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Tubac's
5 Flags
& 7 Governments
| 1752 |
Spain
establishes El Real Presidio de San Igancio de Tubac. |
| 1821 |
Mexican
independence and Tubac becomes part of the Republic
of Mexico. The fort becomes El Presidio de San Rafael
de Tubac. |
| 1850 |
The
New Mexico Territory is created including Arizona north
of the Gila River. |
| 1853 |
December
30, the Gadsden Treaty is signed with General Antonio
Lopez de Santa Anna, brings Arizona south of the Gila
River into the Union. |
| 1854 |
April
25, the Gadsden Purchase is ratified by the Congress
and signed by President Franklin Pierce. Tubac is now
part of the New Mexico Territory. |
| 1862 |
The
Confederate Territory of Arizona is created and Camp
Tubac is established. |
| 1863 |
President
Abraham Lincoln declares Arizona a Territory of the
United States. |
| 1912 |
Arizona
becomes the forty-eighth state in the union. |
Tubac Firsts:
| 1691 |
Padre
Kino visits Tumacacori, passing through Tubac a year
later on his way to San Xavier del Bac. He is probably
the first European to visit the area. |
| 1721 |
The
name "Tubac" is first recorded in church records
April 13, 1721 by Father Joseph Agustín de Campos. He
records the baptism of a Pima infant. |
| 1752 |
The
Presidio of San Ignacio de Tubac is established and
becomes the first European settlement in Arizona. |
| 1789 |
Toribio
de Otero receives the first Spanish land grant. |
| 1859
|
First
printing press, and first newspaper, The Weekly Arizonian,
is published. |
| 1885 |
Tubac's
first schoolhouse built by T. Lillie Mercer and Sabino
Otero, may be the first in the State. |
| 1959 |
Tubac
Presidio State Historic Park established as the first
state park. |

Artist Dale Nichols painting
in the desert.
|
Tubac's History
Thanks to Mary Bingham at the Tubac Historical
Society
for the content on this page.
Prehistoric: It is believed that the Tubac
area has been inhabited over 11,000 years. First to come were
the Elephant Hunters, who hunted in the dense Arizona forests
and along numerous lakes and streams for the huge elephant-like
mammoth. The Hohokam lived in the area between 300-1500 A.D.,
followed by the Pima and native O'odham, who greeted the Spanish.
Spanish Colonial: Jesuit missionary Father
Francisco Eusebio Kino entered the Santa Cruz Valley in 1691,
converting the natives, building missions, ranches and farms.
By 1732 Tubac was a visita of Mission Guevavi and a mission
farm and ranch by 1738.
The Pima Revolt of 1751, resulting from a half-century of Spanish
domination, caused widespread destruction. In 1752, Spanish
troops defeated an army of 2,000 Piman warriors and established
the Presidio of San Ignacio de Tubac. Garrisoned with fifty
troops and officers, it was commanded by Capt. Juan Thomas de
Belderrain.
Apaches Indians, recent migrants, preyed upon Tubac and the
surrounding area. The Jesuits were expelled from Spanish possessions
in 1767 and replaced by the Franciscans. By 1771, the now-friendly
Pimans, were moved from Guevavi to Mission Tumacacori for easier
protection.
Perhaps Tubac's most famous person was soldier and explorer
Capt. Juan Bautista de Anza II. During his tenure at Tubac (1760-1776),
Anza built the chapel of Santa Gertrudis, the foundations of
which lie beneath today's St. Ann's Church. Anza's second expedition
to the Pacific coast departed from Tubac October 23, 1775. It
included approximately 300 soldiers and colonists, and culminated
with the founding of San Francisco.

Each year Anza's trek is celebrated during
our Anza Days event. Join us Oct 18 & 19, 2004
When the Tubac Presidio was moved to Tucson in 1776, the Tubac
area was left unprotected. Spain reactivated the presidio in
1787, renamed it El Real Presidio de San Rafael, and ironically
recruited a company of Pima Indians who served with distinction.
Mexican Colonial: Independence from Spain
in 1821, brought Tubac under Mexican rule. The U.S.-Mexican
War (1846-1848) had little effect on Tubac until the Treaty
of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Land north of the Gila River was ceded
to the U.S., forming the New Mexico Territory. This did not
include Tubac, but Mexican troops were recalled anyway. Forty-niners
pasting Tubac enroute to California, enticed away even more
residents.
Arizona Territorial: A ghost town when the
U.S. took possession after the Gadsden Purchase of 1853, Tubac
returned to life in 1856. Charles Poston and others established
the Sonora Exploring and Mining Company in the old presidio
ruins. Soon the population topped 1,000; new businesses, regular
Butterfield Stage service, and The Weekly Arizonian newspaper
attracted the elite to Tubac.
By 1860 the mining boom had faded, Civil War recalled Federal
Troops and Apache raiding intensified. August 1, 1861, Confederate
Troops seized Arizona only to lose it to the Union a few months
later. Lincoln declared Arizona a Territory, February 20, 1863.

The Tubac Presidio State Historic Park
offers a Living History program that explores
Tubac's diverse roots.
T. Lillie Mercer, Sabino Otero and others established the Tubac
town site in 1882, built the Tubac School in 1885, and they
organized the Tubac Scouts in 1866 to fight the Apaches. Geronimo
surrender in September, bringing peace to Tubac at long last!
Statehood: On February 14, 1912, Arizona was
admitted to the Union. Homesteaders, granted land during the
Arizona Territorial period, lost it in the Baca Float #3 land
dispute. Evicted from their land by 1917, Tubacans were forced
to relocated to today's "Historic District." St. Ann's
Church was rebuilt for the third time in 1920 and life in Tubac
serene.
In 1948, artist Dale Nichols arrived establishing the Artists
School. Since that time, Tubac has become a center for art
and history. The Tubac Presidio State Historic Park, was
established in 1959 and the Museum in 1964. The first Tubac
Festival of the Arts took place in 1960, with the Tubac Center
of the Arts opening in 1972.
INTERESTING POINTS
Tubac Name Origin: Over the years, there have
been many translations of the name Tubac. They include: "where
the water comes out," "gray adobe house," "black
water," and even "rotten." According to Henry
Dobyns in "Tubac Through Four Centuries.", the original
Piman place name for Tubac may be written Tchoowaka in English.
More recently Dave Shaul, a noted Pima linguist, has determined
that the Pima language does not include the words "tubac"
or "bac." However, it does include: "tu"
= "black"; and "ba'a" = "pool of water";
also the word "tuva" = "where it is low"
or "low area," which is possibly a more accurate translation.
5
Cultures form Tubac
Tubac
has been home to at least five distinct cultures: the Hohokam
between 300 and 1400 AD; the Tohono O'odham ("Desert People"
called Papago by the Spanish) arrived sometime in the 1500's;
the Spaniards arrived with Father Campos in 1726, according
to a baptismal record; Mexico claimed it during the 1821 Mexican
War of Independence; and it was bought by the United States
under the 1853 Gadsden Purchase.
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