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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ATS_travel-on-a-journey-through-time_Bend-AZ.html
From 1915 to 1949 the Heber Ranger Station Stood at this site.The year is 1910 and you decide you'd like to be a Forest Service Ranger. To pass the test you'll need to know the local country, be able to take care of yourself and your horses, stand…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ATR_imagine-youself-here-some-nine-hundred-years-ago_Bend-AZ.html
The smell of burning pinyon lingers in the air. You've just enjoyed a bowl of corn meal mush. The corn has been stored since last season and still feeds the family. Fall is coming. Soon it will be time to gather pinyon nuts and walnuts. A yo…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1ATQ_can-you-read-the-rocks_Bend-AZ.html
These pictographs were made by Native Americans some 800 to 2,000 years ago. How were they made?Paint was made from powdered minerals, charcoal or crushed plants and mixed with a binder such as saliva, blood or vegetable juices. A yucca leaf ch…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMXFP_white-mountain-apache-war-memorial_Whiteriver-AZ.html
Roy BurnetteRoss ColelayRoss PinalCyrus Burnette
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMOND_girls-dormitory-120_Fort-Apache-AZ.html
During the first decade of the Theodore Roosevelt School, girls were housed in the old fort hospital. Since the old barracks that housed the boys was inadequate, a new boys' dormitory was scheduled for construction in 1931. Before that constructio…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMONC_t-r-school-cafeteria-119_Fort-Apache-AZ.html
This stone cafeteria building was constructed in 1948-1949 to serve the students of the Theodore Roosevelt School. It is the last building constructed here that is part of the Fort Apache Historic District. Before the construction of this building…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMONB_theodore-roosevelt-school-118_Fort-Apache-AZ.html
On January 24, 1923 an act was passed by Congress authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to establish and maintain an Indian boarding school on the site of Fort Apache. The first students were Dine' (Navajo) children brought from the Navajo Res…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMONA_boys-dormitory-116_Fort-Apache-AZ.html
The Boys' Dormitory was constructed in 1932. Located on the east end of the fort's Parade Ground, it is on the site of earlier military structures including a telegraph office. Sandstone was quarried for the building's construction from a site abo…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMON9_barracks-115_Fort-Apache-AZ.html
These ruins represent the last surviving enlisted men's barracks, on the east end of Barracks Row. Much like Officer's Row defined the north side of the Parade Ground, Barracks Row made up the south side. This adobe barracks was one of two complet…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMOLK_barracks-row_Fort-Apache-AZ.html
Throughout the military history of Fort Apache, enlisted men were housed with their units to the south of Officers' Row. The first company quarters, completed in February 1871, were 18 by 20 foot log squad huts built in rows running north and sout…
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