Tombstone Courthouse State Historic Park Reports and Documentation
Part of: Arizona State Parks Reports and Documentation
This collection contains reports pertinent to Tombstone Courthouse State Historic Park. Document types may include site stabilization reports, site evaluation or survey reports, expert consultations, ground disturbance monitoring, excavation reports, architectural documentation or survey, heritage management plans and evaluations, historic background research, and inventory and records searches.
Site Type Keywords
Resource Extraction / Production / Transportation Structure or Features •
Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex •
Settlements •
Town / City •
Domestic Structures •
House •
Agricultural or Herding •
Agricultural Field or Field Feature •
Commercial or Industrial Structures •
Mine
Other Keywords
Mining •
Ranching •
Glass Bottle •
Bottle •
Tile •
Window Glass •
Corrugated Metal Roofing •
Queen Anne Style •
Tudor Style •
Gothic Revival Style
Culture Keywords
Historic •
Euroamerican •
Spanish •
Apache •
Anglo •
Mexican •
Cochise •
Tohono O'odham •
Sobaipuri •
Chiricahua Apache
Investigation Types
Architectural Survey •
Data Recovery / Excavation •
Records Search / Inventory Checking
Material Types
Building Materials •
Metal •
Glass •
Wood •
Brick •
Adobe •
Concrete •
Stone •
Sheet Metal
Temporal Keywords
19th Century •
Historic
Geographic Keywords
Arizona (State / Territory) •
Cochise County (County) •
United States of America (Country) •
North America (Continent) •
Tombstone, AZ •
San Pedro Valley •
Tombstone Townsite •
Goose Flats •
Tombstone Courthouse State Park
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-2 of 2)
- Documents (2)
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Excavation of Sidewalk at Tombstone Courthouse (1988)
DOCUMENT Full-Text
As part of an ongoing effort to bury the utility lines at Tombstone Courthouse State Park, helping to recreate the 1800's aesthetics, in April of 1988 a trench for a telephone line conduit was dug (east to west) in the northeast yard at the Courthouse. Located four feet N.E. of the corner of the east wing, the trench encountered what appeared to be possible (although rather small) flagstone pavers. The stones were not broken by the construction and were placed in position to await further...
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Historic Resources Inventory and Report of Tombstone, Arizona (1996)
DOCUMENT Full-Text
Four sets of mountains can be seen from Tombstone; the Dragoon Mountains to the northeast, the Mule Mountains to the southeast, the Huachucas to the southwest and Whetstones to the northwest. From these mountains, rivulets form an alluvial plain and feed into the San Pedro River. The San Pedro originates in Sonora, Mexico from a point, Casa de San Pedro, in the Sierra Madre Occidental. The river then flows north to feed the Gila which in tum joins the Colorado at Yuma Crossing; the Colorado then...