The Union Saloon Prescott, AZ. c.1890 On May 30, 1864, under the guidance of Robert W. Groom, the community was carefully surveyed


The Union Saloon Prescott, AZ. c.1890
On May 30, 1864, under the guidance of Robert W. Groom, the community was carefully surveyed, setting the stage for its growth and development. The town was named for and paid homage to the esteemed historian William H. Prescott by naming their new settlement after him. 

On June 4, 1864, 73 lots changed hands, beginning a thriving community. The enthusiasm of buyers persisted, and by July 4, 1864, 232 lots had been snatched up within the town. Prescott was officially incorporated in 1881. 

The region possessed a wealth of gold and silver. The allure of fortune captivated the hearts and dreams of countless fortune seekers. However, a dark cloud loomed over the land amidst the glistening prosperity. The influx of so many whites ignited an already volatile tinderbox of conflict known as the American Indian Wars. A vicious cycle of escalating violence escalated, with each side, white and native, exacting bloodier retribution upon the other. 
The presence of women in the region was a rarity; a census conducted in 1864 unveiled a stark truth: a mere forty women stood as beacons of femininity.  

Yet, amidst this scarcity, a few women of legend emerged from Prescott's storied history—Mary Sawyer, a woman who defied societal expectations with an unyielding spirit, was one of them. Clad in men's attire, Mary, with unwavering determination, toiled on a mining claim, her hands unafraid to delve into the gritty labor of the earth. Unbound by conventions, she reveled in her independence, her spirit matching the wildness of the frontier itself. But such audacious defiance came at a price. In a cruel twist of fate, Mary found herself incarcerated in the confines of an asylum in 1877 and labeled as "mad," where she languished within those suffocating walls until she died in 1902.

Many men of legend also called Prescott home at times. Virgil Earp (Wyatt Earp's brother) and Doc Holliday lived in Prescott before their now infamous gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
Find out more about Prescott, AZ, here: https://amzn.to/3BYIFjD

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