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Dewey–Humboldt, Arizona
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==Brief history== {{more citations needed section|date=July 2021}} Dewey–Humboldt was incorporated on December 20, 2004, from the existing unincorporated towns of '''Dewey''' and '''Humboldt''', located adjacent to one another in the [[Agua Fria River]] Valley, 15 miles east of [[Prescott, Arizona|Prescott]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dewey-humboldt.net/about/|title=About the Town of Dewey–Humboldt|publisher=Town of Dewey–Humboldt}}, dead as of July 1, 2017</ref> After discovery of gold on [[Lynx Creek]] in the spring of 1863, the Dewey area was settled around the summer 1863 by pioneer prospector, rancher and politician [[King Woolsey]] (1832–1879), who founded the Agua Fria Ranch, in what was then known as "Woolsey Valley," to supply the miners. Woolsey used stones from decimating prehistoric ruin to build his ranch house, built an irrigation system off the Agua Fria (probably part of a prehistoric system), and introduced some of the first cattle into newly organized Yavapai County (1864). At the "falls" of the Agua Fria at present Humboldt, Woolsey built a small quartz mill to work gold ores from the nearby hills and a small water-powered grist mill. During 1864, he led the storied Woolsey Expeditions to the east in retaliatory raids on Apache and in search of gold; all failed to find a new Eldorado. All these activities caused his bankruptcy, and sale of the ranch property to the Bowers Brothers, sutlers at Fort Whipple. The brothers continued to use the house and farm the lands to supply the region with corn, barley, and other agricultural products. (The ruins of Woolsey's ranch house can still be seen between the old Black Canyon Highway and the Agua Fria River about one mile north of Humboldt. The property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.) As the valley began to fill up with a few ranches and farms, a post office was established in 1875. The stage station (Prescott to Phoenix wagon road via Black Canyon) and post office nearby was named "Agua Fria." By the early 1870s water diversions were being used to irrigate an extensive area of corn and other crops. In the mid-1870s a small water-powered, silver-lead furnace, "Agua Fria Furnace," was built to work the ores from what would become the Iron King mine area. The small plant, built at the site of Woolsey's earlier mill at today's Humboldt, proved the value of the region, but was too isolated to make a profit. The isolation of the region came to an end in 1898. The Prescott & Eastern Railroad was built from near Prescott to Mayer (later it was extended all the way to Crown King). The {{nowrap|P & E}} followed along the Agua Fria and built sidings at Cherry Creek Siding (Dewey Post Office), and Val Verde, the site of a smelter built by the Val Verde Smelting Company—a large plant at the site of Humboldt. The Agua Fria post office closed in 1895. When a new post office opened in 1898, the community was renamed Dewey, probably to honor [[Admiral Dewey]]'s great victory that year at the [[Battle of Manila (1898)|Battle of Manila]]—this was the height of the [[Spanish–American War]]. Another post office was established at Val Verde (Humboldt) in 1899. In 1902 the Val Verde smelter burnt to the ground. A new company was formed, the Consolidated Arizona Smelting Company, which built a giant smelting plant upon the ashes of the Val Verde works. This operation served not only local mines, but operations throughout the then Arizona Territory. The Val Verde post office was renamed Humboldt in 1905 to honor Baron [[Alexander von Humboldt]], who had visited [[New Spain]] early in the 19th century and predicted that greater riches would be found to the north (interpreted by early twentieth century promoters as the [[Bradshaw Mountains]] region).<ref>Philip Varney, ''Arizona Ghost Towns and Mining Towns: A Travel Guide to History'', Phoenix, Arizona Highways Books, 1988; p. 16</ref> Around this time the town of Humboldt began to develop.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/167054166/|title=Cameron Wins He Also Loses|publisher=Williams News, Williams, Ariz.|date=September 2, 1905|page=1}}</ref> The smelter and the railroads into the Bradshaws created probably the most widespread mining boom in the county. By 1907 the population had reached 1,000. With two daily trains, business in the town boomed and the city decided to showcase their development by hosting a Labor Day celebration that year. The celebration featuring a parade on Main Street became an annual tradition, now organized by the Agua Fria Chamber of Commerce and held on the last Saturday in September. The Humboldt smelter operation went through a half decade of reorganization after the [[Panic of 1907]] deflated the local mining boom. Revival came during the high mineral market prices of the World War I era, when the smelting plant operated in conjunction with the Blue Bell Mine, the one productive copper mine in the Bradshaw Mountains. The train connected the mine, located south of Mayer, with the smelter, which kept the town prosperous. Many of Humboldt's historic buildings date from the early twentieth century period. One of the early important mines was the nearby '''Iron King Mine''', but its over promotion in the early 1900s, with the panic of 1907, caused it to close temporarily. It was reopened during the high mineral market prices of World War I. After World War I, a post-war economic down turn caused the smelter and mine to close again. Revival came by the mid-1920s and the local farm and mine economy prospered until the Wall Street crash of 1929 hit. Mines and the smelter closed, and by 1930 the population of Humboldt had dwindled to 300. Humboldt had a second but smaller boom in 1934 when the mine reopened, but its duration of operation would be longer under the Shattuck-Denn company of Bisbee, Arizona fame. The Iron King became the most productive mine in the Bradshaws, and produced $100 million in gold, silver, lead and zinc before its closure in 1968.<ref>Robert L. Spude, ''Central Arizona Ghost Towns'' (Las Vegas: Nevada Publications, 1978).</ref><ref name="Full1968">{{cite book |last1=Gilmour |first1=Paul |last2=Still |first2=Arthur |editor1-last=Ridge |editor1-first=John |title=The Geology of the Iron King Mine, in Ore deposits of the United States, 1933–1967 |date=1968 |publisher=The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum engineers, Inc. |location=New York |pages=1238–57}}</ref> The mine tailings are presently being reprocessed into iron-rich [[Ironite]] fertilizer. There have been questions raised about the lead and [[arsenic]] content of the fertilizer, but the company maintains its product is harmless. "The lead and arsenic are in forms that cannot escape into the environment. You can eat them and they'll pass right through you," said Rob Morgan, Ironite's executive vice president and chief operating officer. "They're not harmful."<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.dirtdoctor.com/view_question.php?id=120 |title=The Ironite Story, from ''Dallas Morning News'' |access-date=June 10, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070930021232/http://www.dirtdoctor.com/view_question.php?id=120 |archive-date=September 30, 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref> However, the [[United States Environmental Protection Agency]] has recently posted a cautionary statement, warning that potentially harmful amounts of arsenic could be released from use of Ironite. Ironite is banned in Canada.<ref>[http://www.epa.gov/nrmrl/lrpcd/wm/projects/135367.htm Release of Heavy Metals from Ironite]</ref> The railroad track, the old Prescott & Eastern line which long before had been taken over by the Santa Fe, was removed in 1971. Today in Humboldt, a lone smelter smokestack, a significant reminder of the region's mining history and pioneers' legacy, remains overlooking the historic buildings on Main Street. Farming continued in a small portion of the area until 2006 when the last working farm was sold to developers. Today Dewey is a low-density residential area.
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