Matching Items (5)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

41251-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsPage, John H. (Author)
Created1910-08-09
Description

Letter from John H. Page regarding his right to build a railway between Grand Canyon Station and the Canyon Copper Company's mines and hotel.

41253-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsPage, John H. (Author)
Created1917-12-19
Description

Letter from John H. Page to Carl T. Hayden regarding his company's rights to build a railway if they choose to.

41256-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsPage, John H. (Author)
Created1917-11-21
Description

Letter from John Page to Carl T. Hayden regarding a conversation conducted at Hotel Adams in Phoenix. Page states his concern over the national park bill in reference to his mining company.

41268-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsPage, John H. (Author)
Created1917-02-03
Description

Letter from John Page to Carl Hayden concerning the future of property ownership within the proposed boundaries of the national park.

42750-Thumbnail Image.png
Created2001-10
Description

If one species had to be chosen to preserve and restore, perhaps it should be cottonwood. Cottonwood-willow forests, where they exist and are healthy, indicated the presence of a viable riparian area, which is in turn the key to conserving great proportions of our native species. A reflection of the

If one species had to be chosen to preserve and restore, perhaps it should be cottonwood. Cottonwood-willow forests, where they exist and are healthy, indicated the presence of a viable riparian area, which is in turn the key to conserving great proportions of our native species. A reflection of the dire status of our riparian systems is that the Sonoran cottonwood-willow and Sonoran mesquite-cottonwood forests.