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Town Of Miami

500 West Sullivan Street
928-473-4403

History

Miami is located in the mountains of south central Arizona, approximately 75 miles east of Phoenix and 110 miles north of Tucson. Humans have occupied the Pinal Creek watershed, in which the present day Miami is located, for hundreds of years. Sometime around 500A.D, Hohokam Indians began visiting the Pinal Creek region on a seasonal basis, passing through the area on trading expeditions or hunting for food and looking for turquoise. Over the next 400 to 600 years, they established permanent settlements along Pinal Creek and began cultivating crops in irrigated fields. From roughly 1200 to 1450 the Salado people occupied the area and Apaches arrived sometime around 1500. In the 1860's the first non-Indians penetrated in the Pinal Creek region with expeditions organized by Anglo settlers and soldiers for the purpose of recovering stolen livestock from Apache raiders or conducting warfare against the Apaches.

Silver mining started in the surrounding areas in the 1870's and interest in mining gold and silver was far greater than any other kinds of metal, which included copper. It was not until the early 1880's when the price of silver dropped and the price of copper began to rise did the miners began to take an interest in copper deposits the had previously encountered. Copper ore with content of 5% to over 50% was being mined from copper vain and pockets in area surrounding Globe (7 miles east of Miami) but not in the Miami area. The large deposits in the Miami Wash - Pinto Creek area were a type known as porphyry deposits, a term that refers to bodies of ore in which the recoverable mineral (copper) is disseminated throughout the rock mass rather than concentrated vein or pockets. The porphyry deposit ore typically has only 2% to 3% copper content which was considered unprofitable to mine. Toward the end of the century as the countries as the reserves of higher grade ore (5% or high) dwindled while the demand for copper increased, the copper industry took new interest in porphyry deposits. New processes were developed to recover copper from porphyry ore, which made the very large ore deposits in the Miami region profitable to mine. In 1906, the Miami Copper Company began working the claims in the Miami area and the demand for men to work in the mines increased. Most of the men traveled to work on foot (no public transportation), few miners could afford to keep their horses and these new mines were located 7 miles west of Globe. These factors of the development of new large scale copper mines, and the need to provide miners with convent housing, shopping and places of amusement led to the founding of Miami Arizona.

Miami was founded in 1907 when it was first developed by the Miami Land and Improvement Company when they purchased a tract of land on the upper end of Miami Flats (where the down-town present day Miami is located). In 1908 Cleve Van Dyke purchased the tract from the Miami Land and Improvement Company and also began purchasing adjacent tracts of land. It was not until two days after the first train arrived on the newly constructed railroad, 4th of October 1909 did the sale (and renting) of lots begin. At this point, the town was little more than an idea on paper. Only the roughest of streets had been graded, and no utilities of any kind were available. According to the ARIZONA SILVER BELT, 800 people were living in Miami at the beginning of 1910, an impressive number for a town that was only three months old. By the time a federal census taker arrived for the 1910 canvass, there were 1,390 residents in the Miami census precinct.

Post Office was established on September 25, 1908 and was moved from the Miami Copper Company's residential camp into the new town site in December 1909. For years the Post Office building was on wheels and it was place on lots for sale. As these lots sold, the post office would be moved to another unsold lot. At times, the post office would be in a new location monthly and sometimes even weekly.

The first concrete building erected in Miami was build by J. H. Fitzpatrick at the corner of Keystone Ave and Gibson in the fall of 1909 and is today's oldest building in town. This was a handsome two-story saloon and boarding house that was sometimes called the Mission.