Results for National Historic Landmark
National Historic Landmark - Old Oraibi
Located on the westernmost of the Hopi mesas, this is prob...
National Historic Landmark - Navajo Nation Council Chamber
The Navajo Nation Council Chamber, Window Rock, Arizona st...
National Historic Landmark-Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guevavi
The site of Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guavavi, which p...
National Historic Landmark - Merriam C. Hart, Base Camp Site
Operating from this camp in the San Francisco Mountains, D...
National Historic Landmark - Lowell Observatory
Founded in 1894 by Percival Lowell, this relatively small ...
National Historic Landmark - Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site
Located on the Lehner Ranch and excavated in 1955-56 by th...
National Historic Landmark - Kinishba Ruins
Kinishba is the ruins of a pueblo capable of housing up to...
National Historic Landmark - Jerome Historic District
Jerome was one of the richest copper-producing areas in th...
National Historic Landmark - Hubbell Trading Post
Still active trading post representing the varied interact...
National Historic Landmark - Grand Canyon Village
The town plan for Grand Canyon divided the village into di...
Results for National Historic Landmark
National Historic Landmark - Old Oraibi
Located on the westernmost of the Hopi mesas, this is probably the oldest continuously inhabited pueblo in the Southwest. Old Oraibi documents Hopi culture and history from before European contact to the present day. The village is on the present ...
National Historic Landmark - Navajo Nation Council Chamber
The Navajo Nation Council Chamber, Window Rock, Arizona stands today as a symbol of the New Deal revolution in federal Indian policy during the 1930s, advocating reconstitution of tribal organizations, restoration of tribal land base and promotion of traditional Indian ...
National Historic Landmark-Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guevavi
The site of Mission Los Santos Angeles de Guavavi, which presently consists of the ruins of an adobe church and "convento", is associated with the 17th and 18th century Society of Jesus (Jesuit) missionary efforts to Christianize and acculturate the ...
National Historic Landmark - Merriam C. Hart, Base Camp Site
Operating from this camp in the San Francisco Mountains, Dr. C. Hart Merriam, America's first bio-ecologist, conducted the investigations that led to his formulation of the Life Zone concept (1889). His work was seminal in the development of the modern ...
National Historic Landmark - Lowell Observatory
Founded in 1894 by Percival Lowell, this relatively small observatory was at the time the one significant center of pure scientific research in the Southwest. Here, Lowell studied Mars (and theorized that it was inhabited by intelligent beings) and performed ...
National Historic Landmark - Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site
Located on the Lehner Ranch and excavated in 1955-56 by the Arizona State Museum, the site showed that about 11,000 years ago hunters, probably over a period of several months, killed and butchered nine immature mammoths which were watering at ...
National Historic Landmark - Kinishba Ruins
Kinishba is the ruins of a pueblo capable of housing up to 1000 people, abandoned about 1400 AD. The culture of the inhabitants represented a blend of Mogollon and Anasazi ancestry.
Information provided by the National Registry of Historic Places, a ...
National Historic Landmark - Jerome Historic District
Jerome was one of the richest copper-producing areas in the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The town and surrounding mining area illustrate the historic activities associated with copper production.
Information provided by the National Registry of ...
National Historic Landmark - Hubbell Trading Post
Still active trading post representing the varied interactions of Navajos and the white traders who ran trading posts on the Navajo reservation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Information provided by the National Registry of Historic Places, a program ...
National Historic Landmark - Grand Canyon Village
The town plan for Grand Canyon divided the village into discrete residential, commercial, and civic areas. It also included a consistent architectural idiom, a hierachy of street sections, and a central plaza with the village's major public buildings sited around ...