Hualapai Valley

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Hualapai Valley is a valley in Mohave County, Arizona.[1]

Location[]

Hualapai Valley is an endorheic basin and its watershed terminates in the dry lake or playa called at an elevation of 2762 feet.[2] It is bounded on the east by the Grand Wash Cliffs and Peacock Mountains, on the south by the Hualapai Mountains, on the west by the Cerbat Mountains and the White Hills. It extends from its divide with

 WikiMiniAtlas
35°46′57″N 114°07′53″W / 35.78250°N 114.13139°W / 35.78250; -114.13139 at over 2680 feet, southward to Red Lake, and northward from Kingman and the Hualapai Mountains
 WikiMiniAtlas
35°10′21″N 113°50′17″W / 35.17250°N 113.83806°W / 35.17250; -113.83806
at 4439 feet, to Red Lake.[1]

History[]

From 1857 to 1858 Lieutenant Edward Fitzgerald Beale, built the first federal highway in the southwest, Beale's Wagon Road. Beale's road roughly followed the 35th Parallel railroad route laid out by Lieutenant Amiel Weeks Whipple west across New Mexico Territory through the Flagstaff area and then turned away northward through Peach Springs, , and the Hualapai Valley, making its way through what became Kingman to a crossing on the Colorado River near the location of Fort Mohave.[3]

J. L. Smith, was known as Hualapai Smith for being first to explore the Hualapai Valley of Arizona before any other prospector in the early 1860s.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ a b U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Hualapai Valley
  2. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Red Lake
  3. ^ Beale's Wagon Road from kingmanhistoricdistrict.com accessed July 17, 2015.
  4. ^ The Arizona Sentinel, Saturday, January 22, 1887, p. 3

Coordinates: 35°34′29″N 113°56′10″W / 35.57472°N 113.93611°W / 35.57472; -113.93611

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