Fort Lowell museum Tucson Arizona.
At the Fort Lowell museum
Fort Lowell Day Celebration
Visitors enjoy a walk through 1,000 years of history filled with cavalry, adobe bricks and fort-era artifacts. Produced by Tucson 12.
The Arizona Historical Society Museum, in Tucson Arizona. This place is awesome!!!
Come along with us to the Arizona historical society museum. This place has so much stuff in thier museum, it takes hours to see it all. Lets get going so we can see it all. This will be a two part video.
#arizonahistoricsocietymuseum
#tucsonarizona
#history
#mcdonalds
#travelarizona
#markonthemove
#foodnetwork
#travelchannel
Tucson az ft Lowell and mountain last night
We want to find out what happened
New Cubs Stadium & Arizona History & Pocket Parks
Mesa Mayor Scott Smith will talk about the new Chicago Cubs Spring Training facility. Marshall Trimble will talk about Arizona's rich history in honor of the state's 102nd birthday on February 14. The owners of a Phoenix coffee shop turn to community members to help transform a vacant lot into a pocket park.
Arizona History Museum
Fund Raiser for Arizona History Museum presenting the history of brewing in the 1860’s in Arizona
Downtown Tucson Archaeology Spotlight on Arizona Illustrated
Buy the Book:
SRI employees and others involved with the Tucson/Pima County Joint Courts Project discuss their work on Arizona Illustrated. For more information on the project, go to the Pima County Joint Courts Archaeological Project.
Harkers Old West Museum
Harkers Old West Museum in Tucson
Thanks to Rick Harker, Mike Williams and the boys from Explorer Post #6039
Wagon Wheel and If I Had A Chicken by Kevin MacLeod are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Things to do in Tucson, the Arziona HIstorical Society, including an Exhibit of Geronimo
Learn more about the Apache tribe At we're dedicated to helping you discover the BEST
that beautiful Southern Arizona has to offer. From full color, high definition videos that
show you in full color, what businesses have to offer, to tips & advice on dining &
lodging in Tucson, Bisbee, Tubac, Tombstone & more!In depth reviews of the area, history, dining and lodging. Business owners can take advantage of our low advertising rates. Very high visibility at a very affordable price.
Ancient sacrificial center found in the Arizona desert?
10-1-17 NOTHING, AZ - A pyramid, a human foot, a claw, right angles like a puzzle, and more.
Lost city in the Arizona desert. Megalithic ruins, reptile claws, human hands, right-angle cuts. Who made this? The Truth is Out There ... in the Arizona desert!
Does nature carve out a human hand in the rock? How about right-angle cuts like pieces to a puzzle? I count at least three bird claws. Can you spot them. Just like the Egyptian bird gods?
Since the government is tearing them down, I assume the history is valuable and must be covered up.
The history is of a world-wide connected civilization. We are supposed to believe Columbus discovered America. He thought he rediscovered India, but that's their story and the're sticking to it.
But I'm not....
rockfordfraud.wordpress.com
Presidio San Agustín del Tucsón
A brief tour of the reconstructed Spanish frontier fort in downtown Tucson, Arizona.
Harris4.3gp
Mark Harris, AIA
He apprenticed under Antoine Predock, FAIA, where his early theoretical and practical frameworks of cultural excavations and environmental stewardship were formulated and expanded. His current emerging work, which centers on latent social and environmental narratives within architecture, has recently received numerous national and international awards. Mr. Harris' work has been noted as 'visionary, bold, and evocative, creating a cohesive and probing architecture that is both powerful and highly symbolic. His early formulations of Hybrid Architectures, manifested in his recent Billboard House project and his Remote UN Security Council Chambers project, garnered him the prestigious 2003 American Architecture Award.
Considered an emerging voice in architecture, he has been a visiting lecturer, conference speaker, and studio critic at major national and international universities , and donates his time and talents to several overseas children's charities in Russia and Romania.
Education:
Master of Architecture and Environmental Design -- Arizona State University
Bachelors of Architecture and Environmental Design -- University of Texas at Arlington
Professional Registrations:
Licensed Colorado Architect - #B3166
Licensed General Contractor - #14871
Professional Affiliations:
American Institute of Architects (AIA)
American Preservation Society
Council for Educational Facility Planners (CEFPI)
Civic Affiliations:
Colorado Springs 40 Influential People Under 40
Colorado Springs Downtown Partnership Development Committee
National Design Awards:
2003 American Architecture Award -- Billboard House, New York City, NY
1997 National Historical Preservation Award -- Historic Briarhurst Manor Inn
AIA Design Awards:
2006 AIA Western Region -- UN Security Council, Tucson, AZ
2005 AIA CO South Citation Award -- Irving Elementary School, Pueblo, CO
2003 AIA CO Honor Award - UN Security Council, Tucson, AZ
2003 AIA CO Honor Award -- Netcher Barn, Palmer Lake, CO
2003 AIA CO South Honor Award -- UN Security Council, Tucson, AZ
2002 AIA CO Honor Award -- Billboard House, New York City, NY
2001 AIA CO South Honor Award - Billboard House, New York City, NY
2001 AIA CO South Honor Award - Netcher Barn, Palmer Lake, CO
2000 AIA CO South Honor Award -- Hellman Residence, Moscow, Russia
1994 AIA CO Honor Award - Hellman Residence, Moscow, Russia
1991 AIA Design Merit Award- 18 N. Tejon, Colorado Springs, CO
1991 AIA Design Merit Award -- Farmington Armory, Farmington, NM
Fellowships and Scholarships:
1988 Frank Lloyd Wright Architectural Fellowship Grant
1989 AIA Merit Scholarship
1983-1987 PELL Scholastic Scholarship Grant
Teaching/Guest Critic
Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK
University of Tunisia, Tunis, Tunisia
Arizona State University Graduate School of Architecture, Tempe, AZ
University of Colorado Graduate School of Architecture, Boulder, CO
University of Colorado Graduate School of Architecture, Denver, CO
Published Papers:
Flows Conference: Hybrid Architectures in the 21st Century
CSAAR Conference: Memories of the Ruined Landscape -- Hybrid Architectures in the 21st Century
Published Projects:
Progressive Architecture: The Americans Are Coming! - American Architects in Russia, by Michael J. Cosbie.
Sun Coast Architect: Hellman Residence, by Margarie Smithe.
Architectural Digest: Rediscovering Moscow Moderne, by Roland Flamini.
Published Books:
Modern Deco: Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center Publishing
Memories of the Ruined Landscape - Hybrid Architectures -- (pending)
Museum Exhibitions:
Impacts in Architecture -- Center for the Arts, Jackson Hole, WY
Innovative American Architecture -- The Chicago Athenaeum, Chicago, Il
Designs on the Front Range -- UC Boulder, CO
PAM Museum -- Brendle Gallery, Denver, CO
Totems -- Amon Carter Museum, Ft. Worth, TX
Narrative Architecture -- University of Arizona Fine Arts Gallery, Tempe, AZ
The Cavalry at Apacheland
Larry Hedrick tells his adventures at Apacheland and how his Cavalry reenactment unit became based out of Apacheland.
For more information go to:
Exploring the Mysteries and Stories of the Superstition Mountains in Arizona with the help of the Superstition Mountain Museum
Learn more about Apacheland:
The Queen and Her Court A True Story of Apacheland Movie Ranch
Take home or download a Book written by our Host Charlie
LeSueur
Riding the Hollywood Trail: Tales of the Silver Screen Cowboys (Volume 1)
The Western Legends Live On: Tales & Interviews with the Cowboy Stars of the Silver Screen
Riding the Hollywood Trail II: Blazing the Early Television Trail
The Westerns: Creating the Myth for Film and Television: Short Shots # 1 (Volume 1)
Where Have All the Westerns Gone?: Essays on Western Film
The Western Legends Live On: Tales & Interviews with the Cowboy Stars of the Silver Screen
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Exploring the Mysteries and Stories of the Superstition Mountains in Arizona with the help of the Superstition Mountain Museum
Things used to make this video
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Produced Opal Images Inc.
Fort Yuma - John Malcolm Penn
Words and music: John Malcolm Penn - Radio Flyer Music
SHL NO. 806 FORT YUMA - Originally called Camp Calhoun, the site was first used as a U.S. military post in 1849. A fire destroyed the original buildings. By 1855 the barracks had been rebuilt. Called Camp Yuma in 1852, it became Fort Yuma after reconstruction. Transferred to the Department of the Interior and the Quechan Indian Tribe in 1884, it became a boarding school operated by the Catholic Church until 1900.
Location: On bank of Colorado River, 350 Picacho Rd, Winterhaven
Found plaque on 2nd trip. Imperial county has some interesting local landmarks and one should consider the Glamis Cemetery, The Dunes Lookout, The Pre Columbian Indian Trail, and the Obregon Mining District. Suggested tour of Imperial County #2 to include: 193, 985, 194, 350, 806, 845, 944, 939, and 1008.
Places to see in ( Tucson - USA )
Places to see in ( Tucson - USA )
Tucson is the second-largest city in the state of Arizona, in the United States of America. At an elevation of 2,400 feet, it has slightly cooler temperatures than its desert cousin, Phoenix. It is situated in the biologically diverse Sonoran Desert. With a population of 486,699 (2000 Census) in Tucson and 843,746 in the greater metro area, which also includes Marana, Oro Valley, Green Valley, Sahuarita, Drexel Heights, Vail, South Tucson.
Tucson has always been a crossroads. Until recently, water was relatively plentiful in Tucson, in spite of its location in the middle of a desert. This made it an important travel route, an agricultural center, and a communications nexus. Tucson's history is ancient, with evidence of human occupation stretching back 10,000 years. Between A.D. 200 and 1450, the Hohokam culture dominated the area -- the Pima and Tohono O'Odham peoples that still occupy the area are descendants of the Hohokam. In 1699, Father Eusebio Kino, S.J., established the Mission San Xavier del Bac, southwest of present-day Tucson. Over the next 100 years, other missions were established in the area, but European presence was minimal.
It wasn't until 1775 that the Presidio of Tucson was created by Don Hugo O'Connor. At that time, it was the northernmost Spanish outpost in the New World. In 1821, Tucson became part of the new country of Mexico, and in 1853 it became part of the United States as a result of the Gadsden Purchase. In 1863, Arizona became a US territory, and by 1880, its population was around 8,000. In 1912, Arizona became the 48th state to enter the union. Today, Tucson is still a crossroads, with European, Native American, Mexican, and Asian cultures bumping into one another, in sometimes conflicting and sometimes compatible -- but always interesting -- ways.
A college town with a long history, Tucson (too-sawn) is attractive, fun-loving and one of the most culturally invigorating places in the Southwest. Set in a flat valley hemmed in by snaggletoothed mountains and swaths of saguaro, Arizona's second-largest city smoothly blends American Indian, Spanish, Mexican and Anglo traditions. Distinct neighborhoods and 19th-century buildings give a rich sense of community and history not found in the more modern, sprawling Phoenix. The eclectic shops toting vintage garb, scores of funky restaurants and dive bars don't let you forget Tucson is a college town at heart, home turf to the 40,000-strong University of Arizona (UA).
A lot to see in Tucson such as :
Saguaro National Park
Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
Sabino Canyon Recreation Area
Mission San Xavier del Bac
Pima Air & Space Museum
Old Tucson
Seven Falls
Reid Park Zoo
Tohono Chul
Gates Pass
Tucson Botanical Gardens
Sentinel Peak
A Mountain
Agua Caliente Park
The Mini Time Machine Museum of Miniatures
Reid Park
DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun
Children's Museum Tucson
Tucson Museum Of Art
Tumamoc Hill
Funtasticks Family Fun Park
Arizona State Museum
Kitt Peak National Observatory
Brandi Fenton Memorial Park
Pusch Ridge
Center for Creative Photography
Airplane Boneyard
Presidio San Agustín del Tucson Museum
El Presidio
Trail Dust Town
Rillito River Park
Bear Canyon Trail
Mercado San Agustin
Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium
University of Arizona Museum of Art
Tucson Audubon Society
Sweetwater Wetlands Park
International Wildlife Museum
Barrio Viejo
St. Augustine Cathedral Church
Fort Lowell Museum
Himmel Park
West Romero Pools Place
Northwest
Southern Arizona Transportation Museum
Blacketts Ridge Trail
Arthur Pack Regional Park
Crossroads at Silverbell District Park
Morris K Udall Park and Recreation Center
Tucson Rodeo Parade Museum
( Tucson - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Tucson . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Tucson - USA
Join us for more :
Arizona, a documentary
All audio clips listed here were in the use for shorts and indie films, and are for listening purposes only.
Contact us if you look for sound that works for your picture.
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ASCAP Affiliated
hfken@mac.com
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Arizona Historical Society
The museum depicts life at a frontier Arizona army post. Long-term and changing exhibits. Special exhibits, outpost ruins featured. Wed.Sat. 10 a.m.4 p.m.
Ancient treasures on display at the Arizona State Museum
Ancient treasures from thousands of years ago are on display at the Arizona State Museum in Tucson.
Timelapse Timewarp Austin Texas To Tucson AZ via Alpine TX Part 1 4K video
Gopro Timewarp video
Austin texas to Tucson Arizona via Alpine Texas Part 1
This video is shoot by Gopro 7 few parts are in 2.7k and few are in 4k
Few parts are shoot in video mode and few parts are using timewarp mode