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AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
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Arizona is a name that evokes images in everyone's minds, but where did that name come from? We explore the possible Spanish, Native American, Basque and even Aztec roots for the word and how it's all wrapped up in a 1736 discovery of silver in Mexico. As an added bonus, we also learn what "Connecticut" means.
Arizona’s history wouldn’t be quite the same without the magnificent stage it plays out on. That’s why we need to answer the question of why the state has so many great-looking holes in the ground.
From the outside, Arizona - with its venomous snakes, scorpions and lizards; barbed cactus and spiked trees; and imposing geography - looked primed to kill anyone foolish enough to come close. But that impression doesn't do justice to the complex evolutionary forces that have shaped the state's flora and fauna.
At some point, humans entered North America. And the ones that made Arizona their home produced marvels that still capture the imagination today.
No, this isn't the start of a joke. For Coronado and his expedition, the search for glory and gold in Arizona and New Mexico turned out to be no laughing matter.
Spanish North America was a costly, unproductive project. So you can perhaps forgive King Felipe II for telling a new wave of explorers to keep their hands out of his treasury.
The missions were a key part of Spanish rule along the North American frontier. And no one represents the missions in southern Arizona like math-student-turned-priest Eusebio Kino.
After the Spanish Habsburg dynasty gave way to the Spanish Bourbons, a young Basque man would immigrate to the New World, where he would quickly show he had the chops to rise to the top. It’s time to welcome Juan Bautista de Anza the Elder back to the podcast.
By the mid-1730s the first permanent residents in Arizona had begun to settle along the Santa Cruz River. Too bad what followed was more than 20 years of revolts, raids and one radical change for the Spanish empire.
In which Juan Bautista de Anza and hundreds of colonists went for a walk to San Francisco on a winter’s day. Plus, it turns out it wasn’t all safe and warm in LA.
In the 1770s, the Spanish crown instituted a massive reorganization of how it oversaw the frontier in North America. Meanwhile, Garcés finally realized his dream of making it to the Hopis, only for it not to go as planned.
In 1793, a group of Apaches were at the gates of Tucson. Their arrival represented the new normal for the Pimería Alta, which managed to achieve something it had never known before - peace.
With Spain’s peace by purchase policy now firmly in place, things started changing in future Arizona. The last decades of Spanish rule were marked by the passing of the old guard and the arrival of some measure of prosperity for Tucson and Tubac.
In which we learn that one great lesson of history: You cannot trust Napoleon
Political instability, economic woes, collapsing societal structures, Apache raids, an aggressive neighbor … post-independence Mexico has it all. And that can’t be good for Arizona.
The Beatles were right, life does go on … that is until your supplies dwindle, Apaches begin raiding more extensively and your land is invaded by beaver-hunting Americans.
In the early 1830s, Tucson and Tubac learned that when no one has any supplies, it makes it incredibly hard to protect yourself.
Tensions were tightening all around the Pimería Alta in the late 1830s. And political turmoil on both the local and nation level did nothing to help Arizona, where soldiers were selling weapons to buy food.
Revolting Papagos and Yaquis, continual back-and-forth over the Sonoran governorship, and fighting the Apaches without any supplies … yep, the last few years of Mexican Arizona would not be a fun ride.
In which we bring everyone up to the brink of the Mexican-American War.




