Pipe Spring National Monument

Pipe Spring National Monument

Infobox_protected_area | name = Pipe Spring National Monument
iucn_category = V
nrhp_type = hd |



caption =
locator_x = 53
locator_y = 95
location = Mohave County, Arizona, USA
nearest_city = Fredonia, AZ
lat_degrees = 36
lat_minutes = 51
lat_seconds = 45
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 112
long_minutes = 43
long_seconds = 46
long_direction = W
area = 40 (0.16 km²)
established = May 31, 1923
visitation_num = 57,173
visitation_year = 2004
governing_body = National Park Service

Pipe Spring National Monument is located in the U.S. state of Arizona, and is rich with American Indian, early explorer and Mormon pioneer history. The National Monument was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966.

The water of Pipe Spring has made it possible for plants, animals, and people to live in this dry, desert region. Ancestral Puebloans and Kaibab Paiute Indians gathered grass seeds, hunted animals, and raised crops near the springs for at least 1,000 years.

Pipe Springs was discovered and named by the 1858 Latter-day Saint missionary expedition to the Hopi mesas led by Jacob Hamblin. In the 1860s Mormon pioneers from St. George, Utah, led by James M. Whitmore brought cattle to the area and a large cattle ranching operation was established. In 1866, conflict with the native peoples of the area, Navajo and Paiute, flashied into violence, and by 1872 a protective fort was built over the main spring. The following year the fort and ranch was purchased by Brigham Young for the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The LDS Bishop of near-by Grafton, Utah, Anson Perry Winsor, was hired to operate the ranch and maintain the fort, soon called "Winsor Castle". This isolated outpost served as a way station for people traveling across the Arizona Strip, that part of Arizona separated from the rest of the state by the Grand Canyon. It also served as a refuge for polygamist wives during the 1880s and 1890s. The LDS church lost ownership of the property through penalties involved in the federal Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1887.

Although their way of life was greatly impacted by Mormon settlement, the Paiute Indians continued to live in the area and by 1907 the Kaibab Paiute Indian Reservation was established, surrounding the privately owned Pipe Spring ranch.

In 1923 the Pipe Spring ranch was purchased and set aside as a national monument, a "memorial of western pioneer life.". Today the Pipe Spring National Monument - Kaibab Band of Paiute Indians Visitor Center and Museum explains the human history of the area over time. Daily tours of Winsor Castle, summer "living history" demonstrations, an orchard and garden, and a half-mile trail offer a glimpse of American Indian and pioneer life in the Old West. The Paiute tribe runs a small adjoining campground.

ee also

*Eliza Stewart Udall

External links

* [http://www.nps.gov/pisp/ Pipe Spring National Monument] Official NPS website


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