Arizona

Arizona, formerly part of the Territory of New Mexico, was organized as a separate territory on February 24, 1863. The U.S. acquired the region under the terms of the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the 1853 Gadsden Purchase. Arizona became the forty-eighth state in 1912.

Remains of the Homes of Ancient Cliff Dwellers in Canyon de Chelly…. Carol M. Highsmith, photographer, April 15, 2018. Highsmith (Carol M.) Archive. Prints & Photographs Division

By the 1880s, the Arizona Territory was bustling with fortune seekers hoping to strike it rich. The discovery of gold in 1863 near Prescott, which became the territorial capital in 1864, and the 1877 discoveries of silver at Tombstone, near Tucson, and copper at Bisbee, brought back many of those who had traveled through Arizona in 1848 on their way to the goldfields of California.

Traveler Emma H. Adams, of Cleveland, Ohio, visited Tucson in 1884. She described it as “a queer old town,” but was struck by the cosmopolitan atmosphere of the desert outpost:

Americans, Mexicans, Germans, Russians, Italians, Austrians, Frenchmen, Spaniards, Greeks, the Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, the African, Irishman, and Sandwich Islander are all here, being drawn to the spot by the irresistible mining influence.

To and Fro in Southern California, by Emma H. Adams. New York: Arno Press, 1976[c1887], 55-56. “California as I Saw It:” First-Person Narratives of California’s Early Years, 1849 to 1900. General Collections

Adams spent ten days in Tucson before traveling on, via the Central Pacific Railway, to Los Angeles. She describes her journey from New Mexico through the desert to Tucson, including a visit to the Mission San Xavier del Bac, in chapters eight and nine of her travel journal, which documents rail trips to the west taken from 1883 to 1886.

San Xavier Mission, Tucson, Arizona. West Coast Art Co., c1913. Panoramic Photographs. Prints & Photographs Division

The San Xavier del Bac Mission, completed in 1797, is one of the most famous monuments to the early Spanish presence in Arizona. Jesuit missionary Eusebio Kino laid the foundations for a church on the site around 1700. Spanish missionaries first ventured into Arizona in 1539. With the exception of occasional forays among the Native Americans living in the northern part of the state, the Spanish presence in Arizona was limited to scattered missions, ranches, and forts in the Santa Cruz Valley south of Tucson. By the time the United States acquired Arizona, many remnants of Spanish influence in the state were gone. Most persons of Hispanic descent living in Arizona today immigrated to the state from Mexico after 1900.

Phoenix is the capital of Arizona’s nearly 114,000 square miles. The state has one of the fastest growing economies and is home to a diverse population. Native Americans maintain a strong presence in Arizona with twenty-two distinct tribes including Navajo, Hopi, Maricopah, Apache, and Pima.

Hopi Woman Making Pottery. c1910. Detroit Publishing Company. Prints & Photographs Division

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Winslow Homer

American artist Winslow Homer was born on February 24, 1836, in Boston, Massachusetts. When Homer was 19, he began an apprenticeship with the lithographic firm John Bufford. During the early part of his career, he was a freelance illustrator for periodicals. In October of 1861, Harper’s Weekly sent Homer to the front lines of the Civil War to be a wartime artist-correspondent. In addition to battles, Homer portrayed scenes of military camp life, such as The Coffee Call.

Campaign sketches. The coffee call / H.W. i.e. W.H. Winslow Homer, artist. Boston, Mass.: Lith. & pub. by L. Prang & Co. [1863] Popular Graphic Arts. Prints & Photographs Division

Completed after the Civil War, one of Winslow Homer’s most famous paintings, The Veteran in a New Field, represents hope after the loss of hundreds of thousands of lives: a veteran reaps his wheat harvest (a symbol of renewal), with a scythe (a symbol of death).

The veteran in a new field–from a painting by Homer. Winslow Homer, artist. Illus. in: Frank Leslie’s illustrated newspaper, July 13, 1867, p. 268. Prints & Photographs Division

During the late 1860s and early 1870s, Homer’s oil paintings depicted scenes of hunters, farmers, and children playing outdoors in rural New England and upstate New York. In 1873, Homer used the watercolor medium to portray everyday life in the seaport village of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Homer lived in Cullercoats, England from 1881-1882, where he painted the hardscrabble women and men of the fishing village. Upon his return to America, Homer settled in Prout’s Neck, Maine. Homer was drawn to the ocean, where he frequently explored humanity’s relationship with nature, as exemplified by the painting The Fog Warning.

Winslow Homer died on September 29, 1910, in Prout’s Neck.

The Fog Warning. Winslow Homer, artist. Photograph of painting at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. c[between 1900 and 1912]. Detroit Publishing Company. Prints & Photographs Division

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