Monday, February 8, 2010

Arizona Archaeology & Heritage Awareness Month: March 2010

 A calendar of events throughout the State of Arizona, by region, is available by going to this link:
http://azstateparks.com/find/images/arch_2009/AAHAM_calendar_2010.pdf

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Historic Roadside Marker Short on History

If you see vandalism like this on any historical markers or historic sites throughout Arizona, you should report it.
GET INVOLVED IN ARIZONA
ARCHAEOLOGY!!!
The Arizona Site Steward Program is sponsored by the StateHistoric Preservation Office (SHPO) and is an organization of
volunteers that aid the public land managers of Arizona by visiting prehistoric and historic archaeological and paleontological sites on public land and reporting any destruction or vandalism that they note. 
In addition to this site monitoring, Site Stewards are also active in public education through outreach activities. Site Stewards are
selected, trained, and certified by the SHPO and the Archaeology Advisory Commission.
If you are interested in volunteering as a Site Steward, please contact:
Site Steward Program Coordinator
State Historic Preservation Office
1300 W. Washington
Phoenix, AZ 85007
(602) 542-4174
www.azstateparks.com

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Sunday, October 4, 2009

PATAGONIA PEOPLE: Author Philip Caputo

Question: How Do You Make History Come Alive?" when it's more often than not thought about as way-back-then or way back when, or sketchy details of memories make a mash-up of interesting and entertaining misinformation that are nonetheless the way we look at history and create legends that have a life of their own sustained over time - could be history or could be fiction. . . and then we have a real time novel by part-time Patagonia resident Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Philip Caputo. Here's what Publishers' Weekly had to say about this book: "The fallout between public and private distinctions of war is just one of the border disputes haunting Pulitzer-winner Caputo's gorgeously stark latest. Inconsolable after the loss of his wife on 9/11, Gil Castle leaves New York for his family's Arizona ranch, San Ignacio, overlooking the Mexican border. But San Ignacio proves to be “a pretty place where some ugly things happen,” and Gil's discovery of a Mexican illegal, left for dead after a border-crossing deal gone awry, soon merges “the world of cattle and horses and operatic landscapes” with the “world of drug lords and coyotes and murder,” whose cast of femmes fatale and tough muchachos includes the Professor—an “agent of history” working both sides of the border and at least two sides of the law—and Yvonne Menéndez, the ruthless leader of the Agua Prieta cartel, whose past may be painfully entwined with Gil's family history. That history is broadly personified in Gil's larger-than-life grandfather Ben Erskine, a legendary deputy sheriff whose adventures emerge in inter-chapter accounts. At first glance, this multifarious book skirts country familiar to readers of McCarthy or McMurtry, but Caputo's west supersedes elemental cowboys and lone justice with the malaise of post-9/11 America and the violence of the Mexican desert—as gruesome as in Iraq—frothing with moral ambiguity and fraught with complicity. (Oct.)

If that rousing review whets your appetite here's a link so you can read the first chapter http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/randoEMS/Caputo_Ch1.pdf


Here in Patagonia you can purchase "Crossers" at Mariposa Books @ 317 McKeown Avenue, open every day from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
If you would like to reserve a copy in advance please call 394-9186.
Local author Philip Caputo's new novel will be available during the 21st Annual Fall Festival together with the works of other local writers, and books on local history.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

PATAGONIA PEOPLE & PLACES: "Hummingbird Heaven"

In doing research for a posting on this Patagonia Heritage blog after finding out about Marion's passing on Sunday on a birdwatching forum, it came to my attention that very few, if any, local Patagonians had received the news of her death at that time.
The "local grapevine" - or how the news usually gets around town- had simply been co-opted in real time by the huge network of Marion's admirers from around the world on the internet.
Patagonia people and the places they create here oftentimes are appreciated and recognized more by wider national and international interest groups than local residents. The location of The Paton Hummingbird House now appears as a destination on the new Visitors' Guide for Patagonia-Mountain Empire for the first time in 2009 www.patagoniaaz.com . . . a somewhat overdue, but nonetheless welcome, addition to putting Patagonia "on the map" of birding adventure destinations from around the world.
There appear to be no data to record the number of visitors attracted to this location here annually, but from experience working in the local visitor information center, it is a prime attraction with tens of thousands of birdwatchers coming here.

More importantly - and this is vital to The Patagonia Heritage Mural Project 2009 in showcasing the legacy of what one person and one place here in Patagonia creates for future generations - What will now happen to this world-famous location?
For the time being the Hummer attraction continues the way it has been. "Business as usual" according to a telephone call to Robin Baxter who's keeping all the feeders filled.

(Photo Credit Wally Paton, from an article by National Wildlife Federation)


Back in 2004 in a National Geographic Magazine article, the writer had this to say about "Hummingbird Heaven" . . .

Patagonia is a tiny hamlet located in the Sonoita Valley in
southeastern Arizona. A few blocks from the main street through town, on the edge of the The Nature Conservancy's Patagonia-Sonoita Creek Preserve, lies a nondescript ranch house that is no less than one of the most famous bird-watching sites in the world.

This is the home of Marion Paton, but it is more than just a home. It is an open, living museum dedicated primarily to observing hummingbirds in Mrs. Paton's backyard.
Now, you don't need an appointment to visit Mrs. Paton's backyard. You don't even have to knock on her door to ask permission to go around the side of the house to the viewing area. Just walk in through the gate and past the blackboard inscribed with the recent bird species seen in the yard. You'll be met with a view of nine (count them, nine) hummingbird feeders lined up along the side of her house.
For the better part of two days in late March, I stood in the hot sun in Mrs. Paton's backyard, next to whichever feeder I thought gave me the best chance to get a great photograph of a broad-billed hummingbird, a black-chinned hummingbird, or the exquisitely exotic violet-crowned hummingbird. I was lucky on all three counts.
Throughout the day, Mrs. Paton fills up the feeders with sugar water, waters the lawn, and mingles with the visitors, which I figure must add up to well over a hundred per day. This totals well over 30,000 visitors per year. Imagine opening your home to this many people, asking in return for only a small donation to cover the cost of the sugar water. (There's a tin can attached to the fence for this.)
I would say that if anyone deserves the title of saint (at least, bird-watching saint), it is Mrs. Paton.

Hummingbird Heaven
Marion Paton's place is located in an area of southeastern Arizona that is also referred to as Hummingbird Heaven. Here, during the breeding season, you can observe (in addition to the violet-crowned hummingbird pictured on this page) the broad-billed, blue-throated, magnificent, and Lucifer hummingbirds—all of which are regional specialties that poke into this tiny area of the United States from their winter homes in Mexico and Central America.
You can also see more widely ranging North American hummingbird species such as the black-chinned, broad-tailed, rufous, calliope, Costa's, Allen's, and Anna's hummingbirds in this region. Indeed, virtually all of the North American hummingbird species except for the ruby-throated hummingbird can be seen in Hummingbird Heaven, depending on what time of the year you visit the area.

Just down the road from Paton's is the Patagonia-Sonoita Creek Preserve. Here such rare bird species as the gray hawk, northern beardless-tyrannulet, rose-throated becard, thick-billed kingbird, and green kingfisher can be seen, along with about 300 other species.

Stroll along the stream and cut back across the floodplain to the visitor center. It's a beautiful hike!

Sunday, August 23, 2009

PATAGONIA PEOPLE NOW: Dr. John Arnold

Believe It or Not, dear readers, sometimes it takes a newspaper report from halfway around the world - this one from Nigeria published yesterday to focus on an individual in Patagonia whose achievements in philanthropy and micro-business have touched the lives of millions around the world.
Like Dr. Delmar Mock, the subject of an earlier posting, John goes largely unnoticed or unrecognized here most of the time although the reach of his dedication has extended around the world.
You can view more details by going to http://www.sunnewsonline.com/webpages/features/living/2009/aug/22/living-22-08-2009-004.htm
On weekends here in Patagonia, John opens Grayce’s Gift & Candle Shop, founded by his mother Grayce Bogden Arnold in 1975, as well as the Dia de Los Muertos Museum, which the Smithsonian Institute has recognized as the “first of its kind in North America.”
They are both located on the north side of Naugle Avenue or Route 82 at the eastern end of town
http://www.patagoniaaz.com/shop_Grayces.html

Among some of John's accomplishments cited in the article mentioned above, are 40 years of collaboration with Dr. John Arnold, the PPEP Board of Directors and dedicated staff carrying out the dreams to “improve the quality of life” of the farm workers and rural poor who visited the bus in those formative years. His work has been cited as national models 10 times in U.S Congressional Records, including citations by U.S Congressmen Udall, Kolbe, Grijalva, Gifford and Senators Deconcini, McCain, Kyl and Enzi of Wyoming. Also, his programmes have been honoured twice at the White House, among numerous other nationally and internationally recognitions.
We salute John Arnold both for his lifetime work in philanthropy in the United States and Mexico, and creating a legacy of achievement for future generations. Bravo!

http://www.sunnewsonline.com/webpages/features/living/2009/aug/22/living-22-08-2009-004.htm

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

PATAGONIA HERITAGE People & Places: Honoring "Country Doctor" Delmar Mock

Too often we forget outstanding individuals who have made their indelible mark on the culture and traditions of Patagonia - like Dr. Delmar Mock who found his Eureka! in southeastern Arizona.
Your blogger had the pleasure to meet him just last week around the occasion of both his and his wife's Cleo's 93rd Birthday observed without fanfare but radiating quiet devotion and loving warmth to each other at their home, much like their lives throughout the 37 years of community service with people here, covering 2,500 square miles and driving between 2 and 3 million miles.
At a time when the country is in the middle of "reforming" healthcare this beloved gentle man and his wife, of uncommon passion with a strong faith and indomitable spirit,
defined the role and the living legend of the disappearing country doctor.

Here's a direct quotation from the foreword to the book - that should be taken to heart today: "Life is a struggle, at best, and not everyone could fit into the demanding professional life-style of small-community health care as presented in the ensuing stories. Yet hundreds and thousands of small communities still exist where willing caregivers could still go to serve their fellow men rather than live their lives fulfilling selfish interests.
Our wish is that this story may be a stimulus to young professionals in the healing arts who may choose to join in the march to care for the grassroots medical needs of our country. [bold emphasis mine]. We need - and salute - medical specialists and their gifts. Yet we hope they will understand that small community practitioners are not second-rate caregivers. We grassroots caregivers often have to stand alone in making treatment choices, some of which may have a life-or-death impact on the patient."

ANOTHER QUOTATION FROM THE DOC:
"One of the needs of the world today is to reuse the stepping stones of the past to carry us into the future." Yeah . . . & Amen
The Doc is commemorated here with this marker in the park named after him for his 37 years of community service
A book published in 1999 and available at Mariposa Books tells that life story.
Fool's Gold: Chronicles of a Country Doctor The Story of Dr. Delmar Mock
by Carolyn Rathbun-Sutton

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Patagonia: This Place Matters

The National Trust for Historic Preservation is running a Summer Photo Contest requesting entries for pictures.
It's a nation-wide call for individuals and groups to upload and send photos of locations in their communities of particular important that they choose to promote.
You can hit the following link to send emails to friends, to upload videos on YouTube, or to add to the area on Flickr
http://www.preservationnation.org/take-action/this-place-matters/
You can likewise have Patagonia photos from the family attic or dusty family albums or tucked away in drawers scanned in the local working group's workstation inside Mariposa Books and the Visitor Information Center, if you'd like to bring a place in Patagonia to the forefront or out of its hiding place - bring it back into its place in the progress of Patagonia.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

OPINION PIECE from another source


Dear Readers,
We urge you to pay attention to this pending budget "shortfall" that would eliminate funding for one of the keystone resources and repositories of Arizona History.
"Mother Mag" gives the facts and background along with a call for action

Daily Kos: What History Will Arizona Celebrate in 2012?

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Patagonia Places: Historic Resources

PLACES: most residents either walk or drive by these locations all the time - hidden to some, but clearly marked on this 1994 Survey ... see a post by scrolling downfor some information about another location in Patagonia on the National Register of Historic Places
Please note that these places tend to cluster on a very walkable path in and around the Patagonia Town Park and can serve to anchor a self-guided walking tour through history at the center of town.
Plans are currently being developed by The Municipal Property Association, the beneficiary organization for this year's Patagonia Fall Festival, for looking at the health of the trees in the greenway in the heart of town and ways to regenerate its use and enjoyment by all.

Locations marked with black squares are individually eligible or a potentially contributing property in the mapping of the Town of Patagonia done by Don W. Ryden AIA/Architects Inc.

You might or might not be surprised that there are only two properties here listed in The National Register of Historic Places:
  • Cady Hall/Patagonia Public Library @ 342 Duquesne Avenue
  • The James Finley House ID Number 74000462
Other Potential Contributor Historic Properties include:
Richardson Park 4th Avenue & McKeown - no information there about the town founder
Patagonia Jail
McKeown & Third Avenue
Duquesne & Third Avenue
Lopez Pool Hall on Duquesne
Grammar School on the Heill
SW Corner of Lenon & 2nd Avenue

339, 355, 361, 371, 387, 423, 451, 455 McKeown Avenue
366, 292, 275 Duquesne Avenue
273 McKeown
321,381, 289, 430, 405, 414, 430, 433, 433 Duquesne
372, 357, 370, 406, 426 Santa Rita
469, 4, 542 Harshaw
191 Third Avenue
327, 355, 416, 408-410 Sonoita
384, 364, 335, 320,284, 280, 278, 274, 132 Naugle Avenue
195, 170, 261m 265 Third Avenue
345, 306 Pennsylvania Avenue

378, 330, 326, 322, 318, 354 Sonoita Avenue
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PATAGONIA PLACES:The James Finley House on Harshaw Road

PLACES
National Register of Historic Places
Certification Date: 11/19/1974
ID Number: 74000462
Date: 1879
7.2 miles SW of Patagonia in Coronado National Forest.
Privately Owned

Built during the area's silver mining boom near Hermosa Mining Company Stamp Mill which was largest in Arizona Territory at time of construction

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

First Impressions #2: Patagonia Public Restrooms

Posted by PicasaWhen your blogger lived in New York City there was a segment on one of the local television stations called "SHAME ON YOU! "

With apologies ahead of time for the grossness of these images taken yesterday, April 27, 2009, this is what both residents - individuals and families - who use the town public park and visitors find approaching and going into the public restrooms prominently located on Fourth Avenue between McKeown and Naugle Avenues . . . see for yourself

Some weeks ago, a call was made from The Visitor Information Center following the complaint of a tourist to the town offices complaining about the dirty and rank conditions in the public restrooms . . . there was no assurance or response that these reported conditions would be looked into, so here for you, dear readers, to look at are what townpeople and visitors see in Patagonia's public restrooms.

Take a look! . . . sorry for not keeping this "hidden"