Verde River Valley serves up two great cultural sites, Mark Twain, and some great huevos rancheros.
Montezuma's Castle
In the center
of Arizona lies the fertile Verde River valley, one of the longest free flowing
rivers left in the state. The Verde
River Valley has long supported human habitation and the remnants of these
ancient cultures are protected and preserved at Tuzigoot and Montezuma’s Castle national
monuments. I was recently there to learn
about these early residents and score a couple more stamps in my NPS
Passport.
The
original inhabitants were hunters and gatherers who thrived in the rich
environment supported by the year-around river.
The first permanent structures in the valley appeared between 700 and
900 CE (Common Era). The Southern
Sinagua people started building the region’s large pueblos in about 1000 CE and
it is the remnants of one of those hilltop pueblos that drew us to Cottonwood, Arizona just three
short miles away from Tuzigoot. Tuzigoot
is the largest and best preserved of these Sinagua Pueblo structures in the
whole of the Verde Valley.
Verde River Valley from Tuzigoot
I was
traveling with my sister Sandy and my girlfriend Craig and after a good night’s
rest at the Cottonwood Hotel in Cottonwood’s historic district, we found
ourselves birding in the Verde
River Greenway State Natural Area, a 6 mile stretch of especially rich
riparian habitat set aside between the towns of Clarkdale and Cottonwood by
Arizona State Parks and easily accessed on the short drive to Tuzigoot. It is easy to imagine the entirety of the
river supporting this rich habitat and this habitat, along with the agriculture
made possible by the river, supporting a large indigenous population.
Interestingly
enough, it was not the river’s agricultural potential that drew large numbers
of non-native peoples to the region. It
was copper. The population in the valley
took a big jump in the early 1900s with the growth of copper mining and smelting. Cottonwood grew from the copper boom, but it
was not a company town, unlike neighboring Clarkdale and Jerome, and that
independent vibe still exists today.
When the
first round of mine closures hit in the 1930s, it was University of Arizona
archaeologists’ desire to protect and preserve Tuzigoot that provided
employment for out-of-work miners and other area residents. The Civil Works Administration and later the
Works Project Administration, working closely with the University Of Arizona,
excavated the site using this local labor.
The site was originally owned by Phelps Dodge Corporation, but they sold
it to Yavapai County for $1 so the excavation work could be done under federal
work project programs. President
Franklin Roosevelt designated Tuzigoot as a National Monument in 1939.
View of visitor center from top of Tuzigoot
The
workers in the 1930’s developed what is now a well-worn path from the
charmingly rustic visitor center through the pueblo ruins to the top of the
hill 120 feet above the floodplain where you have a wonderful 360 degree view
of the Verde River Valley. The ruins are
mainly waist-high walls of rock showing you the 100 or so rooms that have been
reclaimed and the trail is well interpreted, giving visitors an idea of what
the rooms were used for. The visitor
center not only has some huge water pots recovered during the archeological
excavations, but it tells the story of the archeological work done in the 1930s
under the WPA. Most of the pots are
reconstructed from hundreds of pot shards painstakingly fit together like a jig
saw puzzle by WPA workers 80 years ago.
I marveled at the patience it must have taken to sort through piles of
pottery chips to rebuild these pots. Just
north of the visitor center a trail leads you to overlook a wetland that is a
focus of the twice monthly birding walks (second and fourth Saturdays) offered
by park staff during the winter.
It doesn’t
take long to visit Tuzigoot and after a filling
breakfast of huevos rancheros back in Cottonwood at the Red Rooster Café, and a
walk down main street to check out its diversity of shops and wine tasting
rooms we were on our way to Montezuma’s Castle, about a half hour away. Located just off Interstate 17 about 50 miles
south of Flagstaff, Montezuma’s Castle was a bustling site with a full parking
lot of visitors on hand to see the Sinagua Pueblo built into the side of the
limestone cliff. Too bad I hadn’t been
able to visit in the 1960s when you could still climb the ladders into the
pueblo and explore it first-hand. You
are now limited to a view from the trail.
A small scale-model built by the park service gives you an idea of what
it must have been like with people living there. The Castle is about 20 rooms and is estimated
to have housed about 35 people. There is
observable evidence of additional housing built into the cliff, making this one
of about 40 large villages identified throughout the valley. President Teddy Roosevelt created the
monument in 1906 in one of the earliest uses of the Antiquities Act.
But the
really cool site at Montezuma’s Castle is not the Castle, it is Montezuma’s
Well, a short 11 mile drive to the north.
The well is a naturally occurring sinkhole in the earth filled with 15
million gallons of water. Local Native
American people consider this a sacred site and a place of origin. Think of the well as a limestone bowl 130
yards across and filled about halfway.
You stand on the rim of the bowl and look down into the small lake that
is the well. I have seen other limestone
sinkholes, but one filled with so much water is not a sight one expects in the
desert. From the parking lot it is about
1/3 mile up to and around most of the well.
As we
peeked over the rim for the first time, we were greeted not only by this huge
body of water, but also by ducks – buffleheads, northern shovelers and American
widgeons. We wondered what they ate
besides the vegetation that grew along the water’s edge. Are there any fish in the well? Fortunately there was no shortage of
interpretive signs and we quickly learned that with a carbon dioxide level 80
times greater than most lakes there are no fish. But there is a unique ecosystem that includes
small shrimp-like amphipods, a specialized species of snail and thousands of
leeches, all food for birds.
For those
a bit more adventuresome, there is a short trail down to the water’s edge and I
didn’t hesitate to scramble down to check out the lake at water level. There are two springs at the bottom of the
well that provide about 1.6 million gallons of water daily, even in times of
drought. So about 10% of the water turns
over each day. The trail leads to an
outlet that flows 150 feet through the travertine limestone wall and into Wet
Beaver Creek on the outside of the well.
Trail leading to the bottom of Montezuma's Well
There are
cliff dwellings inside the well including several built into caves near the
outlet. Jerry, a very nice park
volunteer, told me about the graffiti in these caves – not ancient paintings,
but more recent scrawlings including an advertisement for George Rothrock
Photography dated 1878. It seems that
for a short time George claimed “ownership” of the well and charged people to
take their photos along the edge of the lake.
Exploration
of these caves is not permitted for obvious reasons. They are small, narrow and could easily be
destroyed by too many well-meaning visitors.
But Jerry told me that locals who had explored the cave before they were
closed off reported that Samuel Clements (Mark Twain) visited the site and wrote
his name inside the cave, alongside notations from other 19th
century visitors. I liked that I was
standing where Mark Twain might have once stood.
Rothrock Photography graffiti
Back up on
the rim, the trail takes you down the outside of the well to where the outlet
hits Wet Beaver Creek. And there we
discovered remnants of a 7 mile canal that linked the well and its perpetual
water supply with the agriculture fields near Montezuma’s Castle. Seems the canal wasn’t needed every year,
only when the rains didn’t come. But in
those times of drought, these Verde River Valley residents had a steady supply
of water to feed their crops of cotton, squash, beans and agave. The Park Service is currently restoring the
canal.
We’d been
told by several people we met in Cottonwood that the Wells were not to be
missed. How right they were. This is a hidden gem in the desert and now
one of our favorite places.
We visited both monuments, including Montezuma's Well, last April ,and they indeed are national gems providing a glimpse into the past and an important part of our history.
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