Monday, January 27, 2020

Central & Roanoke Airport - Phoenix 1927

Palm-lined Central Avenue in 1926.
The Closing of the Central and Roanoke Airport
From Pages 66-67 "Sky Pioneering" by Ruth Reinhold University of Arizona Press 1982

Phoenix's residential section was spreading north during the mid-1920s, and although Howard Reinhart and Bernard Whelan had enjoyed prosperity during the winter of 1925–26, it would be their last season at Central and Roanoke; however, other aircraft remained at the popular spot.

Central Avenue was then shaded by palms, ash trees, and cottonwoods. It was a favorite route to the desert for an outing, or for a pleasant drive. The autos had not completely replaced horses, and on fine afternoons many rigs trotted up and down the road, and there were numerous riders heading for the bridle paths that began at Camelback Road. Much of this traffic passed the airport at Central and Roanoke.

Also scattered in the vicinity were numerous spinoffs from prohibition, discreetly called “clubs,” and installed in attractive former residences. These were quite respectable, appropriate spots to take one's mother, wife, or girl friend, meet other friends, and have a drink or two. As two of the nicer establishments were handy to the Central and Roanoke field, mutual benefit resulted. A few drinks at a favorite club would remove any inhibitions about riding in one of those dangerous flying machines. Others, returning from the introductory aerial excursion, felt an immediate need for a bit of a bracer.

As the local population increased and some law and order came to the flying business, more complaints were filed against the popular little airport. None are recollected against the “clubs” but, as remembered, the spring of 1927 saw the last of any aviation activity at Central and Roanoke.

During spring vacation my husband and I visited my family who lived at the northwest corner of 3rd Street and McDowell Road. The house was on the east half of the lot, and the west two acres belonged to an aged, half-blind horse named Laddy. East of the house was a large clear lawn and in its center grew a very tall and conspicuous cottonwood tree which fascinated the nearby pilots. They made frequent swoops at its tall top, coming near enough to rustle the leaves and stir up the neighborhood, but never sufficiently low to hit it.

One afternoon mother and some friends were having tea in the yard and a red biplane came screaming over to make the customary salute to the tree. The ladies squealed and scattered as the pilot circled to make another pass. This time his depth perception failed or he misjudged his airplane's capabilities, as when he pulled up the red tail hit the tree's top. A shower of leaves, birds' nests, broken limbs, and dirt made a shambles of the tea table and the yard.

All this racket startled Laddy who commenced running in circles and fell into an irrigation ditch which held some two feet of water. The poor, feeble, disoriented animal was unable to get up, and the Fire Department had to be summoned to rescue him.

Mother was in a fine rage. She began by phoning the governor, worked her way down through the legislature to the police department, voicing complaints to all and finished with a thank you call to the fire department, dispatching two cases of beer to that worthy organization as a more concrete expression of her gratitude.

The following day, when things were almost back to normal, my husband and I visited the airport, planning to take a ride in one of the ships. The place was deserted and all that remained of the busy little operation were a couple of sawhorses and a few empty oil cans neatly stacked under a tree.

The red airplane's spectacular buzz job had been a farewell salute to the Central and Roanoke Airport. It also marked the beginning of the end of the several other sandlot aviation operations in what is now the inner city.

Push pin shows approx. location of airport at Central & Roanoke in modern Phoenix

Sunday, January 26, 2020

The El Tovar - 1910

The El Tovar Project can be read here:
https://issuu.com/arizonahistorystories/docs/the_el_tovar
Here's the story behind the story about The El Tovar in 1910.  As you know, we've been working mostly on the Canyon Diablo Train Robbery and Leo The Flyin' Lion stories.  Well, as we've been slogging our way through those two stories, it became apparent that we'd need a publishing mechanism or venue to package and distribute those two stories.

We immediately thought of the ebook format.  And we kept thinking of the ebook format to the point of not bothering to think of anything else.  We spent ridiculous amounts of time beginning to learn about ebook publishing.  Then it became apparent we needed a "dummy" project to take all the way through the ebook publishing process.

That's how the El Tovar Project came about. George Wharton James was a prolific producer of untold 1000's of words about The Grand Canyon.  He just spewed out words like Niagara Falls spews out water.  All of his works are in public domain.

So, we went to one of his books titled "Grand Canyon, How To See It" and looked around for some suitable text to lift out of the book.  We quickly found it in The El Tovar.  James provided a relatively concise (for James, anyway) description of The El Tovar and its features.  It was just the right length with which to conduct the experiment or "proof of concept," if you will.

Of course, the next challenge lay in how to convert James narratives to editable text.  Luckily, we had already discovered the Google Drive/Docs OCR functionality.  Once we downloaded the free Google ebook on Grand Canyon, we then printed the appropriate pages as an image rather than a PDF.  We uploaded this to Google Drive and then used Google Docs to convert the image of text to real text.

And that when the not-so-fun-stuff began.  We started wrestling with Amazon's Kindle ebook publishing tools.  Gosh, what a frustrating, inscrutable, annoying process.  We've been working with computers since the early 1980's and the Kindle process easily qualifies as one of the most disgusting functionalities we've worked with.  UGH!

Anyway, we finally forced our way through the process of formatting an experimental publication.  Then we began the equally inscrutable process of attempting to actually publish the project. HAHAHA!  That's when Amazon said, "YOU MUST CHARGE $$$!"  Well, we don't want to charge money.  We want all our stuff to be free.  No exceptions.  No matter what we did, we couldn't get around that roadblock.

OH!  How disappointed we were.  But on the other hand, we were grateful that we used a short experimental project to get to the point of realizing there is NO WAY Amazon will allow a free ebook on the Kindle platform.

Meanwhile, Dear Friend Randy Lloyd reminded us of the Old School, tried-and-true PDF process.  Heck, we've been using PDFs since the Pleistocene and creating PDFs is a no brainer as far as we're concerned.  We used Apache Open Office to create an ODT file that we then exported as a PDF.

Then we uploaded the PDF to Google Drive and created a shareable link.  So far, so good but that's still not quite the equivalent of actual publishing.  At least we were able to wave BYE BYE to Amazon ebooks!

This morning (01/26/20) Dear Friend Br'er Lar helped us remember Issuu.  Ironically, we had already used Issuu seven years ago to publish my Dad's book.  (For a recap of that process see: http://www.livesimplecaremuch.com/2013/01/dads-book-is-online.html ).

Anyway, we established a new Issuu account and uploaded the PDF from Google Drive and, POOF, The El Tovar Project was officially published...for FREE..and in a format that works on any device anywhere.

So, in any event, it's been a long, tedious and finally rewarding process.  The El Tovar Project served its purpose well.  And besides serving its purpose, it's a fun read in its own right.  Win-win situation!

Just in case you want to read or download the original PDF, it is here:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Ld5Yv9Lq2IDb0Ugx_FgnCcwu9CzFqfaw/view

Saturday, January 25, 2020

His Story

Greetings and Thank You for visiting AZITWAS, a catchall blog for our various Arizona history-related media resources.  This blog is maintained by John Parsons of The Verde Valley in Arizona.

Contact Parsons via: arizonahistorystories@gmail.com

As of January 2020 our online resources include:

https://azitwas.blogspot.com/

https://www.facebook.com/ArizonaHistoryStories/

https://triviaofhistory.blogspot.com/

http://myarizonatales.blogspot.com/

https://leotheflyinglion.blogspot.com/

https://canyondiablo.blogspot.com/

http://www.us89team.com/


Susun & John love studying history together.
John Parsons was born November 1947 in Tippecanoe County, Indiana.  He grew up with the rich history of French exploration, Indian wars, pioneer settlement, freighting on The Wabash River, a spider web of history railroads and the beloved 19th Century architecture of Lafayette, Indiana.

Parsons graduated from Purdue University in 1970 with a degree in Journalism and History.  He owned and published paid circulation weekly newspapers based in Zionsville, Indiana.  He moved to Tucson, Arizona, in 1979 and then relocated to Flagstaff in 1980. He worked as a Grand Canyon River Guide through most of the 1980's and also served as a paid publications consultant for the former Grand Canyon Natural History Association.  Over the course of 20 years, Parsons worked in the natural resource conservation field.  He is widely known in The Verde Valley as "Mr. Verde River" for his efforts to "save" the iconic stream for which the region is known.

From 2001-2007, Parsons served as a US Forest Service Volunteer in a variety of capacities throughout the West.  From late 2007 to 2010, Parsons was Director of The Eastern Idaho Retired & Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) in Idaho Falls.

Currently, Parsons is devoted to bringing new life to old tales by researching and retelling already legendary Arizona History Stories.