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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing). Search the whole document.
Found 80 total hits in 41 results.
A. P. K. Safford (search for this): entry arizona
Lewis Wolfley (search for this): entry arizona
Myron H. McCord (search for this): entry arizona
Don Jose Vasconcellos (search for this): entry arizona
Arizona,
A Territory in the extreme southwestern portion of the republic, lying on the border of Mexico.
The region was early known to Spanish explorers.
As early as 1526.
Don Jose Vasconcellos, a follower of Cortez, crossed the centre of this Territory towards the Great Cañon, and the region was afterwards visited by other Spanish explorers.
They then, as we do now, found on the river-banks ruins of cities which seemed to have existed for centuries.
These, with regular fortifications, reservoirs, and canals, show that the country was once inhabited by an enterprising and cultivated people.
There are found walls of solid masonry, usually two stories in height.
It is estimated that fully 100,000 people must have inhabited the valley of the Gila alone.
Arizona was settled by Spanish missionaries from Mexico as early as 1687.
These missions were principally seated on the Lower Colorado and Gila rivers.
The Territory formed a part of Mexico until its purchase by the United
John Charles Fremont (search for this): entry arizona
Nathan O. Murphy (search for this): entry arizona
John P. Hoyt (search for this): entry arizona
Lewis C. Hughes (search for this): entry arizona
C. Meyer Zulick (search for this): entry arizona
Hernando Cortez (search for this): entry arizona
Arizona,
A Territory in the extreme southwestern portion of the republic, lying on the border of Mexico.
The region was early known to Spanish explorers.
As early as 1526.
Don Jose Vasconcellos, a follower of Cortez, crossed the centre of this Territory towards the Great Cañon, and the region was afterwards visited by other Spanish explorers.
They then, as we do now, found on the river-banks ruins of cities which seemed to have existed for centuries.
These, with regular fortifications, reservoirs, and canals, show that the country was once inhabited by an enterprising and cultivated people.
There are found walls of solid masonry, usually two stories in height.
It is estimated that fully 100,000 people must have inhabited the valley of the Gila alone.
Arizona was settled by Spanish missionaries from Mexico as early as 1687.
These missions were principally seated on the Lower Colorado and Gila rivers.
The Territory formed a part of Mexico until its purchase by the United