Excursion to Bisbee...

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This weekend the wife and I made one of our semi-regular trips to Bisbee, Arizona for some relaxation and fun. I thought I'd share some highlights.

First stop along the way was Tombstone. This is the old Cochise County Courthouse; my grandfather served on juries here.

00-TOMBSTONE_COURTHOUSE.jpg


While in Tombstone, I bumped into an old friend in a gun shop there.

01-DUKEME-1.jpg


As you come over the Mule Mountains into Bisbee, there's a viewpoint, where pictures of the town have been made for over 100 years. Here is Bisbee as it appears today; little has changed; most of the buildings are over 100 years old. We stayed in the old Copper Queen hotel, center right with the three high roofs.

022-CENTER.jpg


This is a shot of Main Street in Bisbee. The structure at the left is the old combination Post Office and Library. No one gets mail delivery in Bisbee; the hills are too steep. They all go to the post office where they have mailboxes. My mother, born in Bisbee in1912, studied in the library on the top two floors.

03-MAIN.jpg


Here's another shot of the Post Office/Library from the side:

08-POST_OFC.jpg


As you go up main street and look back, this is the view. At the end of the street is the old (second) Phelps Dodge Mercantile building. It replaced the first structure which burned down in 1938. A young Del Webb built this one in 1939.

15-DOWN_MAIN.jpg


Along the South side of Main street, you can see the bay windows of the Letson Loft Hotel. This block was originally built by a man named Letson around the turn of the 20th Century.

06-LETSON_WINDOWS.jpg


Bisbee has its artsy-craftsy contingent now. This is a shot of a street guy with a guitar; just one of many characters in town.

13-GUITAR.jpg


We experienced a newer eating place, named Screaming Banshee Pizza, not far from the courthouse. Here's a shot of their brick pizza oven. The food is terrific; highly recommended. They make their own sausage and their own meatballs; both are incredibly good.

10-SCREAMING_BANSHEE_OVEN.jpg


The men's bathroom in Screaming Banshee is not for those wishing privacy. Yes, those are cameras on the walls!

11-SCREAMING_BANSHEE_TOILET.jpg


You want 5-star dining? Try the Cafe Roka on Main Street. It's open only on weekends, and reservations are required. Here's a pic of my wife and I and a couple of friends enjoying a meal overlooking Main Street:

22-DINNER.jpg


Does Bisbee have ghosts? OH yeah. This is kind of spooky, but here's the picture that freaked me out a bit. This is a pic of the park area beside the old Phelps Dodge Headquarters, just after dark. I photographed it just because it was nice under the street lights there. Look carefully, and you will see an old man sitting on the park bench on the left.

04-MAN_FROM_THE_PAST.jpg


Here's an enlargement of that photo, showing the old man. Look at the clothes he's wearing:

05-MAN-FROM-THE-PAST.jpg


At any rate, my attention wandered to something else, and when I returned to this scene a few seconds later, the old man was gone - poof. I really didn't notice him in the picture until I got home. Just sayin'.

If you continue up Main Street, you will come to the newer Cochise County Courthouse, built in 1931. A real "art deco" piece of architecture.

17-COURTHOUSE.jpg


Here's the bas relief of two miners on the face of the court house:

19-COURTHOUSE_MINERS.jpg


At the front entrance of the court house stand these two bronze sentinels, each with a sword of justice:

18-COURT_HOUSE_DOORS.jpg


Right next to the court house is the old Gothic-style St. Patrick's catholic church. The last time I was there was in 1960, for my maternal grandmother's funeral service. It's been very nicely cared for over the years.

23-st_patricks.jpg


There's more about ghosts. This is a picture, taken at night, of the Bisbee city park - an area for gatherings and for kids to play ball. What's interesting is that this site was originally the town cemetery, and the corpses in the marked graves were re-interred in 1913 in Greenwood Cemetery, about 3 miles SE of old Bisbee. The problem is that there were many unmarked graves; no one knew where to dig up those remains, so they just graded and cemented over the site. Those remains will probably be there for eternity. The wind whistles through the trees there, and it does sound like wailing at night...

16-GHOST_PARK.jpg


I was heartened to see this. It's the grave of an unknown soldier in Greenwood Cemetery, which by the style of the gravestone, dates from the time of the Spanish-American war. The song "Where have all the flowers gone?" comes to mind.

12-UNKNOWN_SOLDIER.jpg


Up on the hill west of Bisbee is the old Bisbee High School, built in 1913. My mother graduated here in 1929. It's in the Guinness Book of Records. Because it's built on a hill, each of its four floors has an exit at ground level. No longer a high school, it's become an administration building for Cochise County.

21-HIGH_SCHOOL.jpg


I'll leave you with this tidbit. Just below the high school is a house known as the Oliver House. Since it was built at the turn of the 20th Century, there have been 26, count 'em, twenty-six deaths in the house. Today it's a bed and breakfast, but few board there - ghost encounters, and really scary ones, have been very prevalent. In this shot, you can see the light on the front porch after dark. I really didn't want to go much closer.

14-OLIVER_HOUSE.jpg


The old mining town of Bisbee is really worth seeing again and again. Each time I go, I find more interesting things to see and photograph. Hope you've enjoyed this virtual tour!

John
 
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Bisbee is a favorite of mine. I was at Ft. H in 1977 didn't get back to the area until 2008. If I had not driven into town I would have had no idea where we were. I still have some coffee mugs made by a potter in Bisbee. I remember the Bank as having huge Copper Doors but don't remember that in 2008. Have they been removed? In 1977 the Peso was devalued from 8 to the $ to 24 to the $. It seemed like the economic end of the road for the south of the boarder towns. BTW I met a B&B owner in Talkeetna who remembers Sierra Vista as Fry AZ.
 
Good! We been there once when that rancher krenz was shot off a atv. I would like to go again.
 
Great Pics John; thanks for sharing. Did you happen to stop by 2nd Amendment Firearms off HWY 92? I'm taking a trip up there this weekend...
 
Great Pics John; thanks for sharing. Did you happen to stop by 2nd Amendment Firearms off HWY 92? I'm taking a trip up there this weekend...

I stop and see David every year when I'm in Arizona.
He was my real estate agent when I bought land north of Douglas a few years back, before he opened the gunshop.
He's a great guy!
 
I've noticed a similar looking gent several times in the vicinity of the mining museum, just down the flight of public stairs from the Copper Queen. I thought that he may have been hired to add "local color" for tourists, like the costumed "gunslingers" hanging around Allen St. in downtown Tombstone, buy, hey, it's Bisbee, where dressing and acting like a "character" is, well, characteristic...
 
John,

Your "virtual tours" are The Best. I haven't been to Bisbee for 25 years or so, but seeing this "tour" as well as the one you did a year or so ago make me want to go again.

Thanks for doing this great tour with those fantastic pictures.

Tom
 
Great Pics John; thanks for sharing. Did you happen to stop by 2nd Amendment Firearms off HWY 92? I'm taking a trip up there this weekend...

The only time we had to spend in the State 92 area of Bisbee was on Sunday, and of course he wasn't open. I do have him programmed into my GPS for next time, though.

John
 
I remember the Bank as having huge Copper Doors but don't remember that in 2008. Have they been removed?

I don't know about huge copper, but the bank does have brass-edged glass doors. Originally, this was the Bank of Bisbee, which went defunct when the mines closed in the '70s. Bank of America took it over, but left last year. It was re-opened as the Western Bank within the last year, an outfit headquartered in New Mexico. They have kept the original Bank of Bisbee interior, but the old table that was used to write checks, etc. on since the early 1900s disappeared when B of A left town. I was saddened by this, because I'm sure my grandfather used that table, and was glad it was there for so many years. Here's a pic of the bank entrance today.

John

24-western_bank.jpg
 
My wife and I like to motorcycle down the San Pedro valley on the way down to Bisbee to stay.

The ghost tours are a lot of fun, and very informative about the town.

Great place to hang out on a weekend!
 
Thanks for the tour. I first saw Tombstone and Bisbee at the age of 10 in 1955. Every decade or so I have managed to make it back for a visit, but I am now long overdue. This set of photos just makes me want to return all the more.
 
John, the Copper Queen Hotel where you stayed has long had a "haunted" reputation (the Ghost Hunters television program had a very interesting episode regarding it, as well as another on the Birdcage Theater in Tombstone, where they also had unusual experiences).
 
John, the Copper Queen Hotel where you stayed has long had a "haunted" reputation (the Ghost Hunters television program had a very interesting episode regarding it, as well as another on the Birdcage Theater in Tombstone, where they also had unusual experiences).

We have stayed in the exact room that Ghost Hunters occupied in the Copper Queen. Other than the fact that there were blood drops on the floor when we woke up in the morning, there was nothing unusual there...(I'm quite serious about the blood). Room 315.

We have also been in the Birdcage many times. Dark, dusty, and reeking of times gone by.

John
 
I had a great Uncle in Tombstone, but haven't been out there since 1978. My oldest's first job out of the Army was at Douglas, snice he was just a month, maybe six weeks out of Iraq he found the summer weather brisk. I do need to get back to the land of saluteing plant life.
 
I'm currently reading "Judgement Call" by J A Jance, A series novel about Sheriff Johanna Brady sheriff of Cochise county, that lives in Bisbee AZ. All of these places are listed. I believe the author lives there in the winter and Seattle in the summer. Her other series novel is J P Beumont detective in Seattle. She accurately describes all the places in Seattle also, as I visit there and see the places when visiting my son.

Really nice to put the pictures in my mind when reading the novels. Thanks.
 
John;

I know that I have mentioned this to you before, but my wife and I spent a portion of our honeymoon in Bisbee and your photographs and stories always bring back fond memories and smiles.

Thank you, good sir.
 
This weekend the wife and I made one of our semi-regular trips to Bisbee, Arizona for some relaxation and fun. I thought I'd share some highlights.

First stop along the way was Tombstone. This is the old Cochise County Courthouse; my grandfather served on juries here.

00-TOMBSTONE_COURTHOUSE.jpg


While in Tombstone, I bumped into an old friend in a gun shop there.

01-DUKEME-1.jpg


As you come over the Mule Mountains into Bisbee, there's a viewpoint, where pictures of the town have been made for over 100 years. Here is Bisbee as it appears today; little has changed; most of the buildings are over 100 years old. We stayed in the old Copper Queen hotel, center right with the three high roofs.

022-CENTER.jpg


This is a shot of Main Street in Bisbee. The structure at the left is the old combination Post Office and Library. No one gets mail delivery in Bisbee; the hills are too steep. They all go to the post office where they have mailboxes. My mother, born in Bisbee in1912, studied in the library on the top two floors.

03-MAIN.jpg


Here's another shot of the Post Office/Library from the side:

08-POST_OFC.jpg


As you go up main street and look back, this is the view. At the end of the street is the old (second) Phelps Dodge Mercantile building. It replaced the first structure which burned down in 1938. A young Del Webb built this one in 1939.

15-DOWN_MAIN.jpg


Along the South side of Main street, you can see the bay windows of the Letson Loft Hotel. This block was originally built by a man named Letson around the turn of the 20th Century.

06-LETSON_WINDOWS.jpg


Bisbee has its artsy-craftsy contingent now. This is a shot of a street guy with a guitar; just one of many characters in town.

13-GUITAR.jpg


We experienced a newer eating place, named Screaming Banshee Pizza, not far from the courthouse. Here's a shot of their brick pizza oven. The food is terrific; highly recommended. They make their own sausage and their own meatballs; both are incredibly good.

10-SCREAMING_BANSHEE_OVEN.jpg


The men's bathroom in Screaming Banshee is not for those wishing privacy. Yes, those are cameras on the walls!

11-SCREAMING_BANSHEE_TOILET.jpg


You want 5-star dining? Try the Cafe Roka on Main Street. It's open only on weekends, and reservations are required. Here's a pic of my wife and I and a couple of friends enjoying a meal overlooking Main Street:

22-DINNER.jpg


Does Bisbee have ghosts? OH yeah. This is kind of spooky, but here's the picture that freaked me out a bit. This is a pic of the park area beside the old Phelps Dodge Headquarters, just after dark. I photographed it just because it was nice under the street lights there. Look carefully, and you will see an old man sitting on the park bench on the left.

04-MAN_FROM_THE_PAST.jpg


Here's an enlargement of that photo, showing the old man. Look at the clothes he's wearing:

05-MAN-FROM-THE-PAST.jpg


At any rate, my attention wandered to something else, and when I returned to this scene a few seconds later, the old man was gone - poof. I really didn't notice him in the picture until I got home. Just sayin'.

If you continue up Main Street, you will come to the newer Cochise County Courthouse, built in 1931. A real "art deco" piece of architecture.

17-COURTHOUSE.jpg


Here's the bas relief of two miners on the face of the court house:

19-COURTHOUSE_MINERS.jpg


At the front entrance of the court house stand these two bronze sentinels, each with a sword of justice:

18-COURT_HOUSE_DOORS.jpg


Right next to the court house is the old Gothic-style St. Patrick's catholic church. The last time I was there was in 1960, for my maternal grandmother's funeral service. It's been very nicely cared for over the years.

23-st_patricks.jpg


There's more about ghosts. This is a picture, taken at night, of the Bisbee city park - an area for gatherings and for kids to play ball. What's interesting is that this site was originally the town cemetery, and the corpses in the marked graves were re-interred in 1913 in Greenwood Cemetery, about 3 miles SE of old Bisbee. The problem is that there were many unmarked graves; no one knew where to dig up those remains, so they just graded and cemented over the site. Those remains will probably be there for eternity. The wind whistles through the trees there, and it does sound like wailing at night...

16-GHOST_PARK.jpg


I was heartened to see this. It's the grave of an unknown soldier in Greenwood Cemetery, which by the style of the gravestone, dates from the time of the Spanish-American war. The song "Where have all the flowers gone?" comes to mind.

12-UNKNOWN_SOLDIER.jpg


Up on the hill west of Bisbee is the old Bisbee High School, built in 1913. My mother graduated here in 1929. It's in the Guinness Book of Records. Because it's built on a hill, each of its four floors has an exit at ground level. No longer a high school, it's become an administration building for Cochise County.

21-HIGH_SCHOOL.jpg


I'll leave you with this tidbit. Just below the high school is a house known as the Oliver House. Since it was built at the turn of the 20th Century, there have been 26, count 'em, twenty-six deaths in the house. Today it's a bed and breakfast, but few board there - ghost encounters, and really scary ones, have been very prevalent. In this shot, you can see the light on the front porch after dark. I really didn't want to go much closer.

14-OLIVER_HOUSE.jpg


The old mining town of Bisbee is really worth seeing again and again. Each time I go, I find more interesting things to see and photograph. Hope you've enjoyed this virtual tour!

John

John,

Thanks for providing this very nice post about Bisbee last year.

We just went there the weekend before last and had a very nice time. Stayed at the Letson Loft, had pizza the first night at the Screaming Banshee, and had dinner the the second night at Cafe Roka. We had breakfast one morning at the Bisbee Breakfast Club, their biscuits were huge & delicious. All of those places were great.

Walked around Brewery Gulch, took the Queen mine tour, and pretty much had a nice weekend of R&R.

Your pictures and "on line tours" of places out here in Arizona are the best.

Thanks. It was fun to go see Bisbee again, after 35 years or so since I was there last.

Tom
 
John,

Thanks for providing this very nice post about Bisbee last year.

We just went there the weekend before last and had a very nice time. Stayed at the Letson Loft, had pizza the first night at the Screaming Banshee, and had dinner the the second night at Cafe Roka. We had breakfast one morning at the Bisbee Breakfast Club, their biscuits were huge & delicious. All of those places were great.

Walked around Brewery Gulch, took the Queen mine tour, and pretty much had a nice weekend of R&R.

Your pictures and "on line tours" of places out here in Arizona are the best.

Thanks. It was fun to go see Bisbee again, after 35 years or so since I was there last.

Tom

Glad you enjoyed the visit, Tom. Bisbee is one of our favorite places to kick back, relax and enjoy every now and then. On the next visit we plan to visit the old Greenwood Cemetery in Lowell, and take a picture of Harry Wheeler's pistol at his gravesite. I just posted about the return of his little .32 to Arizona. There's a lot of history in the Mule Mountains!

John
 
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