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American Pioneer & Cemetery Research Project
Internet publication
Version 111811
A TALE OF TWO
TOWNS
Cedar Glade (Drake) and Puntenney, Arizona
By Kathy Block
APCRP Historian
Map shows location of
Cedar Glade and Puntenney.
The Cedar Glade (Drake)/ Puntenney
site in Yavapai County, about 40 miles north of Prescott, is characterized by a
high plateau of mixed grasslands and junipers, and shrubs. There's a long
history of human occupancy. An early documented use of this area is called the
“Archaic Period” (circa 8000BC to 1000BC). Ancient peoples followed a seasonal
round of hunting and gathering and “Archaic” sites are common here. These
groups are followed by “Formative” phases of agriculture, and the use of
ceramics. Archeologists have found pottery shards and pit house ruins, evidence
of the “Prescott Branch of the Upland Patayan” using
this area between AD 900 and 1300.
Spanish explorers in the late 1500’s found the region occupied by
Yavapai and Tonto Apaches. With “Euro-American settlement” and mutual conflicts
between the Natives and new arrivals, these Native peoples were “removed” to
reservations by the 1870's.
Trees
and Grassland East of Drake Cement Plant.
A story about nearby Long Meadow Ranch
(now owned by a Puntenney descendant) illustrates conflicts with the Native
Americans. In the 1870s, a Mrs. Stevens and one old man held off fifty
attacking Apaches for six hours until a group of passing cowboys rescued
them. The cowboy foreman took the wife's
note into Prescott to her husband. It supposedly read, “Dear Henry. Apaches
come. I am almost out of buckshot. Please send me some more. Your
loving wife.”
This area at elevation 4,550 to 4,800
feet contained limestone deposits, some of which are overlain with basalt flows
4 to 8 million years old, and sedimentary and alluvium (stream deposited
sediments.)
These were deposited under subsequent
oceanic conditions approximately 380 to 300 million years ago, forming
limestone, a source of lime.
Typical rocks found in
the area of Cedar Glade and Puntenney
Lime was a very valuable commodity as
the West developed. It could be used for making mortar and plaster and in the
manufacture of glass and casting, the refining of sugar, and leather
tanning. Medicine used “limewater”, a
solution of slaked lime. A famous
theatrical phrase, “standing in the limelight” came from actors aspiring to
stand in a brilliant theater spotlight that used the oxidation of lime!
Looking at the geography of this area,
the development of the two towns was shaped by: Hell Canyon. Puntenney developed
first on the south rim in the 1890s, with Cedar Glade developing on the north
rim at about the same time period.
Limestone mining has been done in the
Cedar Glade/Puntenney area since around 1880, and off and on again thru 1985, and
now again at present time. (More later). The town of
Puntenney was named after George Hollingsworth Puntenney who, with wife Lucy,
followed his bachelor brother Eli to the West from Ohio.
George, born on March 5, 1838, in
Ohio, and Lucy, born Nov. 14, 1854, in North Carolina, married in 1873. They
had six children after moving to Puntenney, five survived. They located an
abundance of limestone on the south rim of Hell Canyon and built the Arizona
Territory's first lime kiln. A small town quickly formed around their
“Puntenney Lime Company.” The family was still listed in the 1920 Census.
According to their Death Certificates, George H. Puntenney, married, died in Phoenix
at age 85 of “senility” on Sept. 13, 1923 and is buried in Greenwood Memory
Lawn Cemetery in
Phoenix.. “Lucy's” official name was Louise Saunders Puntenney. She died at age
85, a widow, of “Myocardial Degeneration and Arteriosclerosis” in Phoenix on
April 6, 1940. She is buried in Cottonwood Cemetery.
A note from a reader, M. Puntenney,
about a 2001 Sharlot Hall archives story on the “lime
rush” stated that “I was told that my Great Grandfather George Puntenney
discovered the lime when the old RR was being built.” There were three
limestone claims with a brick kiln at each claim. The old train went just
behind the kilns.
A rare token that says “Puntenney Lime
Company Amusement Hall” was offered for sale by the Holobird-Kagin
Americana company for $1,200 on their web site. One can only speculate what the “Amusement
Hall” may have been. A history of tokens indicates they were in wide use in the
late 19th century and early 20th century, and were used
by reputable businesses as well as saloons. They were needed because money just
couldn't travel quickly into the remote locales that needed it. Banks had to send money on stage coaches and
by Pony Express. Even though trains brought goods West, Puntenney and then
Cedar Glade were relatively isolated until train service was established. Many of the people who came to work in the
lime mines and kilns were probably poor, if not penniless. As more people
arrived with less money in their pockets, circulating money became scarce. The
Puntenney Lime Company coined its own tokens to expedite trade for goods and
services. Early miners often had purchases at a company store deducted from
their pay, and the remainder was issued as “script.” Possibly these tokens were
used to compensate for the lack of cash in the settlement!
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Puntenney
Lime Company Token, 1910. L – Front, R - Back
Photo courtesy Barbara
Wilson, Holabird-Kagin Americana, Reno, Nevada.
A Puntenney Post Office was
established January 12, 1905, and closed September 30, 1932. Mail then went to Paulden. An early
post office misspelled “Puntney” and existed April
26, 1892 to July 3, 1893. In 1905 the first Puntenney postmaster was Thomas A.
Miller, then in 1906, Charles B. Brown and Henry W. Carson. The population
served at first was estimated as 10 people, then 50 people. By 1909 the post office also served Cedar
Glade, with a population of 70 people.
The postmaster compensation for the year was $24.41 in 1905 and $120 in
1909. Cedar Glade was named for the junipers, commonly called “cedar”in those times.
George Puntenney, when he established
Puntenney, built a one room schoolhouse for the area's children. As Cedar Glade across Hell Canyon developed,
the children living there had to cross on a railroad trestle until the
schoolhouse was moved across the canyon. Finally, a schoolhouse for Cedar Glade
was built in 1928. The 1920 Census
listed Barnetta Ball, age 39, as “Teacher Public
School.” Freda Schwanbeck Davis was a student at the
school in Puntenney (which had a peak population of about 2,500.) Freda was the
daughter of Herman Schwanbeck's widowed sister-in
law, and was only 9 years old at the time. Herman had built a house for them
and hired them to run his restaurant. She reminisced in 1981 to the Prescott
Courier about her early memories of Cedar Glade.
The teachers tried to keep track of
the train schedule so students wouldn't be on the trestle when a train roared
thru. One time she was crossing with two
younger children when they heard the train whistle. They held her hands and
raced to one of the water barrels fastened to the trestle below the tracks,
crawled down, and hung onto the barrel as the train shook the bridge! She was later thanked by the families of the
two children for “keeping her head”.
Hell Canyon runs between Cedar
Glade/Drake on the north rim and Puntenney on the south rim. An early journey
in 1864 was described by a member of a trip with Judge Joseph P. Allyn as: “About ten o'clock we got under way and an hour
brought us to the most infernal canyon for wagons I had yet seen. It was about
300 feet deep and the sides nearly perpendicular and covered with rolling
stones.”
Hell
Canyon from Hwy. 89 bridge, looking east towards Cedar Glade/Drake.
Before the arrival of the trains,
transportation to the area was provided by the Prescott and Ash Fork Stage
Road, around 1877 near Hells Wall. This
was before George Puntenney developed his lime mines and settlement. The road
forded Hell Canyon about one mile upstream, but the route was abandoned by
1910, as a new, local road called “The Road to Cedar Glade” crossed the bottom
of Hell Canyon, at the mouth of Limestone Canyon. In 1923 a paved auto road
crossed the canyon on a concrete bridge.
In 1954 the present SR 89 was constructed to the West, and the old
bridge was abandoned.
The railroad brought many changes and
growth to the area. In 1891 construction on the Santa Fe, Prescott and Phoenix
(the Peavine RR) began between Prescott and Ash Fork,
passing about two miles west of the present-day Drake Cement Company
plant. A “Cedar Glade” siding was
located 3.5 to 5 miles west of the settlement of Cedar Glade. The depot was
built by the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe railroad in 1901. Rail service
ended in 1969, except for a spur line 28 miles from Drake to Prescott which
carried freight until October, 1983. Rain seriously damaged a bridge north of
Prescott and it was too costly to rebuild, so the line was abandoned in March
1984. Now part of this RR right of way is 6.6 miles of non-motorized trail for
walking, biking, and equestrian use, called “the Peavine
Trail.,” so named because an abandoned section from 1894 west of Hell canyon
resembled a peavine with its torturously curving
route.
One of the major changes encouraged by
the railroad and the depot was that Cedar Glade began to develop into a town
across from Puntenney when Herman Schwanbeck and his
family arrived around 1917. He built a hotel, general store, and restaurant
(where his sister-in-law mentioned above worked).A newborn male child was
buried in Cedar Glade Cemetery. He died of strangulation at birth, July 1,
1917. Herman had been born in Colorado in 1872 and on January 24, 1915, married
16-year-old Maria J. Esquibel, born in 1899 and
emigrated from Mexico in 1905. She was
listed on the DC as mother of the newborn child who died. A 1930 Census listed
Herman as age 58, Maria age 38, and 5 children, ages 11, 10, 7, 5, and 3 living
in Ash Fork No other records of this family were found.
There may have also been a brothel,
according to an archeologist quoted in The Daily Courier, Prescott June
21, 2007. Everett Basset had thought the story of the old brothel at Drake was
“an old wives' tale that was too good to be true.” But then he examined a tiny
lava rock building with four little rooms, all with their own doors, that dated to 1916 to 1925. There were many single,
young railroad workers, cattle hands, miners, and wood choppers (who provided
fuel for the limestone kilns and railroad engines.) He found pieces of old champagne bottles
dating before 1918 behind the alleged brothel and now believes “the brothel
stories are not only plausible, but also likely.” The building later housed a
midwife then later an auto repair storage structure.
Cedar Glade quickly grew from a
temporary work camp for construction of a cut-off route over Hell Canyon at
Cedar Glade. The new route reduced the number of trestles by 30, but required
the enormous 165 foot high, 647 foot long steel trestle over Hell Canyon. This
trestle was completed in November, 1901. In 1912 Cedar Glade also became the
junction for the Verde Valley Railroad, which accessed a copper smelter in
Clarkdale. In 1920, Cedar Glade was renamed “Drake”, (after William Drake who
was in charge of building a cut-off line to Jerome's copper mines on the
railroad at Cedar Glade between Prescott and Ash Fork). Approximately 20
structures had been built there by the railroad, including a depot, agent's
house, water tank, a number of section houses,
bunkhouse, and freight warehouses. The
railroad kept a small staff in Drake thru the 1950s.
Railroad trestle at Hell
Canyon, Drake
An analysis of the 1920 Census
revealed some interesting demographics about the 291 people recorded as living
in Cedar Glade. None appear on the Cedar Glade or Puntenney Cemetery rosters
even though burials in Cedar Glade Cemetery extend to October, 1929. And a
search of other sources, such as DC records and Family Search,
yielded no matches in samples of the 291 names on the Census. This suggested
that most of those listed left when the lime works closed in 1932 for the first
time. None of the people seemed to have been buried in Puntenney Cemetery
either. Some of the family names on both rosters appear on the census, but not
the individual first names.
EMPLOYED:
72 Wood choppers, average age 29.
23 R.R. Section workers, average age 30.
19 Laborers in Lime Company, average age 35.
12 Wood haulers, average age 32.
Miscellaneous occupations: 5 Fireman, Lime Company; 3 RR Operators, 2
Chinese cooks, Lime Company; 2 workers General Store (possibly Schwenbeck's?); 2 Fence builders; 2 Foreman RR section;
then, one each: Forest Ranger, Wood Sawyer, Cook in Eating House, Brick Mason,
Bookkeeper, Clerk in General Store, Supt. General Store, Foreman wood camp,
miner, laborer in tanking work, Engineer in lime company, Teacher public
school, Goat Herder, and Supt. Lime Company.
NOT EMPLOYED:
83 Female, average age 12.5 (mostly children)
36 Male, average age 11 (mostly children)
Others unable to determine from name whether male or female.
Comment: The majority of workers in
Cedar Glade in 1920 tended to be in their 20s to 30s. Most were probably
Hispanic, judging from their names, with approximately 45
non-Hispanic. Most of the jobs were related to the lime
company and railroad. Some Hispanics had many members who were laborers.
The CORRAL family, with 11 people listed, had 7 members who worked as wood
choppers or wood haulers.
Page
from 1920 Census listings. Note the Herman Schwanbeck family.
Cedar Glade was served by a ranger
station, According to information from James McKie, a
Forest Archeologist for Prescott National Forest, in response to a query about a 1915 photo of
a ranger station at Cedar Glade, this structure or structures may have been
there from 1898 when the Forest Reserve was established or when the Prescott
National Forest was designated in 1908. The photo caption noted it was moved
from Verde. The structure was either replaced or added to in the 1930s,
somewhere between 1933 and 1936, when nearly all the ranger stations on the
Prescott National Forest benefited from new construction. The Ranger Station was located about 1.5
miles northeast of the kiln and directly west and adjacent to the Drake
property, near where County Road 71 crosses the railroad. It was there from
1911 to 1963. An article on forest service architecture said that in the 1930s
a distinctive architectural style was used by the Forest Service. It was a
“bungalow type with low pitched gable roofs sheathed with asphalt shingles. Rafter
ends were exposed under wide eaves. Exterior chimneys were prominent. This type
was popular for Arizona's national forests. These buildings could be
disassembled and moved to other locations.”
Information was found on two of the
Forest Rangers. The 1920 Census listed Charles P. Smith, age 28, as a Forest
Ranger. A DC was found for Robert
Thompson, whose death “occurred in open country ”from
“natural causes”, He was a married
Forest Ranger from New York, born Dec.18, 1880, and died August 31, 1937, at
age 56 years, 8 months, 13 days, and was buried in Mt. View Cemetery.
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Left
- Ranger house. Portable.
1915. Moved from Verde. Right - Ranger station. 1937. Cedar Glade.
Photo’s Courtesy: U.S.
Forest Service.
Puntenney, which had begun as a town
serving lime kiln and quarry workers, faded in the early 1930s. Cedar Glade
(renamed Drake in 1920), which initially provided services to the RR workers,
gradually shifted its focus to the production of lime and rock products after
the railroad centralized its maintenance elsewhere and the Puntenney Lime works
shut down. A 1930 article in a mining
journal noted several new companies formed to mine and process the lime. In
2002 a company called Stirling Bridge proposed mining
limestone, building a cement plant, and electrical cogeneration facilities, but
the project never was begun.
Drake Cement acquired 70 acres, over
5,000 of mining
claims and 144 acres of private land
from Stirling Bridge.
After a lengthy process of environmental reviews (since some of the
claims were on Chino Valley Ranger District of the Prescott National Forest),
Drake Cement was able to build a state-of-the-art cement plant ten years
later. The Grand Opening was on June 17,
2011. It has a quarry about a quarter mile away that supplies it with limestone
and silica. It imports coal from S.W.
Colorado to fuel the plant and has a rail connecting it to the Burlington
Northern Santa Fe Railroad. Unlike a
coal-fired plant, the cement plant doesn't have coal ash waste because the ash
is incorporated into the cement.
According to a Drake Company website:
“The plant is a state-of-the-art six stage precalciner/preheater with a rated capacity of 660,000 tons of clinker
per year. Several operating and pollution
controls incorporated into the plant are so advanced they are found in only a
few other facilities throughout the world.”
They state that “over the long term,
the Drake plant will provide dozens of new, high quality manufacturing jobs and
economic development in Northern Arizona.”
At present 20 to 56 people are employed there. The construction phase
employed up to 600 people! The plant cost about $300 million to build. It is
the first cement facility built in any county in Arizona in the past 50 years
and marks Drake's first facility west of the Mississippi River in decades. The plant is expected to last 50 to 100
years, with an annual revenue of $6 to $10 million.
It's “sister company” is Drake Materials, a Redi Mix
company, in Scottsdale. Surprisingly, it is a subsidiary of Cementos
Lima, the largest cement company in Peru!
Drake Cement has built around the old
Cedar Glade Cemetery and protects it with a fence enclosing the graves of those
early workers and settlers in Cedar Glade. See APCRP Cedar Glade for more
details.
In summary, two towns, which formed in
the early 1900s as “bookends” on each side of Hell Canyon were Puntenney and
Cedar Glade. There are two cemeteries
and various ruins of buildings and kilns that can be seen. Some are protected
by the Forest Service. A few trivia:
Supposedly actor Walter Brennan (1894 to 1974) was in this area during filming
of “How the West Was Won” and fell in love with the
area and bought one of the quarries. The film itself may show a brief glimpse
of the old RR trestle. (1962, narrated by Spencer Tracy.)
I was unable to verify these trivia.
Flagstones were mined at Drake across
from the railroad depot, another source of employment in this area.
There are many hiking and biking
opportunities (such as the Peavine trail), camping,
sightseeing (Hell Canyon overlook). If
you visit this area, think of the century of limestone quarries, the railroad,
and human history at Puntenney and Cedar Glade.
Photo courtesy & reproduction
approved by Drake Cement LLC
Photo courtesy & reproduction
approved by Drake Cement LLC
All photos not noted, are
courtesy Ed and Kathy Block.
American Pioneer & Cemetery Research Project
Internet publication
Version 111811
WebMaster: Neal Du Shane
Copyright
© 2011 Neal Du Shane
All rights reserved. ® Information contained within this
website may be used
for personal family history purposes, but not for
financial profit or gain.
All contents of this website are willed to the
American Pioneer & Cemetery Research Project (APCRP).
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