Fort Verde State Historic Park

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Commanding officer's house and reenactor playing General Crook
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Commanding officer's house and reenactor playing General Crook

Fort Verde State Historic Park in the town of Camp Verde, Arizona, is a small park that attempts to preserve parts of the Civil War-era fort as it appeared in the 1880s. The park was established in 1970 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places a year later.

Settlers in the mid-1800s near the Verde River grew corn and other crops with the prospect of getting good prices from nearby Prescott, which was the territorial capital, and from nearby miners. The rapid increase in population for the mining economy disrupted the hunting and gathering environments of the local Indian tribes, the Dilzhe'e Apache and Yavapai. In turn, they raided the farmers' crops for food.

The farmers requested military protection from the U.S. Army and, in 1865, although Arizona was still only a territory, the cavalry arrived. They set up a several posts over the next few years:

  • 1865, a small post five miles south of what is today Camp Verde.
  • 1866-1871, Camp Lincoln (Arizona), a mile north of today's Fort Verde.
  • 1871-1879, Camp Verde (built gradually from 1871 to 1873)
  • 1879 Camp Verde renamed Fort Verde
  • 1891, Fort Verde abandoned
  • 1899, sold at public auction

After approximately 1500 local Indians were placed on a reservation by 1875, the army's role changed from protecting the settlers to ensuring that the Indians stayed on the reservation. The last major battle with uprising Indians took place in 1882 at the Big Dry Wash fight.

The fort was never enclosed by walls or stockades and never saw fighting on site. At its height, it consisted of only about 20 buildings, only four of which survived until 1956, when local citizens created a small museum in the administration building. They later donated the buildings and ten acres (40,000 m²) as a State Park.

Some of the buildings were built with pice, which is large adobe slabs cast within wooden frames rather than assembled from the more familiar individual adobe bricks.

[edit] References

Fort Verde State Historic Park brochure (1995)

[edit] External links

State Parks of Arizona
Northern Region
Dead Horse Ranch • Fool Hollow Lake • Fort Verde • Homolovi Ruins • Jerome • Lyman Lake • Red Rock • Riordan Mansion • Slide Rock • Tonto Natural Bridge
Southern Region
Boyce Thompson ArboretumCatalinaKartchner Caverns • Lost Dutchman • McFarland • Oracle • Patagonia LakePicacho Peak • Roper Lake • Sonoita Creek Natural Area • Tombstone Courthouse • Tubac Presidio
Western Region
Alamo LakeBuckskin Mountain • Cattail Cove • Lake Havasu • Yuma Crossing • Yuma Territorial Prison
National Parks within Arizona
Grand CanyonPetrified ForestSaguaro
National Monuments
Canyon de ChellyCasa Grande RuinsChiricahuaGrand Canyon-ParashantHohokam PimaMontezuma CastleNavajoOrgan Pipe CactusPipe SpringRainbow BridgeSunset Crater VolcanoTontoTuzigootWalnut CanyonWupatki
Municipal parks
South Mountain ParkPapago Park