Browse Items (9328 total)

Water bottle used for christening the USS Arizona. Arizona passed prohibition in June of 1915, five years before it became Federal law. Many temperate Arizonans took a dim view to using champagne to christen a ship, despite tradition. However Navy…

A letter dated November 23, 1875 from Walter L. Vail to Edward L. Vail describing Walter's first impressions of Tucson upon his arrival by stagecoach, his meeting the Governor, and discusses at length issues involved in acquiring property and the…

A photograph of Wahutu people dancing with wearing bells and feather head-dress.

A photograph of Chief Kibugwe, his sons, and Rene Verstappen watching the Wahutu dancers.

A photograph of Wahutu dancers, mid-performance, wearing leopard skins.

A photograph of the Wahutu dancers mid-performance.

A photograph of the Wahutu dancers mid-performance.

A photograph of the Wahutu dancers mid-performance.

A photograph of the Wahutu dancers mid-performance.

A photograph of the Wahutu dancers.

A photograph of Kibugwe, a Wahutu chief, in the front with his dancers in the back.

A photograph of the wagon being used as a taxi which which was used to take the indigenous man sitting in the back of it, Jantje, home. The house can seen behind the wagon.

A stone wall on W. Broadway, between the back of Rueben Gold's Furniture Store and another business. The Pima County Administration Building is in the background.

Handbill to amend Section 2 and 15 pf Article VII of the Constitution of the Sate of Arizona, granting to the citizens of the State of Arizona, regardless of sex, the right of suffrage and the right to hold public office.

Information plate describing voltage tolerances from a radio on board a Japanese midget submarine sunk in Pearl Harbor during the Pearl Harbor attack. An exceedingly rare battlefield relic.
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