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Re: Spanish Trail Motel (not Biltmore)...
Hello Jeff,
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Thanks for keeping an eye on the Spanish Trail for us. What a great place! The owner allowed us inside for a photo tour last year. Some of the photos are here, thanks to Mark: Jeff, since you drive by the property every day, could you please let us know what's happening in more detail? Are they knocking something down? Which building? The sign? A quick pic shot out the car window would be helpful. You can post them in the same folder above. FYI, the most recent motel rooms have been converted into low-cost apartments. Earlier motel sections were damaged by fire. The classic, mid-century modern lobby, lounge, and restaurant is being used for storage. Tho owner seemed to have no other plans for the property. Luckily, the property is within South Tucson, and not subject to City of Tucson's ultra-restrictive codes and zoning which could otherwise FORCE a demolition. **** I also agree that Tucson needs a "sign park" for it's grand, unique, irreplaceable signage. Imagine wandering at night through a forest of giant glowing neon signs at Reid Park. I'm eventually going to start working on this idea with contacts from the Magic Carpet / Valley Of The Moon Project. I like the term "sign park", too. As far as I know, the only sign park in existence is in Las Vegas. Where did you hear the term? **** The Tucson Biltmore was at 2775 N. Oracle. I think you confused the two because they both had the circular two-story glass-walled lobby with attached restaurant and lounge. Thanks, Carlos -- In vanishingtucson@..., "roamndav" <roamndav@...> wrote:
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Re: stone houses in the Tucson Mountains...
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýHere one of the photos from the Stone House just off of Ajo (you can see it from Ajo on the south side when you headed through the "pass" - I had this on my other computer since it is my entry for the fair this year.? This house was never completed and the hill has run down into the back side of it - I have never been able to find out any info about it at all.? I passed it for years before I was brave enough to find the trail leading up to it.? Oh, in my walkings this weekend I found an old dump - and the remains of a 50's style roller skate frame - shoe and wheels were long gone just the base and hubs.??There is alot of desert near my house (at the moment) and I like to take wanderings through it - so much to see.
Climb to the top of the charts!?Play the word scramble challenge with star power. |
Re: Triple C Chuckwagon, windmills, etc...
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýThe Triple C Chuckwagon dinners is where the Sons of the Pioneers used to sing - you got dinner in a tin pan and then sat on benches for the show - after the Son didn't tour as much the Camp Family sang themselves or brought in other acts.? You can Google it there are lots of articles on the Triple C - it closed in 2003 I think - I always liked hearing the singing as I drove by.?? The address is on Bopp Road I just would have to look again to get the numbers it was on about 12 acres of land.? ? ?
Need to know the score, the latest news, or you need your Hotmail?-get your "fix". |
stone houses in the Tucson Mountains...
Hello Ann,
I've spent many mornings in the Tucson Mountains hiking and biking to ruins of old stone houses. I'd love to see your photos if you can find them. I'd also like to try to determine exactly where they are/were. I always liked that old stone house under the Tamarisks and billboards on the west side of I-10 at El Camino Del Cerro (Wetmore exit). Wish I had snapped just one shot before they tore it down. Thanks, Carlos --- In vanishingtucson@..., "Ann Tarwater" <raingirl44@...> wrote:
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Triple C Chuckwagon, windmills, etc...
Hello Ann,
This all sounds very interesting. I hate to admit it, but I can just barely remember the places you mentioned. Can you or anyone else refresh my memory? Anyone (Lannie) have addresses? And yes, photos are ALWAYS welcome. Always. There are folders for restaurants and gas stations in the photos section. Thanks for your contributions, Carlos --- In vanishingtucson@..., "Ann Tarwater" <raingirl44@...> wrote:
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"Last golf game at the Magic Carpet" fund raiser April 26th...
Hello All,
Great news! If you see activity in and around the Magic Carpet, it's not demolition crews. More likely it is engineers evaluating relocation of the statues, or volunteers planning the huge fund-raising event to pay for the move. That's right. The project to move the statues to The Valley Of The Moon is a reality, headed by our State Representative, Steve Farley. Steve is devoted to accomplishing this project without using taxpayer funds. That means that the amount of money we raise, and the companies we can convince to donate services will determine how many statues are saved from the wrecking ball. Project spokesman Charles Spillar is promoting this project as an international media event, because what it symbolizes will have a positive impact far beyond The Old Pueblo. There will be live music, food, and local celebrities. Please mark your calendar, start saving Magic Carpet money in a jar, and spread the word to everyone you know who's ever knocked a golf ball around a Tiki or a Sphinx. This event is fun and important enough to justify a drive from Phoenix, or even a cheap flight on Southwest from ______? I asked Charlie what we at VanishingTucson can do to help. He said for now, mainly just spread the word. Charlie's e-mail is [email protected] I would recommend contacting Charlie directly if: You have contacts within companies who might donate engineering services. You know a celebrity who wants to get involved. You know someone who wishes to make a large donation to the Magic Carpet project, Valley Of The Moon restoration, or both. Mention vanishingtucson so he'll know how you found him. Thanks everyone, Carlos --- In vanishingtucson@..., "meyerjohn18" <meyerjohn18@...> wrote: and there anyonewas a bunch of cars and people standing outside the gates. Does drove pastknow what was going on?Same today. I had a dental appointment on Speedway and when I any people. I have a feelingMGC, there were at least six cars parked in the parking lot.I was there yesterday around 3 - I saw all the cars but didn't see they're just using the parking lot. Someone did trim the palo verdetree next to the little wooden hut on the SE corner though. |
Re: Magic Carpet?
meyerjohn18
--- In vanishingtucson@..., George Cohn <george@...> wrote:
I was there yesterday around 3 - I saw all the cars but didn't see any people. I have a feeling they're just using the parking lot. Someone did trim the palo verde tree next to the little wooden hut on the SE corner though. |
Re: Magic Carpet?
George Cohn
thecrewaz05 wrote:
Yesterday around 1 in the afternoon I drove past Magic Carpet and thereSame today. I had a dental appointment on Speedway and when I drove past MGC, there were at least six cars parked in the parking lot. George Cohn |
Re: Found a cool "whatever happened to?" link
George Cohn
diamondbacks07fan wrote:
Awesome link Ann!While looking at the KWFM site, I ran across the name of an old friend. Jonathan Holden who was a DJ during 1970-71. Around the late '70's, I worked with him at Carondelet where he worked in the marketing and media department. He lived on the Southwest side of Tucson in a house that was a Sears and Roebuck's kit home built in the 40's! He left Carondelet in the '80's and the last I heard, he was the director of marketing for another health care corporation in Tucson. I lost track of him after that but still see him listed in the white pages for Tucson. He told me a lot of weird stories about the KWFM days including the fact that phrases such as "pass the bong" were common during that period. ;-) I'm pretty sure the corporate owners would frown on such things now. George Cohn |
Re: Found a cool "whatever happened to?" link
Awesome link Ann!
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Funny how those old names bring back memories! And how some that I didn't know back in broadcasting days I have crossed paths with professionally in other venues! I have a few I'd like added to the list - I'll have to contact the site owner! Thanks for sharing! |
Pics
Also somewhere in my photo cds I have pics of two old stone houses in
the Tucson Mountains one off of Ajo and one that is part of the Trails West III Tucson Mountain Trail - are these part of what we are looking at as well - if so I'll post them. The house in the Trails West area had a signature in the concrete from I think 1926 (I would have to look at the pic again - but the name was Karn - I tried to look at the death records for Tucson but the person died in a nursing home so I couldn't tell if it was the same folks) There is an interesting house near Westover between Drexel and Valencia a man took his wife to New Orleans for their honeymoom and he was sorry he did (as he told me jokingly) since his wife made him built a New Orleans style house (he said he did the best he could using what they had and his memory) it is the only two story in the neighborhood and a bright white color- also nearby that one (there was no zoning in this area for a long while) on Milton near Gunsight across from Warren Elem is a Hogan house for a long time the guy who built it lived in it but it had a for sale sign a few years ago and now the yard looks different so I assume someone new is in it. |
Movie list
Son of his Father was also a Harold Bell Wright
I have a movie called "I Married Wyatt Earp" starring Marie Osmond not sure if it was the same movie by a differnt name already on the list. I think that one was listed as Wyatt Earp's wife. When I was in high school I spent alot of time out at old Tucson - I got to watch them film the Hubba Bubba commerical out there. Also on the list of tv stuff there is Wild West Tech with the Carridine brothers - they have filmed a few things at Old Tucson - I knew someone who was an extra in one of the episodes. Anyone catch Surviorman last week - he was in the Sonoran Desert in Arizona so he was around here somewhere. |
More closed places..
I know we went over quite a few places that closed and I forgot to
mention one - live nearby but never went- The Triple C chuckwagon Dinners - there are now streets there named for the Camp Family (no houses yet) but the sign is still there, peeling but still there - should a snap a pic? The windmill is close by - they repainted it but it is there. Speaking of windmills there is a house near me on windmill strett and he has a near place with windmills and old signs and a replica of an old gas station - I took some pics from the street once did any want to see those? |
Re: 1922 movie filmed near Tucson.
The movie was based on a book by Harold Bell Wright - he of the
Harold Bell Wright Estates near Speedway and Wilmot (where you will find a Natachee Street the Indian in the movie) Harold Bell Wright did do alot for Tucson while he lived here, helped build the VA hospital and insisted that most of his movies be filmed around here so that Tucson would get the money. As a side note one of his early books turned into a movies was Shepard of the Hills the movie didn't follow the book very well but it starred a very young handsome man named John Wayne. --- In vanishingtucson@..., "Helen" <Helengg1@...> wrote: with the Iron Door," a silent film from 1922. I heard many times abouthow my great-grandmother's horse, "Birdie," was in it, ridden by theafter her horse "starred" in a movie.primary school was the last year the original Safford School was used. Itwas damaged in the quake and they replaced it the next year. She movedon to Tucson High, which still exists as Roskruge Elementary. |
Spanish Trail Motel
Hi all...Jeff Jensen here...new to the group.
Perhaps this has been discussed, but I drive by the Spanish Trail Motel everyday and I see the garbage bins out front. Is it coming down in it's entirety, or is there any chance for some semblance of the old motel in some reincarnation? If it's coming down, I sure wish Tucson could create some kind of 'sign park' along the historic Hwy 80 corridor somewhere.... And question: wasn't this place know at one time as the Tucson Biltmor?? Thanks all! |
1922 movie filmed near Tucson.
Don't know how I could have forgotten about this movie. "The Mine with
the Iron Door," a silent film from 1922. I heard many times about how my great-grandmother's horse, "Birdie," was in it, ridden by the heroine. But, my mother was going through my grandmother's photo collection today and found two pictures that her mother received after her horse "starred" in a movie. The movie was based on a legend that there's a gold mine in the Catalina Mountains, with an iron door. But, it was lost in the earthquake that struck Tucson in the mid-1890's. I asked my grandmother if she remembered it, she did. Her last year of primary school was the last year the original Safford School was used. It was damaged in the quake and they replaced it the next year. She moved on to Tucson High, which still exists as Roskruge Elementary. |
Re: El Conquistador
ranger2891
--- In vanishingtucson@..., "bagbaazai" <bagbaazai@...> wrote:
Daddy Jack's Blue Note at Speedway and Country Club. There was also a place over by the old El Rancho called The Elite. It was a front for a prostitution business. We used to deliver pizza's there after the girls got off work. |
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