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There are several National Forest campgrounds in the area and it is the transmitter location for Prescott full-service television station KAZT-TV and several low-power television stations serving Cottonwood, Clarkdale, Camp Verde and Prescott Valley. Mingus Mountain is also the premier flying site of the Arizona Hang Gliding and Paragliding ...
Main Street in Cottonwood was created 1908, when two settlers "used a mule team to pull and drag through brush". [5] In 1917, Clemenceau, a mining town that is now part of Cottonwood, was established nearby. [5] The Clemenceau smelter closed in 1936, causing job loses and a disruption to the area. [5] Cottonwood incorporated in 1960. [6]
Verde Village is a census-designated place (CDP) in Yavapai County, Arizona, United States. The population was 11,605 at the 2010 census . It is a retirement and bedroom community for Cottonwood .
Lay, Inez (1954). "Samuel Loy and His Neighbors of 1877" in Pioneer Stories of Arizona's Verde Valley. Verde Valley Pioneers Association. OCLC 1988440. United States Federal Census for Arizona 1880 Yavapai County, District 28 pp. 1–5. Page, James (1954). "Pioneering" in Pioneer Stories of Arizona's Verde Valley. Verde Valley Pioneers Association.
Cottonwood Valley is a wide valley on the Colorado River on the border between Mohave County, Arizona and Clark County, Nevada.It extends east and west from the river into both states and is the first wide valley south of the Black Canyon of the Colorado, the last in a series of great canyons the Colorado River passes through after leaving the Rocky Mountains on its way west and where it makes ...
Comparison table of North American ski resorts Resort name and website Nearest city State/province Peak elevation (ft) Base elevation (ft) Vertical drop (ft)
Heavy snow quickly built up in parts of Utah on Wednesday, November 9, prompting ski resorts in the state to announce earlier-than-usual openings, local media said.Footage posted to Twitter by ...
Tuzigoot was excavated from 1933 to 1935 by Louis Caywood and Edward Spicer of the University of Arizona, with funding from the federal Civil Works Administration and Works Project Administration. In 1935–1936, with additional federal funding, the ruins were prepared for public display, and a Pueblo Revival -style museum and visitor center ...