Dos Lomitas Ranch Explained

Dos Lomitas Ranch
Nrhp Type:hd
Coordinates:31.8581°N -112.7403°W
Map Width:160
Built:1914
Builder:Robert Louis Gray
Added:May 6, 1994
Refnum:94000426
Nocat:yes

The Dos Lomitas Ranch, also known as the Rattlesnake Ranch, Blankenship Well and the Gray Ranch, was the first of fifteen ranches and line camps in the Gray family cattle business in the Sonoran Desert country north of the US-Mexico border in Arizona. The ranch is now part of Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. The period of significance begins for the district with the purchase of the water rights for the ranch in 1919 and ends with the death with the last of the three Gray sons, Robert, Jr., in 1976, and the subsequent removal of the last of the Gray's cattle from the monument.

The main ranch house, is regarded as a rare example of the earlier "Sonoran traditional ranch style," characterized by thick adobe walls, weather exposed or stuccoed, beamed ceiling, flat roof and floor of packed earth, often laid out in an L-form. An outbuilding is built of railroad ties covered with corrugated roofing.[1] [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dos Lomitas Ranch Main Ranch House. 2008-11-26. List of Classified Structures. National Park Service. 2008-11-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20110521202127/http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=AZ&PARK=ORPI&STRUCTURE=&SORT=&RECORDNO=17. 2011-05-21. dead.
  2. [{{NRHP url|id=94000426}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Dos Lomitas Ranch]. pdf. March 17, 1994 . Lawrence F. Van Horn . National Park Service.