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The survivors were taken to Camp Grant as prisoners. The Yavapai were so demoralized by this and other actions by Crook that they surrendered at Camp Verde (renamed Fort McDowell), on April 6, 1873. [13] This was the start of the Tonto Basin Campaign.
Captain Charles King At Sunset Pass. by. Paul L. Hedren. The pectedly pectedly shrill over over Camp notes Verde, Camp Arizona of "Boots Territory, Verde, one and eve- Arizona Saddles" Territory, resounded one unex- eve- ning in October, 1874. News had arrived that Tonto Apaches.
Classified ad listings for Cottonwood and Prescott, Arizona and all of Yavapai County.
Battle. In October 1874 a Tonto band stole some livestock from a settler in the Tonto Basin so on the morning of November 1, 1874 about forty men of the 5th Cavalry, including some Apache scouts, left Camp Verde to pursue the hostiles.
story of Camp Verde. The earliest evidences of man in the Verde Valley are found in the northern end, just below the red rock country of Scdona and Oak Creek Canyon. Here rest the material remains of a people who probably inhabited the area some 2,000 to 4,000 years ago. The projectile points and small manos found
The Ad-King is the trusted classified advertising publication in Yavapai County since 1978. The Ad-King covers the areas of Prescott Quad-City, Cottonwood, Camp Verde and the Verde Valley, Arizona.
The Ad-King is the trusted classified advertising publication in Yavapai County since 1978. The Ad-King covers the areas of Prescott Quad-City, Cottonwood, Camp Verde and the Verde Valley,...