Cultural life
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In the late 1940s several organizations, including the Phoenix Symphony Orchestra and the Phoenix Art Museum, introduced a notable program of visiting artists and touring exhibits. Today the area is home to several fine art facilities, with the flagship Phoenix Art Museum holding a collection of more than 13,000 pieces, including a major collection of Southwestern art. The Heard Museum houses more than 75,000 Southwestern Native American works of art. The Arizona Science Center, a complex including exhibit halls, a planetarium, and a big-screen cinema, opened in 1997. The Pueblo Grande archaeological museum studies and preserves the ruins of the area’s most prominent settlement of the Hohokam people.
In Papago Park are the Phoenix Desert Botanical Garden, which has a collection of some 20,000 desert plants, and the 125-acre (51-hectare) Phoenix Zoo, which opened in 1962. Founded by appliance magnate Robert E. Maytag, the zoo is the largest privately owned nonprofit zoo in the country, although it receives some funding and support from the city. It participates in scientific research on the ecology of the Sonoran Desert, breeding programs for endangered and threatened species, and other ventures and has a highly regarded program of education and public outreach.
Since the late 1980s, civic leaders have approved several costly improvements to the area’s downtown arts and museum district, which includes the city’s convention centre, one of the largest municipally operated facilities of its kind in the country. Originally constructed in the early 1970s, it has undergone subsequent renovation and adjoins a complex of museums, performing arts venues, and sports facilities, including a baseball stadium and a basketball arena.
Sports have a central role in the cultural life of Phoenix. Baseball is particularly popular. The local professional team is the Arizona Diamondbacks, and many other Major League Baseball teams hold their spring training camps (known as the Cactus League) in areas surrounding the city; several others train in the Tucson area. The area’s other professional sports teams include the Cardinals (football), the Suns (men’s basketball), the Mercury (women’s basketball), and the Coyotes (ice hockey). There are also tracks for automobile, horse, and dog racing. Tennis and golf are widely played, and running, walking, and biking along the banks of the CAP aqueducts are popular recreational activities.
The metropolitan area’s chief daily newspaper is the Arizona Republic. The Phoenix New Times is a weekly covering arts, culture, and politics. The Business Journal Phoenix, a weekly, provides economic and financial news.
Nearby Scottsdale is the site of Taliesin West, the Arizona home and studio of architect Frank Lloyd Wright and the winter campus for the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. Scottsdale is also the site of the Cosanti Foundation, founded by the Italian architect and builder Paolo Soleri. Located in Tempe is Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium, a theatre designed by Wright that has a 2,900-pipe organ. Tonto National Monument is about 60 miles (95 km) east and Casa Grande National Monument some 50 miles (80 km) south of Phoenix.
History
The early period
Archaeological excavations in the mid-20th century by Emil W. Haury at Ventana Cave, southwest of Phoenix, uncovered human and animal remains and stone tools dating to about 10,000 years ago. Possibly as early as 300 bc, the Hohokam people arrived in the area and remained until about ad 1400. A farming people, the Hohokam developed an elaborate system of irrigation canals extending far from the banks of the Salt River. Hohokam culture collapsed in the 15th century for reasons that are not entirely known. The Akimel O’odham (Pima) were the successors to the Hohokam in the Phoenix area.
European arrivals
Spanish explorers arrived in what is now Arizona in the 16th century. A chain of missions and small forts extending northward from Mexico along the Santa Cruz River valley was established by 1700. In that period the Spanish made contact with the Akimel O’odham and Maricopa Indians, whose settlements along the Salt and Gila rivers were in close proximity to the northernmost mission.
In 1846, following the outbreak of the Mexican-American War, a detachment of Mormon volunteers entered the region and made its way to the villages of the Akimel O’odham. There they traded goods for fresh produce and grains. After the war, some of the Mormons returned to the area, established small farms along the Gila and Salt rivers, and founded the towns of Mesa, Florence, and Safford.
The Mormons gave the name Pumpkinville to what is now Phoenix. In 1867 Jack Swilling, a Confederate veteran of the American Civil War, began a grain-milling business near the site of the present Sky Harbor International Airport to provision the federal garrison at Camp McDowell. Two years before Swilling’s arrival, a local farmer named John Y.T. Smith, the first person of European descent to settle in the Salt River valley, had planted grain in the area. The renaming of the town was left to an Englishman and early town civic leader, Darrell Duppa. He chose the name Phoenix, giving the explanation, “A new city will spring phoenix-like upon the ruins of a former civilization.”
From a town to a city
Pioneers came to the valley in increasing numbers throughout the late 1860s, and on October 20, 1870, Phoenix was officially established as a town. A county building and the area’s first schoolhouse were completed in September 1872. A telegraph line, operated by the pioneer prospector and merchant Morris Goldwater, was established in 1874, and a national bank opened in 1878.
After Phoenix became a city in 1881, civic leaders began to lobby for the construction of a railroad. In July 1887 a secondary line of the Southern Pacific Railroad (now Union Pacific Railroad) connected Phoenix to the main line leading east to El Paso and west to Los Angeles, providing a large and accessible market for the valley. With increased prosperity, the city began to modernize. Having already opened one of the first electric-power generating plants in the West in 1886, the city installed a streetcar system that soon traversed much of the valley. Within a few years Phoenix also had a hospital, a public library, and other municipal facilities.
Those leaders also worked to bring the Arizona territorial capital to Phoenix. Since the establishment of the territory in 1864, the legislature had relocated from Prescott to Tucson, then back to Prescott again. After extensive lobbying on the part of the city’s emerging business elite, the legislature moved to Phoenix in 1889. A local farmer donated a 10-acre (4-hectare) site for the territorial capitol, and the new building was dedicated on February 25, 1901. When Arizona attained statehood on February 14, 1912, the building became the state capitol.