Mohave County Arizona (Page 2) has 27 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 3 places of National significance and 3 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Old Trails Bridge, Pipe Spring National Monument, Pipe Spring National Monument Historic District (Boundary Increase), Mohave County Courthouse and Jail and Saint John's Methodist Episcopal Church.
Prehistoric cultural affiliation(s) include Patayan/Cerbat Branch, Late Archaic and Walapai (Hualapai) dating back to 1499 BC.
Several famous people are associated with these Mohave County historic places including Charles Ziemer and Ebenezer Williams.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Mohave County places including S.A. Sourwine, John R. Young, Dr. James Whitmore, Elijah & Elisha Averett, Arizona Highway Dept., Lescher & Kibbey, J.M. Wheeler, James J. Burke, Cecil Davis and J.B. Lammers. Prominent architectural styles found in Mohave Country are Colonial Revival, Bungalow/Craftsman and Classical Revival.
Historic Significance:
Event
Area of Significance:
Communications, Social History, Exploration/Settlement, Other
Period of Significance:
1875-1899, 1850-1874
Historic Function:
Agriculture/Subsistence, Defense, Domestic, Industry/Processing/Extraction, Religion
Historic Sub-function:
Animal Facility, Church Related Residence, Communications Facility, Fortification, Military Facility, Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Monument/Marker, Museum
Water dictates survival here. Out in the arid Arizona Strip, a single bubbling spring drew Mormon pioneers to build Winsor Castle in 1870, a fortified stone ranch house that doubled as a tithing depot for church-owned cattle. Federal officials originally drew tight lines around just these old buildings. That was a mistake. The 2000 boundary increase fixed this by swallowing up hundreds of surrounding acres, pulling in crucial archaeological footprints of the Kaibab Paiutes and the old wagon trails that actually made the fort useful. It finally connected the fort to its raw environment.
Ranchers and native Paiutes fought over every gallon of that water for decades. Blood spilled. Later, during the Great Depression, the Civilian Conservation Corps moved in, pitching tents and building sandstone walls, ditches, and pathways that redefined the historic area. This boundary expansion specifically protects these later layers of history. Not just the pioneer myth. By adding this extra acreage, the register now acknowledges the complex reality of a dusty outpost where federal reservation lands, cattle baron politics, and indigenous survival collided over a few trickles of water.