Arizona Historical Review, Volume 1 (1928-1929)
ABOUT THE COLLECTION
The Arizona Historical Review was published from 1928-1936, first by the Arizona State Historian, and then by The University of Arizona with the cooperation of Arizona Pioneers Historical Society.
The volumes in this collection were digitized as part of efforts to represent Arizona history, under the "Preserving the History of Agriculture & Rural Life: State and Local Literature, Arizona, 1820-1845" grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. The grant, administered by Cornell University, provided funding for land grant universities in the United States to digitize rare and fragile items from this time period. Scholars and librarians at the University of Arizona identified the materials to be included in the collection, and coordinated with libraries and other institutions to obtain materials for digitization.
QUESTIONS? Contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu with your questions about items in this collection.
Recent Submissions
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The California ColumnArizona State Historian (Phoenix, AZ), 1928-04
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Thirteenth Territorial LegislatureIn the year 1910, M. M. Rice, better known as " Mike " Rice, to his numerous Arizona friends, wrote the following account of the Session of the Thirteenth Legislature and incidents connected therewith. Rice was a brilliant newspaper man, and during the session was a reporter for the Prescott Courier. The results attained by what was afterwards designated as the "Bloody Thirteenth" and the "Thieving Thirteenth," brought rebuke from many in Arizona, because of its extravagance, but it must be said that this session did much which has since proved as greatly beneficial to Arizona. The Thirteenth Legislature passed the bill appropriating the first money for the Arizona University, at Tucson, and for the Arizona Insane Asylum.