Soldier Trail – 2/17/2019

Water at a rocky canyon crossing lower on the Soldier Trail. February 2019.
Water at a rocky canyon crossing lower on the Soldier Trail. February 2019.

A Principled Stand, The Story of Hirabayashi v. United States by Gordon K. Hirabayashi with James A. Hirabayashi and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, page 155:

Periods of meditation are Quaker in style and spirit. Under the open sky and hills, we feel very close to the nature of things. Life becomes meaningful in a vivid way.

More images from 2018/2019’s wet winter – this time from Soldier Trail – the highlight of this hike was seeing the rushing falls in Soldier Canyon and, more of a surprise, seeing the water pouring over the rock structure near the junction of the Soldier and Molino Basin Trails.

Soldier Trail takes its general route from an old powerline and road to the prison camp that provided labor for the construction of the General Hitchcock Highway. Highway construction began in 1933 with the prisoners originally in temporary housing at the base of the mountain – in 1939 the camp moved up to the Vail’s Corral area where the remains of the prison can still be seen.

During WWII the Catalina Federal Honor Camp housed draft resistors and conscientious objectors – including Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mennonites and Hopi – in addition to prisoners convicted of federal crimes such as immigration-law violations, tax evasion and bank robbery. The first version of the General Hitchcock Highway was completed in 1951. Before being torn down in the early 70s the prison site served as a juvenile prison, was turned over to the State of Arizona and housed Forest Service crews.

In 1999 the prison site was renamed the Gordon Hirabayashi Recreation Site. Gordon Hirabayashi was one of the approximately 45 Japanese American draft resisters who were sent to the camp during WWII. Committed to non-violent resistance to the unconstitutional racially motivated curfew on, and removal of, Japanese Americans during WWII he served 90 days at the Catalina Federal Honor Camp after his initial conviction was unanimously upheld by the Supreme court in 1943. It would be over 40 years before a 1987 Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling finally overturned his wrongful conviction.

If you want to read more there are a number of interesting articles online – a few are listed above – but I also highly recommend A Principled Stand, The Story of Hirabayashi v. United States by Gordon K. Hirabayashi with James A. Hirabayashi and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi. Published in 2013 the book is a collection of Gordon Hirabayashi’s writings and letters – published and unpublished – that have been selected and edited by James A. Hirabayashi, Gordon’s bother, and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Gordon’s Nephew.

Of particular interest to readers of this site may be the chapter on the Catalina Federal Honor Camp – a few quotes:

Page 150:

There are approximately two hundred inmates, and most are engaged in constructing a road to the mountain resort at the top of the hill. I joined the road crew that worked crushing and shoveling rocks into a dump truck, which was quite monotonous and a non-incentive activity, I assure you.

Consequently, by November 1943, at my request, I was transferred to the baking department. There I became “adept” at mixing, rolling, and baking bread, learning the techniques for various rolls, pies, cakes, etc. I hope to learn something by the time I leave.

Page 152:

There were a lot of Mexican border jumpers … , quite a few selective service cases, many Jehovah’s Witnesses, several pacifists of the FOR type. The latter group was the most aesthetic in appreciation, and I joined them once in climbing a little hill back of the camp to gaze at the beautiful, indescribable Arizona sunsets. The Native Indians were of two types. One type, which included many traditional Hopis, was objecting to being drafted into a white man’s war.

Page 154:

A group of us retreat to our favorite meditation spot for a refreshing, stimulating period of quiet. My thoughts: There is no excuse for tolerating injustice or violation of the brotherhood of man merely because we are incarcerated.

One part of the Hirabayashi family’s history that has been stuck in my mind is the story of the White River Garden. A Principled Stand, page 16:

In 1919, four families of the Pontiac collective, including two Hirabayashi families—my father’s family and the Toshiharu Hirabayashi family—moved to Thomas, Washington, a rural community twenty miles south of Seattle. These families formed a Christian cooperative, White River Garden, and purchased forty acres of land. Then the difficult development process began: clearing the land of stumps, digging ditches for better drainage, fertilizing the soil, cultivating, and building their homes.

At the time Washington’s Alien Land Law prevented non-citizens from owning land – so the White River Garden purchase was made in the name of the oldest child born in the United States – Aiko Katsuno, 10 years old at the time. Government officials felt this arrangement was an illegal subversion of the law and after a victory in the Washington Supreme Court Washington State took the land back from the White River Garden Corporation. The families were forced to lease the land in order to stay and work the property they had developed.

It wasn’t until the early 1950s that the Supreme Court ruled that forbidding aliens from owning land was a violation of the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause. The White River Valley Museum has several photographs from White River Garden including a photograph of the White River Garden families and friends including a young Gordon Hirabayashi!

Poppy just off Soldier Trail. February 2019.
Poppy just off Soldier Trail. February 2019.
Falls in Soldier Canyon. February 2019.
Falls in Soldier Canyon. February 2019.
Water flowing near the Soldier Trail and Molino Basin Trail junction. February 2019.
Water flowing near the Soldier Trail and Molino Basin Trail junction. February 2019.
Grassy hillsides on Soldier Trail. February 2019.
Grassy hillsides on Soldier Trail. February 2019.

Romo Peak and the Sutherland Wash Rock Art District – 2/23/2019

View from Romo Peak. February 2019.
View from Romo Peak. February 2019.

In 1949 Ray Romo was walking near the top of a hill above the Sutherland Wash Rock Art District when he found a ceramic jar covered by an inverted bowl – the ceramics and contents as described in Archaeology in the Mountain Shadows – Exploring the Romero Ruin – by Deborah L. Swartz and William H. Doelle:

Both vessels were decorated with red-on-brown designs, which dated between A.D. 1100 and 1150. The jar contained around 100,000 stone and shell beads, and about 30 copper bells.

Most of the beads were made from red and black stone, but a small number were made of turquoise or marine shell. A majority of them exhibited signs of wear from having been strung. However, no thread was found to show whether they were strung when placed into the vessel. This find is called the “Romo Cache” after Mr. Romo.

The estimate in Archaeology in the Mountain Shadows is that it would take a single person 2.8 years of constant work to produce the 100,000 beads and if strung together it they would stretch 300 feet – an astonishing quantity, while I have not seen a concrete theory offered for the reason the cache was created it seems hard to believe that it didn’t have quite a bit of meaning to the person/people who left the objects.

Copper bells, made in Mexico, have been found in sites across the Southwest but are not common and finding 30 bells in one locations seems to be very rare. From Archaeology in the Mountain Shadows:

Copper bells were made using a process called the “lost wax” method. A small pebble was embedded into a ball of clay, the clay was dipped into wax to form an even coat, and then the waxed ball was surrounded with more clay. Molten copper was poured into the space held by the wax, which melted out. After the copper cooled, the clay was removed from the exterior and chipped off of the pebble inside the copper bell.

The hike to Romo Peak was steep and rugged, we never found any hint of a trail, and to our eyes the summit was remarkably like many other hilltops in the area. We spent some time at the top, enjoying the quickly melting snow, the great views, and wondering at the human activity in the area nearly 1,000 years ago that resulted in the Sutherland Wash Rock Art District and the Romo Cache.

Water in Sutherland Wash near the Golder Ranch South Parking Area. February 2019.
Water in Sutherland Wash near the Golder Ranch South Parking Area. February 2019.
Rushing water in Sutherland Wash. February 2019.
Rushing water in Sutherland Wash. February 2019.
Sutherland Wash Rock Art District Petroglyph. February 2019.
Sutherland Wash Rock Art District Petroglyph. February 2019.
Corn perhaps? February 2019.
Corn perhaps? February 2019.
Sutherland Wash Rock Art District Petroglyph. February 2019.
Sutherland Wash Rock Art District Petroglyph. February 2019.
A quiet moment at the Golder Ranch South Parking Area. February 2019.
A quiet moment at the Golder Ranch South Parking Area. February 2019.

Setting apart Santa Catalina Forest Reserve, Arizona – 7/2/1902

Statutes At Large Volume 32, 1901 to 1903 - Title Page - this volume, on pages 2012 and 2013, contains the Presidential Proclamation that created the Santa Catalina Forest Reserve. February 2019.
Statutes At Large Volume 32, 1901 to 1903 – Title Page – this volume, on pages 2012 and 2013, contains the Presidential Proclamation that created the Santa Catalina Forest Reserve. February 2019.

The power to establish forest reserves from the public domain was given to the President by the 1891 Forest Reserve Act. Other public lands had been set aside before 1891, but the 1891 provision started an impressive flow of land into Forest Reserves. The first reserve – the Yellowstone Park Timber Land Reserve – was created by President Benjamin Harrison on March 30, 1891, and by the end of his presidency in 1893 he had set aside 13 million acres.

The beginning of the Santa Catalina Mountain’s history as a ‘National Forest’ is recorded in the Statutes at Large of the United States of America from December 1901, to March, 1903, Concurrent Resolutions of the Two Houses of Congress, and Recent Treaties, Conventions, and Executive Proclamations, Volume 32.

On pages 2012 an 2013, located between proclamations about the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition and the suspension of discriminating duties of tonnage and imposts on Cuban Vessels, Proclamation Number 27 establishes the Santa Catalina Forest Reserve. The 1902 proclamation by Theodore Roosevelt created Santa Catalina Forest Reserve nearly 10 years before Arizona became a state.

Theodore Roosevelt's 1902 Proclamation creating the Santa Catalina Forest Reserve. February 2019.
Theodore Roosevelt’s 1902 Proclamation creating the Santa Catalina Forest Reserve. February 2019.

The first time I tried to look up the proclamation – slightly unsure if I was even in the correct volume – I was temporarily stymied by a typo in the table of content – ‘Setting apart Santa Catilina Forest Reserve, Arizona’ – the typo is not present in the proclamation itself.

Table of Contents from Statutes at Large Volume 32 with a small typo, 'Catilina', the misspelling is not present in the Proclamation. February 2019.
Table of Contents from Statutes at Large Volume 32 with a small typo, ‘Catilina’, the misspelling is not present in the Proclamation. February 2019.

The boundaries of the Santa Catalina National Forest were expanded by a 1907 proclamation by Theodore Roosevelt – now called a National Forest rather than Forest Reserve. The forest was expanded north towards Oracle and south across the Rincons. In 1908 the Santa Catalina National Forest (along with Dragoon and Santa Rita) were absorbed into Coronado National Forest – creating, roughly, the naming and boundaries that are still in existence today.

A map showing the 1907 expansion of the Santa Catalina National Forest. February 2019.
A map showing the 1907 expansion of the Santa Catalina National Forest. February 2019.
Theodore Roosevelt's 1907 Proclamation expanding the boundaries of the Santa Catalina Mountains. February 2019.
Theodore Roosevelt’s 1907 Proclamation expanding the boundaries of the Santa Catalina Mountains. February 2019.

Small Pieces, Vista Del Rio Cultural Resource Park – 4/16/2018

A Hohokam pottery sherd in Vista Del Rio Cultural Resource Park. April 2018.
A Hohokam pottery sherd in Vista Del Rio Cultural Resource Park. April 2018.

Below the Santa Catalina Mountains, between Tanque Verde Creek and Pantano Wash, tucked into a neighborhood near the intersection of Sabino Canyon and Tanque Verde Roads a small piece the Tucson Basin’s history is preserved by the Vista Del Rio Cultural Resource Park.

Hohokam lived here between 950 and 1150, perhaps irrigating and farming areas closer to the nearby washes. Pit houses and earthen roasting pits have been excavated here – artifacts including pottery, jewelry, arrow points and metates found.

There are not any excavated structures, elaborate reconstructions or large collections of artifacts on display at VDR – just a few informational signs and a subtle scattering of artifacts under a covering of creosote – an interesting look at what an unexcavated archaeological site often looks like and a wonderful space to walk thru and contemplate the past – just a small piece of the Tucson Basin and its history, but well worth a visit.

April 2018.
April 2018.
April 2018.
April 2018.
Looking towards the southwest corner of the Santa Catalina Mountains from the Vista Del Rio Cultural Park. April 2018.
Looking towards the southwest corner of the Santa Catalina Mountains from the Vista Del Rio Cultural Park. April 2018.

SunZia – Redington Road North to Buehman Canyon – 12/12/2017

In the modest distance between Redington Road and Buehman Canyon the SunZia transmission line project will add ten 135 foot tall steel lattice towers, two tension pads and 5 new access roads – only a fraction of the additions the project will make to the San Pedro River Valley. It appears that the only remaining barrier in Arizona to SunZia’s plan is a single lawsuit.

Hiking in the SunZia corridor from Redington Road. December 2017.
Hiking in the SunZia corridor north from Redington Road. December 2017.

The San Pedro River Valley east of the Santa Catalina Mountains is far from pristine wilderness – farms, ranches, homes, utility lines, cattle, a gas pipeline and dirt roads cutting thru the desert… But that list obscures the truth that this area is something special, a part of Arizona that should be preserved as a welcome and important contrast to (and relief from) the dense development on the south and west side of the mountain. Giant steel towers looming over the valley and power lines imprisoning the sky don’t belong here.

Terrain and sky in the SunZia corridor. December 2017.
Terrain and sky in the SunZia corridor. December 2017.

I walk north and imagine the towers and lines – the subtle rolling hills won’t give them any place to hide, every time I look up I can see where they will create new shapes on skyline blocking the open sky – and every time I look down the variety of rocks and plants is amazing.

In the SunZia corridor near Buehman Canyon. December 2017.
In the SunZia corridor near Buehman Canyon. December 2017.
Rocks in the SunZia corridor. December 2017.
Rocks in the SunZia corridor. December 2017.
Cactus in the SunZia Right of Way. December 2017.
Cactus in the SunZia Right of Way. December 2017.
Color in Buehman Canyon. December 2017.
Color in Buehman Canyon. December 2017.

The terrain is steeper near Buehman Canyon and there is still fall color in the bottom of the canyon – beautiful to see this late in the season. The SunZia line will cross high above the canyon.

On a hillside east of the line the sunset comes into view – I wonder if this shot will be interrupted by towers and lines in the future…

Sunset over the Santa Catalina Mountains. December 2017.
Sunset over the Santa Catalina Mountains. December 2017.

Some SunZia reading material:

A map of the SunZia Line as it leaves Redington Road and proceeds north to Buehman Canyon. December 2017.
A map of the SunZia Line as it leaves Redington Road and proceeds north to Buehman Canyon. December 2017.