Aztec Pass

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"Aztec Pass," Western Arizona, 1,330 miles from Missouri River, [ca. 1867–1868]. Photographs of the American West, Boston Public Library
"Aztec Pass," Western Arizona, 1,330 miles from Missouri River, [ca. 1867–1868]. Photographs of the American West, Boston Public Library

Aztec Pass is a gap and a valley between the and Santa Maria Mountains in Yavapai County, Arizona, United States. The summit of the pass is at an elevation of 6,232 feet, at

 WikiMiniAtlas
34°56′12″N 112°58′12″W / 34.93667°N 112.97000°W / 34.93667; -112.97000 the divide between on the west and on the east. The eastern entrance to the pass is at the mouth of the valley of Walnut Creek where it emerges from the hills on the west side of Chino Valley at
 WikiMiniAtlas
34°58′54″N 112°38′04″W / 34.98167°N 112.63444°W / 34.98167; -112.63444
at an elevation of 4,583 feet / 1,397 meters. The western entrance to the pass is at the top of the valley of at the foot of the Juniper Mountains, located at
 WikiMiniAtlas
34°58′30″N 113°02′03″W / 34.97500°N 113.03417°W / 34.97500; -113.03417
.[1]

History[]

Aztec Pass was the route of the wagon toll road, known as the built by in 1864, from his steamboat landing at Hardyville to new Arizona territorial capital of Prescott, through the Juniper and Santa Maria Mountains. The western entrance was the location of a campground known as on Muddy Wash. The eastern entrance of the road into the pass was the location of the 6 miles east of the summit. The toll gate was moved 3 miles eastward after Hardy improved the route through the pass. at

 WikiMiniAtlas
34°55′49″N 112°50′27″W / 34.93028°N 112.84083°W / 34.93028; -112.84083 was built near that second tollgate along Walnut Creek where the road entered the pass from the south from Williamson Valley.[2]

References[]

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