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Main Street in Cottonwood was created 1908, when two settlers "used a mule team to pull and drag through brush". [6] In 1917, Clemenceau, a mining town that is now part of Cottonwood, was established nearby. [6] The Clemenceau smelter closed in 1936, causing job loses and a disruption to the area. [6] Cottonwood incorporated in 1960. [7]
The Bank of Arizona building is located at 816 N. Main Street Cottonwood, AZ 86326. Opened Jan 25, 1954 as the "most modern" in the state with drive-in teller and complete Air Conditioning. It housed the City of Cottonwood police department until a consolidated police, fire, EMS presence was constructed on 6th Street in the 1990s.
Cottonwood is located about 21 miles (34 km) west of Chinle and 22 miles (35 km) east of Pinon. According to the United States Census Bureau , the CDP has a total area of 0.14 square miles (0.37 km 2 ), all land.
The southeast of Arizona, with New Mexico, northwest Chihuahua and northeast Sonora contain insular sky island mountain ranges, (the Madrean Sky Islands), or smaller subranges in association. There are also numerous Sonoran Desert ranges, or Arizona transition zone ranges. Northern and northeast Arizona also has scattered ranges throughout.
Arizona is also one of the Four Corners states and is diagonally adjacent to Colorado. Arizona has a total area of 113,998 square miles (295,253 km 2), making it the sixth largest U.S. state. [1] Of this area, just 0.3% consists of water, which makes Arizona the state with the second lowest percentage of water area (New Mexico is the lowest at ...
The Building at 826 North Main Street, at 826 N. Main St. in Cottonwood, Arizona, was built in 1925.It is a 25-by-75-foot (7.6 m × 22.9 m) building built of cast block and is significant of an example of better fire protection in construction following a 1925 fire in Cottonwood's business district.
Four counties (Mohave, Pima, Yavapai and Yuma) were created in 1864 following the organization of the Arizona Territory in 1862. The now defunct Pah-Ute County was split from Mohave County in 1865, but merged back in 1871. All but La Paz County were created by the time Arizona was granted statehood in 1912.
The Willard House at 114 N. Main in Cottonwood, Arizona is a historic house built in 1890 for Mary Grace Willard, an early settler who arrived in 1888 and homesteaded the land upon which the house sits.