I'm a little behind on posting! We've been riding our bikes around the resort. There are lots of other people people out riding too. Al has been doing some maintenance and updates to Mona. We got a keyless entry door lock that you can use a code or a fob to unlock. We also got a thermostat that I can operate wirelessly on our phones. That will be nice for the days we need to leave Marley back and we can monitor the temperature inside Mona.
We went to the Superstition Mountain Museum and then the Goldfield Goldmine.
The museum
includes 15 acres of both indoor and outdoor displays. I'm glad I wore walking shoes!
A headframe,
originally from a small mine in the Wickenburg AZ area, is typical of the
structures that were used for access to hard rock mines in the late 1800s at
the hundreds of small mines throughout the Superstition mountain region.
As winter
brought snow to their traditional villages in the high pine-forested mountains,
the Apache migrated to the low deserts and built temporary winter villages.
"The Apache people call this mountain “Tseh’-Hos-keet” (Rocky Outcropping). It is one of our sacred mountains where our guardians, the 4 Mountain Spirits, dwell. The Indeh’ (The People)–what Apaches call themselves–have long protected this holy mountain. It is to be respected and left undisturbed."
"The brush
structures, that some call Wickiups, our people call “Gowah” (our home), and
are made from two types of willow; Red Willow for the frame and Goodden’s
Willow for the thatching. Yucca rope is used to tie the home together."
Elk hide traditionally covered the top of the homes but here, tarp is utilized because this display is a permanent structure. The actual village would have been used only in the winter months.
"All Apache dwellings located their doorway to the east to welcome every sunrise. The entrances were made just low enough to have all who enter bow before entrance. Then as they left, they had to bow to nature and give respect to the Creator’s work. Between the two Gowahs is a shade/ramada where crafts such as woven baskets, cradles, bows & arrows, and moccasins were made. It was also a place where family members shared meals or simply rested. The ramada support posts are made from Cottonwood trees, the thatching above is made from willow branches. With the arrival of spring, the Apache family would break their winter camp and move back up to their high country pine forest mountain homes for the other seasons."
This is the 1914 Cossak
20-stamp ore mill, a critical piece of mining equipment that was
state-of-the-art from the mid 1800s to the early 1900s.
A stamp mill is a large mechanical device, essentially a monster mortar and pestle. It uses lift-and-fall motion of heavy steel stamps to reduce the size of the ore (rock containing valuable metals) it is fed, to a fine sand which is transported out of the mortar box as a slurry through screens. The milling exposes the valuable metal (usually gold or silver) allowing its recovery by amalgamation with mercury or dissolution with cyanide as was done at the Cossak mill.
You’re a
prospector and you’ve found a source of material that you think may contain
gold. Or you have a mine, and you only want to dig the best ore. How do you
find out if you’re right or where the best ore is? That’s the assayers’ job.
Assay is the procedure used to measure the amount of valuable metal contained in ore. The assay office, located down the street from the Cossak mill, is a replica of a typical assay office that would have been associated with the Cossak mill. It houses all the period tools that would have been used and signage that takes the visitor through the process from receipt of samples to the final calculation of gold and silver content.
This 2,300
square-foot railroad layout contains more than 1500 feet of track. It includes passenger and freight trains pulled by steam engines and a trolley. Trains run though St. Amaro, an Arizona
Territory in the late 1800s, to Dutchman’s Gulch, a frontier town typical of
the 1920s–1930s, past the Roosevelt Dam, gold, silver and copper mines, rodeo
grounds and ranches depicting what Arizona looked like in the early days.
In addition to depicting the five C’s of Arizona’s economy, Copper, Citrus, Cotton and Cattle, and Climate, the layout also includes a lumber camp and sawmill, and other track side industries. Frontier life from wagon and stage coach travel to everyday activities in a 1930s town are also featured.
Apacheland
Barn
The Barn is
a major building that was spared in both fires at the Apacheland Movie Ranch.
The barn figured prominently in dozens of western films and TV western episodes
shot at this location. It too, was donated to the Superstition Mountain
Historical Society by the owners of Apacheland.
It was moved
in literally hundreds of pieces to the museum’s grounds and is now has been
reconstructed almost entirely of its original materials. The sheathing of the
roof has been replaced and some of the shingles. It’s loft serves as a storage
area while the ground level has displays of a number of vehicles representing
the old west: wagons, buggies, stage coaches, etc.
The Elvis
Memorial Chapel is a movie prop that was used in the 1969 Elvis Presley western
“Charro!” — the only movie Elvis made in which he did not sing, but played a
strictly dramatic role. During the movie shoot, a specially-made steeple was
constructed and put on the chapel so that it could be blown off during an
explosion central to the movie’s plot.
The Chapel is a survivor of two fires: one in 1969 and one in 2004, that destroyed Apacheland Movie Ranch. The Elvis Memorial Chapel was donated to the Superstition Mountain Museum by the owners of Apacheland, Sue and Ed Birmingham.
3 comments:
Looks like you two are super busy exploring! Enjoy!
Do you have special plans for Christmas?
Today it was over 55 degrees so not feeling very wintery right now!
Looks like you two are super busy exploring! Enjoy!
Do you have special plans for Christmas?
Today it was over 55 degrees so not feeling very wintery right now!
Thanks for sharing 😊 keep having FUN 💜
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