Cottonwood Lane - Fort Lowell - Tucson, AZ
N 32° 15.594 W 110° 52.409
12S E 511916 N 3569251
Fort Lowell Park is full of historical markers and monuments including this marker which resides next to an official Arizona State Historical Marker.
Waymark Code: WMPH02
Location: Arizona, United States
Date Posted: 08/30/2015
Views: 5
Located at the east entrance to the historic Cottonwood Lane (now part of Lowell Park) are two historical markers highlighting historic Fort Lowell. This marker is monumented on top of a rock base and reads:
COTTONWOOD LANE
PLANTED SHORTLY AFTER FORT LOWELL WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1878. THE TREES WERE IRRIGATED BY ACEQUIAS OR OPEN DITHCES WITH WATER DIVERTED FROM PANTANO WASH. THE BEAUTIFUL SHADE TREES MADE FORT LOWELL AN OASIS IN AN OTHERWISE BARREN AREA. AFTER THE FORT WAS ABANDONED IN 1891 THE TREES DIED AND WERE CUT UP FOR FIREWOOD. NOW THEY HAVE BEEN REPLANTED AS THEY ORIGINALLY WERE IN THE HEYDAY OF FORT LOWELL. PRESENTED BY THE CONSERVATION DEPT. OF TUCSON WOMAN'S CLUB MRS. H. M. MERRITT, PRESIDENT 1964-65 |
There is another nearby historical interpretive display that contains a historic photo of Cottonwood Lane from the mid-1880s. I've attached that picture.
Marker Name: Cottonwood Lane
Type of history commemorated: Place
County: Pima
Name of any agency/ agencies setting marker: Conservation Dept. of Tucson Woman's Club
Year placed: 1965
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Visit Instructions:
To claim a log for this waymark, some proof of visit is required. This proof can be a simple gps photo, a photo with your mascot (a signature item that you use for photographs, similar to using a gps) or a answer to any question that the person who posted the waymark has asked. A gps photo will always be accepted as proof of visit regardless of any specific question a waymark may ask.