Thursday, March 19, 2009

Cowboy Poetry of Badger Clark to be Featured



The fourth week of the Sun Valley Lodge Discover Arizona series will feature the poetry of Badger Clark. The event will be held on Thursday, March 26th in the Lodge’s Wriston Lounge and will be presented by Greg Scott of Nogales.

Badger Clark was probably the first poet to make his living writing and reciting cowboy verse. It was in the Arizona Territory in 1906 that Clark discovered his muse. The young TB patient found cowboy work in Cochise County, and thrilled with his new lifestyle, companions, and environment, Clark turned to verse to express his delight and renewed health. His poems, published in western literary magazines, quickly brought him national acclaim.

This presentation examines several of Badger’s best-known poems and songs, and explores his life in Arizona and as South Dakota’s "poet lariat." Additionally, some of his unpublished and out-of-print verse is used, including Badger’s humorous take on Arizona’s attempts to gain statehood.

Greg Scott is an educator, historian, and musician. His lifelong interest in Arizona cowboy folk music has taken him throughout the state and the West, researching the songs and the people who sang them. Scott has been a Traditional Music Roster Artist for the Arizona Commission on the Arts and regularly performs at schools, libraries, museums, and festivals.

The Discover Arizona series consists of six programs that each feature a different aspect of Arizona history and are presented by an accomplished speaker. The series opened on March 5th and is sponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

No Better Than Murderers: The Story of the Canyon Diablo Train Robbery of 1889


The Sun Valley Lodge/Arizona Humanities Council Discover Arizona series will continue on Thursday, March 19th at 2:00 PM with a presentation by historian Paul Hietter entitled “No Better Than Murderers: The Story of the Canyon Diablo Train Robbery of 1889.”

Dr. Hietter will discuss the 1889 train robbery and subsequent manhunt that brought Yavapai County Sheriff Bucky O’Neill national fame and served as a test case for Arizona law. Dr. Hietter has taught U.S. and Arizona history at a variety of colleges since 1991, and is currently a residential faculty member in history at Mesa Community College. He has published a number of articles on his area of specialization: crime and criminal justice in territorial Arizona.

The Discover Arizona series consists of six programs that each feature a different aspect of Arizona history and are presented by an accomplished speaker. The series opened on March 5th and is sponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council.

All of the programs are free and open to the public. Sun Valley Lodge is located at 12415 N. 103rd Avenue in Sun City. For more details please call 623-933-0137

Monday, March 9, 2009

General Crook and the Sierra Madre Adventure of 1883


The second installment of the Sun Valley Lodge Discover Arizona series will be held on Thursday, March 12th at 2:00 PM with a presentation entitled “General Crook and the Sierra Madre Adventure of 1883.” The program will be presented by Dale Curtis Miles.

The Crook expedition was the first to convince the Chiricahua Apaches under Geronimo that surrender was necessary, since their mountain sanctuary was no longer safe from U.S. troops. In this presentation, Miles draws on interviews with elders to explain the use of Apache scouts and mule trains, which helped make this campaign a success.

Mr. Miles was born on the San Carlos Apache tribal area and was their first tribal historian. Mr. Miles has devoted his life to learning the history and culture of the Apache peoples while studying at ASU and NAU. He has worked with the Arizona Historical Society, the Smithsonian Institute of the American Indian, and tribal elders as well to gain a traditional view of tribal life-ways and stories. In addition, he has written articles for Native People and True West magazines. He is currently working on a book on the image of the Apache people in film and media.

The Discover Arizona series consists of six programs that each feature a different aspect of Arizona history and are presented by an accomplished speaker. The series opened on March 5th with a discussion of the Gunfight at OK Corral and is sponsored by the Arizona Humanities Council. All of the programs are free and open to the public. For more details please call 623-933-0137.