Sierra Vista, AZ History

A view of the Lewis Springs train station circa 1909. Posing is Mr. Abijah Smith in front with daughter, wife and friends. This train station was built in circa 1902. Arizona Historical Society photo.

Sunday, August 30, 2020

Military and civilian group pose for a picture at the African-American Recreation Center dedication.

    Photo courtesy Signal Corps., U.S. Army.
Posted by Frank Vega at 10:25 AM No comments:
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Lewis Springs was a resort for all the people.

Lewis Springs was a resort for all the people.
June 20, 1906 Bisbee Daily Review article.

The only standing building at Lewis Springs.

The only standing building at Lewis Springs.
This is the pump house building, it had the large water tank tower on the left. The train depot was directly across the RR tracks. June 2021 image.

October 1955

October 1955
Huachuca Herald ad

January 1959

January 1959
Gateway Times ad

July 1959

July 1959
Gateway Times artcle

August 1961

August 1961
Gateway Times article

The Famous Green Top...

...a page from the book- FORT HUACHUCA The story of a frontier post, by Cornelius C. Smith Jr. :
"Notwithstanding the fact that post officials did everything possible to keep soldiers entertained and happy at Fort Huachuca, soldiers exercised the age-old perogative of looking for diversion and comfort off base. Adjoining Ft. Huachuca was a small clusters of buildings named Fry, described by the Post Commander, Col. Hardy, as a 'small rather sordid town.' As the post grew with the influx of soldiers from other army establishments, so did Fry."
"It became a boom town of tents and ramshackle buildings filled with prostitutes and sleazy bars. Some post officials compared Fry with Tombstone in the latter's heyday, but noted that Fry was probably tougher. The place was a 'natural' for trouble. Brawls were frequent and knifings were not uncommon."
"Post commander Col. Hardy then interested a black entrepreneurial group in Chicago in establishing an amusement center in the small town of Fry. The place was designed by the noted black architect, Paul Williams, of Los Angeles, and because of its domed oval roof (covered with green asphalt roofing) it was dubbed by the soldiers the "Green Top". It opened its doors in March 1943, costing the government about $100,000 for construction. A handsome mural entitled, 'New Peace With Victory' was painted by William E. Scott, a Chicago artist. The mural ran for some distance behind a bar 120 feet long, one of the longest in the country at that time. (After doing more research, this article is not entirely correct. There were 7 murals displayed through out the 6400 sq ft building.) Rumor has it, that World Heavyweight Boxing Champ Joe Louis Barrow was a silent partner at the GT. No hard liquor was served, but the place was generally filled with soldiers drinking beer. Consumption of beer at the 'Green Top' amounted to about two-and-half (train) carloads of draft beer monthly."
"Oddly, a portion of the Green Top was used as living quarters for some 25 black officers and their wives. The space had been designed for use by employees, but so critical was the housing situation that rooms were assigned to division personnel rather than Green Top workers."
Quoting Mr. Jack Sabin, who moved to Sierra Vista in 1954, from an Oral History interview in 2005 says about the Green Top, "Just prior to reopening the Fort in the '50s there, the Green Top Cafe was in there, the Green Top building burnt down. That was the building Joe Lewis supposedly had built for the troops. It was a big building, it was just 1x4s and tarpaper on the outside."
The domed Recreation Center building burnt down on January 7, 1955. Roy Brockbank acquired the property and built a shopping center on the same location.
In the up coming years, The Green Top Apartment building was rebuilt twice, the third time it burned, it was demolished. 1963 McLellan's was built on that same location. Today, that same building at 256 W. Fry Blvd. is vacant.

McLellan's October 1963

McLellan's October 1963
Gateway Times article

October 1955...

October 1955...
Courtesy The Huachuca Herald

October 1959....

October 1959....
The famous Green Top. Courtesy Gateway Times

Before the Sorry Gulch.....

Before the Sorry Gulch.....
.... it was Ceaders Lounge

December 1960

December 1960
Gateway Times ad

July 1959...

July 1959...
Courtesy: Gateway Times

The Champs....

The Champs....
..opening act for Bobby Darin at the El Rancho Roller Rink. Photo submitted by unknown.

The last of the rock houses..

The last of the rock houses..
.. still standiing today,built in the 1930s,on Garden Ave.

December 21, 1957

December 21, 1957
The Smoke Shop fire, was fought by an all-volunteer fire dept. The owners were able to rebuild. Courtesy Henry Hauser Museum.

March 1964

March 1964
The MI was well known for quality entertainment. Audie and the Forget Me Nots, a well known all girl trio favorite of the Nevada circuit. Gateway Times ad.

October 1955

October 1955
The new drive-in theater that recently opened for business in 1955. Courtesy the Huachuca Herald.

September 1958

September 1958

January 1960

January 1960
The "other" Drive-in Theater that offered in car heaters during the cold months. Gateway Times ads.

156 W. Fry Blvd...

156 W. Fry Blvd...
...the newly built Western Furniture Co in 1955.. A few years later, with construction on both sides,it became known as The Modern Shopping Center.Courtesy The Bellantoni Family.

El Rancho Roller Rink

El Rancho Roller Rink
A popular place for everyone in the 50s & 60s. Courtesy the Gateway Times

March 1962

March 1962
Dance Hall fun. Gateway Times ad

September 1960

September 1960
"The Ventures" at ERRR. Gateway Times article.

October 1959

October 1959
Saturday night at ERRR. Ad from Gateway Times.

Check this out-

*Early 1900s Outside of the main gate, to the north and alongside what is now Garden Avenue and Highway 90, there was a row of small wooden shacks (cribs) connected by one roof overhead. The structures were all painted white, and became known what the military referred to as "White City." The homesteaders and "dry landers" referred to the cribs as "sporting houses" and they were off-limits to all newcomers.
* February 1955 Tony Giacoma, manager of Geronimo Theater submitted plans to build a drive-in theater which opened on July 29, 1955.
*1955 The Huachuca Herald printed their first newspaper edition on October 7.
*1956 Stanley Wenc started construction on Stanley's Apts. on Garden and Wilcox. Mr. Wenc was issued the first building permit from the newly incorporated city.
*1956 El Rancho Roller Rink held their Grand Opening in November. Built by Roy Brockbank Enterprise for $200,000.
*1957 Virginia and Joseph Hilb built and operated the Dairy Queen on Fry Blvd..
*1957 The El Coronado Lanes was built by Roy Brockbank Enterprise for $250,000. Grand Opening was held in April.
*1957 Sierra Family Drive-in Theater was built.
*1958 The Gateway Times printed their first edition newspaper on April 24.
*1961 Highway 92, the street which extended east from the
main gate of the fort, and later, as a result of a naming contest, was named Buena Highway was changed in 1961 when councilman Louis Broitman recommended to the city council that the main thoroughfare be re-named Fry Boulevard in honer of Erwin Fry. After a discussion concerning the matter, the council voted in favor of changing the name from Buena
Highway to Fry Boulevard.
*1962 Halloween party was held at the "El Rancho Roller Rink" for the first time.
*1965 The first traffic light was installed on Fry Blvd and North Ave. The cost of a traffic light that year was $12,452, installed. The city's share: $5,820. The state paid the balance.
*1967 The Huachuca Herald merged with (bought out) The Gateway Times.
*1968 As the city grew Sierra Vista had three traffic lights installed: Garden/Fry, North Ave/Fry and Carmichael/Fry.
*Dec. 25,1971 Geronimo Theater's auditorium was gutted by fire, destroying the indoor seating area. (Note: before the auditorium was built, they parked a school bus on the last row, where kids sat in the bus and watched the movie).
MORE TO COME



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