Contact With Arizona

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Robert Glass Cleland
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
18
File Size:
986 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

THE DEATH of William E. Dodge occurred at a time when, all unwittingly, the company in which he had so long been the dominant factor was about to break with its old practices, its old traditions, its old interests, and transfer its major activities three fourths of the way across the continent and engage in an enterprise that differed almost as much from the original Phelps Dodge undertakings as the rough, arid mountains of the new region differed from the green hills and valleys of New England. To understand the effect of this transformation upon the fortunes of Phelps Dodge, one must change the setting of the present narrative from the familiar locale of the Atlantic seaboard to the land of "distance, silence, and solitude," that men called Arizona. In 1880 that Territory was one of the last frontiers of the Old West. To the Spaniards it had been a land of mystery and fable, the limit of the King's settlements, the far edge of the rim of Christendom. Through it Coronado; in a vain effort to find the fabulous Cities of Cibola, had led "the most brilliant company ever assembled in the Indies to go in search of new lands." Below its southern border, Father Kino, the "steel-thewed" Jesuit described by his
Citation

APA: Robert Glass Cleland  (1952)  Contact With Arizona

MLA: Robert Glass Cleland Contact With Arizona. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1952.

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