By Associated Press - Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Sunday, Feb. 21

On this date in 1881, the Flagstaff Post Office was established.

On this date in 1908, representatives of the Kickapoo Indian tribe were in Douglas negotiating for the purchase of 200,000 acres (809 square kilometers) of land 50 miles (80 kilometers) southeast of Douglas for a permanent home for the tribe.

On this date in 1930, Arizona hanged a woman for the first time for murder when Eva Dugan died on the scaffold at State Prison for killing A.J. Mathis, Tucson rancher.

On this date in 2008, Evan Mecham, a firebrand conservative who served 15 months as governor of Arizona before an impeachment trial removed him from office in 1988, dies at age 83 in Phoenix.

Monday, Feb. 22

On this date in 1825, John Baptiste Salpointe, the first Roman Catholic Bishop of Arizona, was born.

On this date in 1876, a five-stamp quartz mill was put into operation at Mineral Park by the Mineral Park Mill Co.

On this date in 1890, Walnut Grove Dam on the Hassayampa River broke after heavy rains, causing the loss of 50 lives.

Tuesday, Feb. 23

On this date in 1540, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado set out from Mexico in search of the Seven Cities of Cibola. His expedition was the first to explore what is now Arizona, and his men were the first Europeans to visit the Hopi Villages and to see the Grand Canyon.

On this date in 1931, 15 convicts escaped form the State Prison at Florence.

Wednesday. Feb. 24

On this date in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Territorial Act, creating the Territory of Arizona.

On this date in 1879, Apache County was created from Yavapai County.

On this date in 1897, reports were received from Tucson, Benson, Tombstone and Pantano, describing a brilliant meteor which passed over at a very low altitude.

On this date in 1901, the first Arizona state song, “Hail to Arizona, The Sun Kissed Land,” was sung in public for the first time at the dedication of the new Territorial Capitol.

On this date in 1929, the Pima County Fair was leveled by high winds and closed. Winds of up to 80 mph (129 kph) were recorded.

Thursday, Feb. 25

On this date in 1864, Gov. John Noble Goodwin instructed U.S. Marshal Milton B. Duffield to take the first Arizona Territorial census.

On this date in 1881, the city of Phoenix was incorporated with a population of 1,780.

Friday, Feb. 26

On this date in 1837, Army Chaplin and Maj. Winfield Scott, for whom Scottsdale was named, was born. Scott homesteaded in the Scottsdale area while still serving at Fort Huachuca.

On this date in 1908, 200 prominent citizens of Douglas gathered in the new Gadsden Hotel for a “dollar dinner” to discuss and plan for the future of the young city of Douglas.

Saturday, Feb. 27

On this date in 1862, Confederate Capt. Sherod Hunter entered Tucson with nearly 130 dragoons and was greeted with a celebration.

On this date in 1901, the Tombstone Prospector noted that the third story of the Copper Queen Hotel in Bisbee had been completed and workmen had begun to erect the two large towers.

On this date in 1927, a construction company arrived at the Grand Canyon to begin work on the Grand View Road in Grand Canyon National Park.

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