Misplaced Pages

Fort Verde State Historic Park

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Fort Verde District) NRHP-designated site in Yavapai County, Arizona

United States historic place
Fort Verde District
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. Historic district
Commanding officer's house and Dennis Lockhart portraying General Crook
Fort Verde State Historic Park is located in ArizonaFort Verde State Historic ParkShow map of ArizonaFort Verde State Historic Park is located in the United StatesFort Verde State Historic ParkShow map of the United States
LocationBounded by Hance, Coppinger, and Woods Streets, Camp Verde, Arizona
Coordinates34°33′55″N 111°51′09″W / 34.56528°N 111.85250°W / 34.56528; -111.85250
Area12 acres (4.9 ha)
Built1872
Visitation10,320 (2022)
NRHP reference No.71000120
Added to NRHPOctober 7, 1971

Fort Verde State Historic Park in the town of Camp Verde, Arizona is a small park that attempts to preserve parts of the Apache Wars-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.

Fort Verde was established at its current location in 1871. It is significant as "the best preserved and least altered of any military post associated with General Crook’s 1872-73 campaign against the northern Apaches."

Settlers in the mid-19th century 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 Native American tribes, the Dilzhe'e Apache and Yavapai. In turn, they raided the farmers' crops for food.

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

  • 1865, a small camp five miles (8 km) south of what is today Camp Verde.
  • 1866–1871, Camp Lincoln, a mile north of today's Fort Verde.
  • 1871–1873, 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 1,500 local natives were placed on a reservation by 1872, the army's role changed from protecting the settlers to ensuring that the Indians stayed on the reservation. The last major military engagement with uprising natives took place in 1882 at the Battle of Big Dry Wash.

The fort was never enclosed by walls or stockades, and it never saw fighting on site. At its height, it consisted of twenty-two 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 m) 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.

Historic structures in Fort Verde State Historic Park

The following structures and markers are pictured:

  • The "0" Mile General Crook Trail Marker which is located in the place where in 1871 General George Crook established a military supply trail which connected Forts Whipple, Verde and Apache. The marker is located close to the Fort Verde Administration Building.
  • The main Administration Building. It contained the main offices from which the decisions as to the operations of the fort were made. It now houses the Visitor Center of the Fort Verde Museum and contains exhibits, period artifacts from military life, and history on the Indian Scouts and Indian Wars era.
  • Inside the Commanding officers office in the Administration Building of Fort Verde.
  • Display of uniforms once used by the men who served in Fort Verde. The display is in the old Administration Building.
  • The Commanding Officer Quarters.
  • The Bachelor Officers’ Quarters.
  • The Doctor's & Surgeons Quarters.
Historic structures in Fort Verde State Historic Park.
  • This "0" Mile General Crook Trail Marker. This "0" Mile General Crook Trail Marker.
  • The main Administration Building. The main Administration Building.
  • Inside the Commanding officers office. Inside the Commanding officers office.
  • Display of uniforms. Display of uniforms.
  • Commanding Officer Quarters. Commanding Officer Quarters.
  • Bachelor Officers’ Quarters. Bachelor Officers’ Quarters.
  • Doctor’s & Surgeons Quarters Doctor’s & Surgeons Quarters

References

  1. "Monthly State Parks Visitation Report" (PDF). Arizona Office of Tourism. December 2022.
  2. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  3. Wallace Vegors (May 20, 1970). National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Fort Verde (1879-1890) District / Camp Verde (1868-1879) / Camp Lincoln (1865-1868). National Archives. Retrieved June 12, 2021. (Downloading may be slow.)

External links

Protected areas of Arizona
Federal
National Parks
National Historical Parks,
Historic Sites and Memorials
National Monuments
National Park Service
Canyon de Chelly
Casa Grande Ruins
Chiricahua
Hohokam Pima
Montezuma Castle
Navajo
Organ Pipe Cactus
Pipe Spring
Sunset Crater
Tonto
Tuzigoot
Walnut Canyon
Wupatki
Bureau of Land Management
Agua Fria
Baaj Nwaavjo I'tah Kukveni – Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon
Grand Canyon–Parashant
Ironwood Forest
Sonoran Desert
Vermilion Cliffs
National Conservation Areas
National Recreation Areas
National Trails
National Forests
National Wildlife Refuges
Wilderness AreasSee List of Arizona Wilderness Areas
Wild and Scenic Rivers
State
State Parks
Wildlife areas
Municipal
Nature parks
Other
National Natural LandmarksSee List of National Natural Landmarks in Arizona
National Historic LandmarksSee List of National Historic Landmarks in Arizona
Historic PlacesSee National Register of Historic Places listings in Arizona
Categories: