![]() |
|
|---|
|
|
Maricopa County, Arizona |
|
|---|---|---|
This county website needs a dedicated
host to make this site the best that it
can be! If you think that you may
be interested in volunteering to host
a county or state please view our Volunteer Information page and email
Kim.
(A desire to transcribe
data and the know-how to make a basic webpage
is required)
Join our mailing
lists for researchers looking
to connect and share information.
You never
know who you might meet and what family data they may share with you --
it could start a whole new branch of the
family!
We also use the mailing lists to announce our website updates.
Remember to look around at the other states and consider donating your source information -- every little bit helps someone.
Please contact Kim if you have any questions or comments.
|
MARICOPA COUNTY Maricopa County, named after the Maricopa Tribe, was created from portions of Pima and Yavapai counties in 1871. It was the fifth county formed in Arizona, and eventually portions were used to create Gila and Pinal counties. In the late 19th century, citizens living far south of Prescott, the territorial capital and site of the Territorial Legislature, petitioned for a more local seat of government. Residents of the Salt River Valley and the Gila River area wanted a new county in their respective locations. After weighing both proposals, the Legislature agreed with the Salt River Valley group and created Maricopa County. In 1889, Phoenix became the final site of the territorial capital and retains its status as Arizona’s capital city. More than half of the state’s population resides in Maricopa County, which includes the cities of Phoenix, Mesa, Glendale, Scottsdale, Tempe, Chandler, Peoria, and Gilbert. This metropolitan area is the state’s major center of political and economic activity. In addition to housing the state capital, the county is home to a growing high-tech industry; manufacturing and agricultural industries; 15 institutions of higher learning, including Arizona State University and the Thunderbird Garvin School of International Management; various cultural attractions; major league professional basketball (Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury), football (Arizona Cardinals), hockey (Phoenix Coyotes) and baseball’s 2001 World Champion Arizona Diamondbacks; and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, fifth busiest in the world with over 1,300 daily flights. Today Maricopa County measures 9,222 square miles, 98 square miles of which is water. Twenty-nine percent of this area is owned individually or by corporation, and 28 percent is owned by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The U.S. Forest Service and the State of Arizona each control 11 percent of the county; an additional 16 percent is owned publicly. Almost 5 percent is Indian reservation land. Parts of 11 jurisdictions in western Maricopa County are designated Enterprise Zones as well as central and southern areas in the City of Phoenix. The cities of Tempe, Chandler and Mesa each have an Enterprise Zone in the central part of the city. |




|
Join our Genealogy Trails
Southwest States N O T I C E : To join our |
Neighboring
|
|---|
Return to : Arizona Genealogy Trails
©2006 Genealogy
Trails
Copyright includes all contents of this site.
Submitters retain all copyright, along with the hosts