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Cochise County, Arizona

Cochise County History, Geography, Demographics, Cities and Towns, and Education

 

 

County Seat: Bisbee
Year Organized: 1881
Square Miles: 6,170
Court House:

1415 Melody Lane
Courthouse & Annex
Bisbee, AZ 85603-3037
Phone: (520) 432-9200
Fax: (520) 432-5016

 

Named: Cochise is named after Cochise, the Apache Native American leader

 

State & County QuickFacts: Census Bureau Quick Facts

History

Cochise County, Arizona


Formed apart from Pima County and organized in 1881, and was named for the legendary Apache chief, Cochise, who, with a band of Chiricahuas, made his stronghold on the Dragoon range of mountains, and, like an European robber-baron of the 'Middle Ages, swooped down on those who passed along on the plains below and robbed and murdered without mercy. So bold was he in his depredations, and such terror did he inspire in the breasts of all, that no one finally dared venture within striking distance of the raids of this terrible mountain outlaw. Indeed, it was not until he was starved out of his stronghold and happily hanged, that anything like an effort was made to settle up the county, now called by his name, or to develop its varied and valuable resources.

Little was done in this section of the terrain prior to the Civil War, save a few settlements on the San Pedro and at minor points. Hence the history proper of this county may be said to have begun with the detection of the mines in the Tombstone district in 1878, antedating the organization of the county by the space of three years.

Earlier in 1878, the country beyond the San Pedro was prearranged over to a domination of the Apache outside of the one traveled wagon road to the east. The grassy plains and hills were bare of cattle, and its mineral treasures were but in the imagination of the curious. In February, 1878, Ed Scheffelin, a prospector, who had tramped much of the territory in vain, stumbled across the droppings of what is now known as the Toughnut mine and located several claims upon the ledge. It was about the time that the Comstocks and Bodie were showing signs of collapse, and the miners of the coast flocked by the hundreds to the new discovery. A city of tents sprung up and by June 1879 a stamp mill was in operation. The mines had not been overrated: they were veritable bonanzas. And (luring their season of activity has produced over $25,000,000, about $5,000,000 of which took the form of dividends to the stockholders. Full $7,000.000 more was spent upon hoisting plants and milling machinery. Up to 1885 was the busy time, when the burning of the hoisting works of the Grand Central mine cast a gloom over the camp, and the water gained upon the miners, and the main properties were closed down for a long season of inactivity. The ore on the lower levels is of high grade, and there yet remain vast quantities of it. But to reach the ore it would be necessary to inaugurate a combination pumping plant that would cost in the neighborhood of $1,000,000, and this expense the mine owners are not inclined to put upon themselves until assured of the future of silver. With a combination of capital the mines will yet be cleared of water, and operations resumed on as grand a scale as ever before.

Neighboring Counties:
  • North: Graham County
  • Northeast: Greenlee County
  • East: Hidalgo County, N.M.
  • South: Sonora
  • Southwest: Santa Cruz County
  • West: Pima County
Cities:
  • Benson
  • Bisbee (County Seat)
  • Bonita
  • Bowie
  • Chiricahua National Monument
  • Cochise
  • Copper Queen
  • Dos Cabezas
  • Double Adobe
  • Douglas
  • Dragoon
  • Elfrida
  • Fort Grant
  • Fort Huachuca
  • Fry
  • Gleeson
  • Hereford
  • Hilltop
  • Huachuca City
  • Johnson
  • Kansas Settlement
  • Klondyke
  • Lowell
  • McNeal
  • Miracle Valley
  • Naco
  • Nicksville
  • Palominas
  • Paradise
  • Paul Spur
  • Pearce
  • Pirtleville
  • Pomerene
  • Portal
  • Redington
  • Saint David
  • San Simon
  • Sierra Bonita
  • Sierra Vista
  • South Bisbee
  • Sunizona
  • Sunset
  • Sunset Acres
  • Sunsites
  • Tintown
  • Tombstone
  • Warren
  • Willcox
  • Winwood

 

County Resources:

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Cochise County, Arizona Cochise County, Arizona
 
 
County Resource Guide

State Resource Guide

The history of our nation can be seen as a prolonged struggle to define the relative roles and powers of our governments: federal, state, and local. And the names we’ve given our counties, our most locally based jurisdictions, reflects the “characteristic features of our country!”

But age, size and colorful names of our counties isn’t the only reason to explore counties’ role in American history, or the history of county government itself. In fact, the story of county government reflects the larger meanings of American history.

Today’s counties are the most flexible, locally responsive and creative governments in the US. They are the most diverse, varying in size, population, geography, and governmental structure. In their politics and policies, they express a 1990’s political slogan “Think globally, act locally.”

 

 

 

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