Monday, April 5, 2021
Old Jails - 1800s
Friday, April 2, 2021
Arizona Trivia #2
Arizona Gives Day! - Donate to the PCA!
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Joseph Barnum (1832 - 1909) - First Elected Sheriff of Maricopa Co.
Joseph Thomas Barnum was born in 1832 in New York state, the son of Truman Barnum and Harriet Rich. Although he is said to have been a cousin of P.T. Barnum, the famous showman (Phineas was the son of Philo, while Joseph Thomas was the son of Truman), so far no proof has been found that Philo and Truman were brothers. By 1835, the Barnums were in Chicago, where Joseph Thomas's brother William E. was born.
The Barnums came to Arizona in 1864 and settled first in
Prescott, where Joseph Thomas met and married Jeanette Jane “Jenettie” Osborn,
daughter of John P. Osborn and Perlina Swetnam, on May 10, 1865. He was
33, almost 17 years older than his teenage bride.
When Barnum, who usually went by his middle name of Thomas, moved his family to the Salt River Valley in 1868, Barnum was quick to see the Valley's potential and went into partnership with J. W. Swilling in digging irrigation ditches.
Barnum was a personal friend of John T. Alsap; in fact, the two families were sharing a household in 1870. Barnum was one of the signers of the original Salt River Valley Town Association pact on October 20, 1870 and is believed to have helped William Augustus Hancock lay out the original Phoenix town site,
When Maricopa County was created in 1871 from Yavapai County, it became necessary to elect county officials for the first time. After one candidate for sheriff, a man named Chenoweth, shot and killed another candidate, J. Favorite, in a gunfight, Barnum became the front runner for the office. He was elected and served from May until August, 1871.
Besides enforcing the law, Barnum's duties included developing a tax roll and collecting taxes for the new county. He also had to take convicted felons to the state prison in Yuma and transport the insane to the nearest mental hospital which was in California.
For more information on Joseph Barnum, who was a fascinating man, come down to the PMMP. -adapted from a story by Donna Carr
Friday, March 26, 2021
Arizona Trivia #1
This man was a civil engineer in Arizona, but had other aspirations. They did not pan out.
Who is he, and what was unique about him?
Answer: Lewis Wolfley, 8th Governor of the Arizona Territory, and the only bachelor to be governor
Sale, Sale, Sale! - PCA Gift Shop!
Thursday, March 25, 2021
Arizona Trivia Fun - Five Facts
Our members at PCA enjoy random Arizona trivia each time they meet at the cemetery. For the next few days, we will post five trivia questions that sure do boggle the mind. Can you solve them?
Cemetery Open House: March 27th
Monday, March 22, 2021
Noah Broadway (1833 - 1905) - Arizona Lawman
PCA Archives - Noah Broadway
Noah Broadway is believed to have been the son of William M. Broadway and Mary “Polly” Key. On the federal census of 1850, Broadway was living with his brother John in Kemper County, Mississippi, and his age was given as 19, making him born around 1831.
No photo of Broadway has ever been found, nor evidence of him marrying or serving during the Civil War. He seems to have been a somewhat solitary man.
Broadway is known to have been farming in the Salt River Valley by 1868. He and seven other men formed the Prescott Ditch company on 26 Sep 1870, and dug the Prescott (later Broadway) Ditch to irrigate his crops.
The Maricopa Crossing was on Broadway’s ranch. It was a nice crossing with a firm gravel bottom, and the stages usually crossed the Salt River there. The road which ran through Broadway’s ranch is known today as Broadway Road.
Broadway never sought public office but was nominated for sheriff and elected on the 14th ballot in late 1884. Some didn’t support him as he had publicly expressed a desire to ‘string up’ men who were selling whiskey to Indians.
Broadway was the first sheriff to have his office in the new, two-story brick courthouse between First and Second Avenues facing Washington. the previous office was an adobe structure, and had several escapes.
As sheriff, Broadway regularly conveyed prisoners to Yuma. Another of Broadway’s duties was conveying insane people to the hospital in Stockton, California. On 9 March 1885, the county approved the issuance of bonds to build an insane asylum in Phoenix.
Broadway’s term as sheriff was plagued by a rash of armed robberies, and host of other issues. For more fascinating information on this man, come to the PMMP! - adapted story from Donna Carr
Friday, March 19, 2021
Lawman of Territorial Phoenix
Next week, we will be honoring our past Phoenix lawmen that are buried at the PMMP. The old west during this time period was a rough place, and lawmen were often searching for outlaws and trying to maintain order. In some cases, they wore many hats, such as tax collectors, and executioner. Follow us as we honor the Phoenix lawmen buried at the Pioneer Military and Memorial Park in Phoenix.