J. Chandler purchases 100 ostriches, the beginning of Ostrich farming in Chandler.[106]
  • 1907
    • St. Luke's Home, a tuberculosis treatment center, opens in Phoenix.[53]
    • The YMCA raises $100,000 to construct a building in Phoenix.[53]
    • Southern Pacific railway station built.
    • Roskruge School, Tucson's first high school, opens.[107]
  • 1908
    • Salt River again floods.[53]
    • Prescott National Forest is established.
    • Granite Reef dam completed.[53]
    • In Phoenix, the Carnegie Library is completed and open to the public.[53]
    • The Coconino County Hospital for the Indigent is opened in Flagstaff.[108]
    • The Arizona Prison at Florence opens.[59]
  • 1909
    • In Phoenix, the Central Avenue bridge over the Salt River is approved.[53]
    • The original "Old Main" campus of Mesa High School opens.
    • Mesa installs potable waterworks system.
    • Arizona Overland Telephone Company opens in Flagstaff, giving residents long distance capability for the first time; headquartered in the Telegraph Building, built the same year.[109]
    • September 15: Yuma Territorial Prison is closed.[59]

1910s

  • 1910
    • Speed limit in Phoenix is increased to 12 mph in city limits; city has 329 licensed cars.[53]
    • Phoenix city schools establish an official segregation policy.[53]
    • In Phoenix, the Adams Hotel is destroyed by fire, but is rebuilt.[53]
    • Guidelines concerning surface water rights are established by the Kent decree.[53]
    • Population in Phoenix reaches 11,134,[41] Tucson hits 13,193.[23]
    • The oldest synagogue in Arizona, Stone Avenue Temple, opens in Tucson. Currently known as
      Temple Emanu-El.[110]
  • 1911
  • 1912
    • February 14: Arizona becomes the 48th state of the United States; Phoenix becomes the state capital.[105]
    • May 17: Chandler is founded by Alexander Chandler, from the breakup of his ranch.[53][85][112]
    • May 21: The Chandler Arizonan begins publication.[113]
    • Women are granted the right to vote.[53]
    • Casa Grande Dispatch founded.[114]
    • Chandler Grammar School opens.[85]
    • Fort Grant becomes the State Industrial School for Wayward Boys and Girls.[59]

Statehood through World War II

1910s, continued

  • 1913
    • November 22: Hotel San Marcos, the first golf resort in the state, opens in Chandler.[112]
    • Phoenix adopts
      mayor-council), becoming one of the first cities in the country to adopt this form of government.[115]
    • 35% of the votes cast in Phoenix were by women.[53]
    • Phoenix has 646 registered automobiles.[53]
    • Ash Avenue Bridge is completed in Phoenix.[53]
  • 1914
    • Arizona votes to ban alcohol.[53]
    • William Fairish becomes Phoenix's first manager.[116]
    • Chandler High School is formed, classes are held at the Grammar School, and at several local merchants until a building can be constructed (which was done in 1922).[85]
  • 1915
  • 1917
    • Arizona adopts its state flag.[83]
    • Litchfield is founded when the Goodyear Tire Company purchases a tract of land.[116]
    • Salt River Valley Water Users Association gains control of the Salt River Project.[116]
    • Migrant workers from Mexico are brought in to pick cotton in the Salt River Valley.[116]
    • Mesa purchases existing gas and electric utilities from Dr. A.J. Chandler.
    • Orpheum Theater opens in Flagstaff.[117]
  • 1918
    • August 3: Casa Grande Ruins are declared a national monument by President Woodrow Wilson.[19]
    • Alfalfa falls to the number two agricultural product, behind cotton in Phoenix.[116]
    • The Rialto Theatre opens in Phoenix.[116]
    • Spanish flu infects a significant portion of the population in Phoenix.[116]
  • 1919

1920s

  • 1920
    • Congregation Beth Israel formed in Phoenix.[119]
    • The Heard Building, the first skyscraper in Phoenix, is constructed.[51]
    • Phoenix Union High School has 2000 students.[83]
    • The entirety of the original Phoenix town site is now completely paved.[116]
    • A precipitous drop in the price of cotton, from $1.35 to $0.35 a pound, creates a financial crisis in Phoenix.[116]
    • Phoenix has over 11,000 registered vehicles.[116]
    • Chandler is incorporated.[112][116]
    • Rialto Theatre (Arizona)
      opens in Tucson.
    • Phoenix College, one of the oldest community colleges in the United States, and part of the Maricopa Community College District, is established.
    • Population in Phoenix reaches 29,053.[51]
  • 1921
  • 1922
    • Valley and Gila River Banks merge.[116]
    • Water from the Verde River becomes available in Phoenix through a 30-mile-long (48 km) wooden pipeline.[116]
    • KFAD becomes Phoenix's first radio station (later renamed KTAR; it was followed shortly by KFCB, which today is called KOY.[116]
    • Casa Grande Municipal Airport opens (date approximate).[121]
    • Chandler High School building is completed, and classes begin there in September.[85]
  • 1923
  • 1924
    • Luhrs Building constructed in Phoenix.
    • The depression in Phoenix caused by the drop in the cotton price in 1920 ends.[116]
    • Phoenix Sanitarium opens.[116]
    • Jokake Inn opens in Phoenix.[116]
    • South Mountain Park (originally named Phoenix Mountain Park) is created in Phoenix.[116]
  • 1925
    • 12 subdivisions are annexed by Phoenix.[116]
    • Phoenix Fine Arts Association formed.[123]
    • The private electric streetcar system is purchased by the City of Phoenix for $20,000.[122]
    • Mormon Flat Dam completed.[116]
    • Voters approve a separate high school for blacks in Phoenix.[116]
    • First municipal airport in Phoenix is opened, near Christy Road and 59th Avenue.[124]
    • Phoenix implements a zoning program.[116]
    • The Nogales International newspaper founded.[125]
  • 1926
    • The Phoenix Main Line of the Southern Pacific Railroad is completed, intercontinental rail will begin being routed through Phoenix the following year.[122]
    • Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway builds the passenger terminal in Flagstaff.[126]
    • The first Annual Masque of the Yellow Moon is held in Phoenix.[116]
    • The segregated Phoenix Union Colored High School opens.[116]
  • 1927
  • 1928
  • 1929

1930s

1940s

Post-war years through the 1960s

1940s, continued

  • 1946
    • The Arizona State Constitution is amended; Arizona becomes a right-to-work state.[158]
    • Ray Bussey is elected mayor of Phoenix.[158]
    • Avondale incorporated.
    • Tempe Airport starts operations as a private airport.[153]
    • Gilbert Airport is opened as a private airport, it would close in 1962–63.[153]
  • 1947
    • October: A fire destroys all but four of Phoenix's electric streetcars. The city begins the process of transitioning to a public bus transit system.[122]
    • The Phoenix Charter Revision Committee is formed. The political group, headed by Barry Goldwater, would dominate city politics in the 1950s.[159]
    • Phoenix Symphony Orchestra is founded.[158]
    • The
      New York Giants start spring training in Phoenix.[158]
  • 1948
  • 1949 – Modern wastewater treatment plant built at Riverview in Mesa.

1950s

1960s

1970s through the end of the millennium

1970s

  • 1970
    • Phoenix Mountains Preservation Council founded in August, to purchase all of the 7000 acres in the Phoenix Mountains Preserve, and a total of 9700 acres.[189]
    • Remnants of Tropical Storm Norma slam into Phoenix, causing flooding and resulting in 23 deaths.[158]
    • During the 1960s, Phoenix annexed 134.55 square miles of land, now totaling 245.5 square miles.[173]
    • Lehi becomes part of Mesa.[190]
    • The Fountain, which gives the name to Fountain Hills, is erected.[191]
    • The town of Fountain Hills is founded as a master planned community.[192]
    • Phoenix population reaches 581,562,[193] city becomes the nation's 20th most populous;[158] Mesa's population reaches 63,049.
  • 1971
    • May 1: Amtrak takes over intercity rail routes in Phoenix.[122]
    • First National Bank Plaza, currently known as the
      Wells Fargo Plaza
      , is built in Phoenix.
    • The third building, 3838 N. Central Avenue, is built, completing Phoenix City Square.[194]
    • Phoenix purchases the Phoenix Transit System from American Transit, who agrees to continue to manage the operation.[122]
    • The city adopts the Central Phoenix Plan in an attempt to develop the Central Avenue corridor.[195]
    • The first Fiesta Bowl is played.[158]
    • Prehab of Mesa (youth-related nonprofit) established.[196]
    • Tucson Opera Company founded.[197]
    • Tucson Convention Center built.
    • London Bridge opens in Lake Havasu City, after being transported from London, England.[198]
  • 1972
  • 1973
    • Voters approve a $23.5 million bond issue, to fund the Phoenix Mountain Preserve.[158]
    • Dobson Ranch planned community began selling homes in the first phase of its 26-year development.
    • A boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion (BLEVE) kills 11 firefighters in Kingman.[200]
    • Fort Grant becomes an Arizona state prison.[59]
    • Construction of the Central Arizona Project began.[201]
  • 1975
    • Phoenix elects its first female mayor: Margaret Hance.[158]
    • Papago Freeway is passed by the voters of Phoenix.[158]
    • After extensive renovations, the Mesa Arizona Temple is rededicated
    • The Park of the Canals in Mesa is added to the National Register of Historic Places; work then commences for developing park facilities and later the botanical garden.
    • Chandler Unified School District is created by combining the Chandler Elementary and High School Districts.[85]
  • 1976
  • 1977
  • 1978
  • 1979
    • Terminal 3 at Sky Harbor Airport opens.[202]
    • City adopts the Phoenix Concept 2000 plan, which split the city into urban villages.[207]
    • Fiesta Mall opens.
    • Mesa Amphitheatre built.
    • Mesa Weekly News begins publication.[65]
    • Radio station KMLE begins broadcasting from Chandler.

1980s

1990s

21st century

2000–09

2010s

See also

Cities in Arizona

References

  1. ^ Sheridan 2012, pp. 11–12.
  2. ^ a b c Sheridan 2012, p. 6.
  3. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 18.
  4. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 26.
  5. ^ a b "The Hohokam". Arizona Museum of Natural History, City of Mesa. Archived from the original on 30 November 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
  6. ^ Sheridan 2012, pp. 22–24.
  7. .
  8. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 25.
  9. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 19.
  10. ^ "Hopi Places". Cline Library, Northern Arizona University.
  11. .
  12. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 22.
  13. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 29.
  14. ^ Malotki, Ekkehart. 2002. Hopi Tales of Destruction. Bison Books. pp. 230
  15. ^ Braatz 2003, p. 27.
  16. ^ a b c d Sheridan 2012, p. 31.
  17. ^ "Nahanni National Park Reserve". Great Canadian Parks. Retrieved 2007-07-02.
  18. )
  19. ^ a b c d e f "A Brief History of the Casa Grande Ruins". National Park Service. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
  20. ^ a b Sheridan 2012, p. 38.
  21. ^ Sheridan 2012, p. 41.
  22. ^ Kessell, John L. (1970). Mission of Sorrow: Jesuit Guevavi and the Pimas, 1691–1767. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press.
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Bibliography

Further reading

Published in the 19th century
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Published in the 21st century

External links