Banner Bottom ImageBanner Bottom Image


Other Regional History


Previous
Next


Hashknife Posse

The Navajo County Sheriff’s Hashknife Posse was organized in 1955 as a search and rescue group. Later they started their annual Pony Express Ride carrying official U.S. Mail. They have held the longest continous contract with the U.S. Postal Service to carry the mail to Scottsdale. They celebrated their 54th ride in 2012. Pictured here are the original charter members of the posse.

photo id: 122


Flat Tire

Flat tires were a common occurrence on the rural roads in early Navajo County travel.

photo id: 265


Navajo County Road Yard

The old Navajo County road yard in the Taylor area  was located on Maverick Lane just off of Highway 77. This has since been used as an exterior remodeling business and landscape supply yard.

photo id: 267


Sheriff Frank Wattron

Frank J. Wattron was deputy under Sheriff Commodore Perry Owens in 1895 in Navajo County. The following year the former school teacher and editor was elected as sheriff. As sheriff he continued the crackdown on cattle rustlers, rowdy brawls and gunfights. Frank was famous for his quest for law and order.

One of the prisoners in his jail was George Smiley, a convicted murderer. Smiley was scheduled to be the first person executed in Navajo County on December 8, 1899. When Wattron issued an invitation on gilt-bordered paper to the hanging, he caused quite a stir worldwide. The invitation, seen by a reporter, made the hanging appear to be a social event. George Smiley got a 30 day reprieve until appropriate invitations could be resent.
 


photo id: 515

Previous
Next


Aerial View of McNary

It wasn't until 1924 that the town of McNary received its current name. It was first named Cluff Cienega. In 1919 Tom Pollock, a rich Flagstaff entrepreneur, renamed the town Cooley after Corydon Cooley. 

During the recession in the bottom fell out of the lumber prices. The Apache Lumber Company closed down and creditors took over.

In 1923 M. W. Cady and James McNary purchased the old Pollock's Lumber mill in Cooley and that was when the town was again renamed  McNary.


photo id: 355


Aerial View of McNary

Here we see an aerial view of the town McNary back in the early 1900s. This was considered the hub of civilization in the White Mountains.  Due to expiration of a land lease with the White Mountain Apache Tribe, the community no longer exists as it once did.

This was a segregated town. Each section had its own church, school and cafes.  Prior to the federal segregation laws being mandated, the high school was desegregated by James McNary. Sadly the movie theaters remained segregated until the town's demise.
 



photo id: 115


McNary General Store

Arizona's largest general mercantile was located in the center of Arizona's White Mountains vacation land.

In 1936 or 1937 the original store burned to the ground and was immediately rebuilt. It was expanded to accommodate the growing community. The new, expanded store is what you see pictured here.

The store was closed in the middle of the 1970s and the building was torn down and land leveled. Around that same time the McNary sawmill moved to Eager and the McNary offices were closed. 


photo id: 110


McNary Movie Theater

The first theater in McNary was The Rivoli. It was located in what most of the residents would remember as the bowling alley, which was near the old hotel and is across the street from the present Post Office. It was located there from 1935-1941. The Rivoli was operated by Bill Hatch and later by Art Hattie Cozier.  Prior to 1935, both silent and sound movies were shown one night a week for the people of the area in the same building. This was done for several years before The Rivoli was established.

In 1940 the McNary Theatre was built.  It was the first Quonset type building in the area and seated 100 people. The knotty pine interior was chosen from McNary's best. Most of the residents remember the concessions stand featuring "the best popcorn" in the world. 

The McNary Theater remained in McNary until 1967. The theater was then moved to Pinetop and stands today as an antique shop.  Every year at Christmas, the manager, Art Crozier, offered a free matinee for the children of the area and Santa delivered a treat sack of candy and fruit for each child. Treats were provided by the company and the union.



photo id: 344


Center of McNary

McNary is seven miles southwest of Pinetop on the Fort Apache Indian Reservation.  At one time it was the largest town in the White Mountains. The town's original name was Cluff Cienega and a post office with that name was established.

Tom Pollock, the rich Flagstaff entrepreneur, and his partner William Cady built the town sawmill in 1917. During World War I lumber was a very lucrative business. The Pinetop-Lakeside area was already known as "Sawmill Valley." It was also Pollock and Cady that built the Apache Railroad from Holbrook to McNary. In 1919 Pollock changed the town's name to Cooley.


photo id: 346


McNary Fire Department

McNary was once a fully functioning town.  Here you can see the McNary Fire Department building. In 1979 a fire burned down the lumbar mill in McNary.  The Apache Tribe refused to extend the lease to Southwest Forest Industries, causing the lumber operation to shut down forever. The workers moved away in search of jobs.

Today McNary is just a shadow of its former self.  It has a small grocery store, a post office, a couple of churches, an elementary school, and the Head Start Center.


photo id: 349


Dysterheft McNary Home

This home of Dr. Arnold H. Dysterheft and his family was originally in McNary. It is still standing today, but was moved to the Snowflake/Concho area after the lumber mill shut down in 1979. 

photo id: 381


David Russell

David Russell was born in Arkansas in 1919. He came to McNary in 1936 at the age of 17. He arrived with his sister and brother- in-law, Mr. & Mrs. Harry Wilfong.

Southwest Lumber Mills upped his age to 18 and he was hired. He worked many years at the mill and in the woods. When the planner mill burned down he became supervisor of the new rebuilt planner.
 
Later David said that Ben Pearson, who was the High Sheriff for Navajo County, asked David to take the Navajo Deputy Sheriff's position when Olin Denton, the area's Deputy Sheriff, resigned. David served two years as Navajo County Deputy Sheriff.
 

In 1948, David was encouraged by Southwest Forest Industries to become an Apache County Deputy Sheriff and go to the Police Academy. David became the first and last black Deputy Sheriff in Apache County. The company paid half of his deputy wages and St. Johns paid the other half. He worked for the county and company for almost 30 years.

 
In this photo he is giving a tour of SWFI in McNary. Dan Ferren, a Flagstaff Fire Captain, is pictured to his right, and Karen to his left.

   


photo id: 384


Southwest Lumber Mills

The Southwest Lumber Mills went through several name changes. It was originally Cady Lumber Company. In 1935 the company was renamed Southwest Lumber Mills. In 1960 the company changed names to Southwest Forest Industries. The company had several mill sites, including ones in Flagstaff and McNary.


photo id: 422


Forest

Pictured here are John Elam, Jack Fish, Charles Lindstrom, and Jim Hansen.


photo id: 492


Slash Burner

Pictured here is what was called a "slash burner." When lumber was processed, the bark and unsellable after products were burned in the slash burner to produce energy for heating houses and steam for power. This was mainly during the 1930s and 1940s. 

Today all parts of lumber are used in various ways, so slash burners are no longer used. 
 


photo id: 343


Elk Hunt

James McNary stopped by on his way to work to admire a neighbor’s successful elk hunt.  Hunting and fishing were not just pastimes, they were essential to feeding the family.

photo id: 648


Big Lake Dam

1934 - Three teams working scrapers to build the dam at Big Lake. It wasn't until after the dam was constructed in 1930 on the east fork of the Black River that Big Lake came into existance.
 
Today, Big Lake Arizona is considered to be a premier fishing destination. It is located in the White Mountains near Springerville.
 
 
 
Photo courtesty of USFS.


photo id: 664






photo id: 329






photo id: 331


Snow Bank

A Snow bank near McNary in the late 1950’s. Most old timers seem to agree that the winters were colder and had more snow in the "olden days.”

photo id: 646

Previous
Next


Petrified Forest

Petrified Forest National Park is located about 26 miles east of Holbrook on Interstate 40. It attracts more than 600,000 visitors each year. The national park features vibrantly colored petrified wood.
 
 


photo id: 535


1895

Holbrook’s neighbor, the Petrified Forest National Park, has drawn millions of vistors from around the globe. 
 
Pictured here is C. Osbon with an unidentified man in Jasper Forest in 1895. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1056


Jasper Forest

A photograph of Jasper Forest taken by Adam Clark Vroman in 1895 with some splendid samples of fossils of fallen trees.

Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.




photo id: 1052


Petrified Wood

A close-up of the largest petrified log in the Jasper Forest in the park, circa 1905.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.
 
 


photo id: 1051


First Forest

Jasper Forest was originally known as First Forest. It was the first collection of petrified wood that tourists would see when they traveled from Adamana by wagon in the early 20th century.
 
This photograph was taken looking north in First (Jasper) Forest in 1905. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service. 


photo id: 1049


John Muir

Naturalist John Muir at Petrified Forest Park in 1905. 
John Muir was enchanted by the petrified logs when he first visited the area. It was Muir who suggested to President Roosevelt that the land be protected from exploitation and commercial enterprises. The following year Roosevelt declared Petrified Forest to be a National Monument. Later it was expanded into the National Park that we know today.
 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1032


Exploring Jasper

Two gentlemen exploring First Forest in August 1905. First Forest was later renamed Jasper Forest.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1057


John Muir and Tourists

John Muir showing tourists the petrified wood found in the petrified forest  in 1905. The area was declared a national monument in 1906, and a national park in 1962.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1050


Early Visitors

Tourists visiting Petrified Forest, prior to when it was named a National Monument. This was taken circa 1900; the land was declared a National Monument in 1906. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.



photo id: 1074


Giant Logs

Pre-1930s giant logs. At this time the area was a national monument.
 
Petrified Forest National Monument was created on Dec. 8, 1906 by President Theodore Roosevelt stating that " …the mineralized remains of Mesozoic forests…are of the greatest scientific interest and value and it appears that the public good would be promoted by reserving these deposits of fossilized wood as a National monument with as much land as may be necessary for the proper protection thereof."
 
The Petrified Forest National Monument was disestablished by Congress when the Petrified Forest National Park was created on December 1962.
 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1044


Petrified Forest Agate Bridge

Visitors stand atop the Agate Bridge at Petrified Forest National Park. This natural formation was created over centuries of water wearing away the sediment below this petrified log. 

photo id: 675


Agate Bridge

Tourists stand on Agate Bridge in 1911. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1033


Early Tourism

An early visitor poses in Jasper Forest on a trip in 1911.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1054


Louise Scott

Louise Scott poses with a petrified log. Photo taken by Dudley Scott in 1929.



Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1065


Painted Desert Scenery

A young child admires the Painted Desert scenery. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1062


Charles Camp

Charles L. Camp in the 1920s.
 
Camp was a zoologist who was appointed in 1922 to teach comparative anatomy in the Zoology Department at the University in Berkeley, CA. He was also made a research associate of their newly established Museum of Paleontology.
 
During that time he began field work in the Triassic deposits of the Painted Desert. He continued his work for many years and published monographs of the phytosaurs (1930) and dicynodonts (1956).
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1034


Perched on Log

A gentleman poses on a petrified log early in the park's history. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1075


Line of Cars




Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1077


Adamana Car

This photo shows a car being driven through old Adamana sometime between 1924 and 1928. The photo was a gift from Mrs. Harold Meyer. Written on back of the photo is the following:
 
 "Special stage to the Petrified Forest for geologists, astronomers, artists etc. Leaves Adamana at every total eclipse of the sun." 

Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1058


Stone Tree House

Pictured here is Lore's Painted Desert Inn in the 1920s.
 
The Stone Tree House, originally registered as the Painted Desert Inn, was the vision of Herbert David Lore, who obtained the property where the Inn was built under the Homestead Act. It was built with petrified wood and other native stone, giving rise to the nickname "stone tree house"
 
In 1936, the Petrified Forest National Monument purchased the Inn and land owned by Lore.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1035


Stone Treehouse Employee

Fred, an employee of the Lore family, standing on the porch of the Stone Treehouse (original Painted Desert Inn building) in mid 1920's.

Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1069


Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein and his second wife, Elsa, visiting Rainbow Forest in 1931. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1078


Eagle's Nest

A vintage postcard of Eagles Nest, Jasper Forest, from the 1920s.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1047


Puerco River CCC

During the 1930s men affected by the Great Depression were able to find work with the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). Many of the national parks buildings and monuments were built by CCC workers, including Petrified Forest.
 
This is the Puerco River CCC Camp in the 1930s. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1037


Neocalamite Cast

A Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) worker with a portion of a Neocalamite cast in the late 1930s.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1068


Rainbow Forest

Rainbow Forest prior to the 1930s. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1045


Painted Desert Roof

During the 1930s the Painted Desert Inn was purchased by the Petrified Forest National Monument and remodeled. The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) provided the manpower.
 
In this picture CCC workers are building a roof for Painted Desert Inn during the 1930s. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service. 


photo id: 1036


Painted Desert Inn Remodel

Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) workers converting the old Painted Desert Inn into its modern adobe look. March 10, 1938.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1063


Rainbow Forest Museum

The Rainbow Forest Museum in the 1930s. This structure was also completed by the Civilian Conservation Corps.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1038


Museum View

The view from the rear door of the museum. Taken in 1932.

Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1059


BBQ Celebration

Dedication of the Rio Puerco Bridge entrance, July 3, 1932. The Holbrook Chamber of Commerce served a barbecue lunch. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1060


Rainbow Forest Interior

Ranger Frank Winess and Superintendent Smith inside the Rainbow Forest Museum in 1932.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1067


Mather Plaque Dedication

Important visitors for the dedication of Mather Plaque, July 4, 1932.

Back row: Richey, Phil Murray, Frank Gunnell, Alberts, Lawfield.
Front row: Curtis Herbert, Marion Reid, Carrol Miller, Supt Frank Pinkley, Horace Albright, Supt Chas Smith, Supt M.R. Tillotson, Frank Winess, John Edwards.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1070


Badlands

Tourists study the Blue Mesa badlands.  Photographed by Josef Muench. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1061


Nora Ramirez

During the 1940s the Fred Harvey Company took over management of the Painted Desert Inn. There were several Harvey Houses in Navajo County during this time of railroad expansion and increased tourism.
 
Pictured here is Nora Ramirez, a Harvey Girl,  at the Painted Desert Inn in 1950. 

Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1039


Painted Desert Inn


This is the Painted Desert Inn in the 1930s. It is now a National Historic Building and has been restored by the National Park Service.
 
The Inn was closed for most of 2004-2006 for a major rehabilitation project which repaired damage, provided improvement to the building’s construction, and returned the design to that of the early 1950s.


photo id: 141


Old Faithful

Visitors climbing on Old Faithful. Photograph by Josef Muench sometime prior to 1946.



Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1064


Agate House

Visitors explore Agate House, ca. 1945-46


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.



photo id: 1073


Road to Painted Desert

A car traveling on Park Road, north of the railroad, heading toward Painted Desert.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1066


Painted Desert Inn

Cars parked outside the Painted Desert Inn, circa 1950. The Painted Desert Inn was used as a hotel until the mid-1960s. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1987.
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1041


Snow Lady

The Snow Lady is a well-known rock formation in the Jasper Forest. This photo was taken in the 1930s.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1046


Eagle's Nest

Eagle's Nest in Jasper Forest, circa 1930. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.
 


photo id: 1053


Snow Lady

The Snow Lady formation in Jasper Forest in 1933.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.
 


photo id: 1055


Entrance

The Jasper Forest park entrance as it looked in the 1940s. 
 
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.
 


photo id: 1048


Row of Cars

A busy summer day in 1960. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1071


Archaeology

A beautiful black on white pot, as found by District Ranger Clark MacLamore.  July 1961.



Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1072


Changing the Sign




Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1076


Community Complex

The Painted Desert Community Complex in 1962. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.
 


photo id: 1043


Balcony

Finished in the early 1960s, this apartment's balcony was part of the Painted Desert Community Complex designed by Mid-century architect Richard Neutra. Today the complex houses the visitor center at the north end of Petrified Forest National Park. The complex is on the National Register of Historic Places. 



Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1085


Putting Green

Supt Humberger's sister turns employee housing into a putting green in July 1966.


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1084


Contest Winners

The winners of the Fire Prevention Week Poster Contest display their designs. Taken on October 16, 1967.




Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1081


Visitor's Center

A tourist studying a map inside the Painted Desert Visitor Center in the 1960's.




Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1082


Training

Staff perform fire extinguisher training in 1965. 


Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.


photo id: 1083
www.librarywebsites.com