Prescott Valley, Arizona Explained

Official Name:Prescott Valley, Arizona
Settlement Type:Town
Mapsize:250x250px
Pushpin Map:Arizona#USA
Pushpin Label:Prescott Valley
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Arizona
Coordinates:34.61°N -112.3158°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name1:Arizona
Subdivision Name2:Yavapai
Established Title:Incorporated (town)
Established Date:1978
Leader Title:Town Council
Leader Name:Mayor Kell Palguta, Vice Mayor Lori Hunt; Council Members: Brenda Dickinson, Michael Greer, April Hepperle, Lucy Leyva, Kendall Schumacher
Area Total Km2:104.80
Area Total Sq Mi:40.47
Area Land Km2:104.80
Area Land Sq Mi:40.47
Area Water Km2:0.00
Area Water Sq Mi:0.00
Elevation M:1532
Elevation Ft:5026
Population Total:46785
Population As Of:2020
Population Density Km2:446.40
Population Density Sq Mi:1156.18
Population Metro:218,844 (US: 199th)
Postal Code Type:ZIP codes
Postal Code:86312, 86314, 86315
Area Code:928
Website:http://www.prescottvalley-az.gov
Timezone:MST
Utc Offset:-7
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank Info:04-57450
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID
Unit Pref:Imperial
Area Footnotes:[1]

Prescott Valley is a town located in Yavapai County, Arizona, United States, approximately east of Prescott. According to the 2020 United States Census, Prescott Valley has a population of 46,785 residents.[2]

History

Prescott Valley's Fitzmaurice Ruins contain artifacts from the early Mountain Patayan people who inhabited the area some 1,400 years ago.[3] The Walker Party discovered gold along Lynx Creek[4] in 1863. The Lynx Creek placers went on to produce a recorded 29000ozt of gold. Estimates of actual production range up to 80000ozt, which would be worth about $138 million at 2020 prices.[5]

Prescott Valley, formerly known as Lonesome Valley, was settled by ranchers in the 1880s, raising beef to supply the miners and new settlers. The Fain family, pioneer ranchers, still ranch in the valley.

Thomas Gibson Barlow-Massicks arrived in the area in the early 1890s and built the historic "castle" that still stands in Fain Park. Massicks had a hydraulic gold mining operation in Lynx Creek Canyon and built the company mining camp of Massicks, Arizona just east of his Victorian home, the castle. The fireplace with chimney just inside the castle's fence is all that remains of the Massicks store. Massicks accidentally shot himself and died in April 1899 at the age of 37. In the 1930s, there was a gold dredging operation, the Doodle Bug Diggings, farther east in Lynx Creek Canyon.[6]

In the mid-1960s, Prescott Valley Incorporated, a real-estate company from Phoenix, purchased land in an area 10 miles east of Prescott known as Lonesome Valley. In 1966, representatives from Prescott Valley Inc. began traveling to the Midwest to sell home lots. By 1978, more than 1,500 residents were living in the unincorporated area now known as Prescott Valley. In 1978, 80 percent of the voters of Prescott Valley voted for incorporation as a town.[7] The town celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2018.

In 1985, Prescott Valley got its first licensed radio station. The station was the first solar powered FM station in the United States. Today, Arizona's Hometown Radio Group has grown to seven stations throughout Arizona.[8]

Geography

Prescott Valley (locally, PV) is located in central Arizona approximately 85miles north of Phoenix at 5100feet. elevation. PV has good access to Arizona State Route 89, SR-89A and SR-69, connecting to Interstates 17 and 40. Air service is available at Ernest A. Love Field, approximately 8miles northwest.

One of PV's landmarks, Glassford Hill (elevation 6177feet) was an active volcano between 10 and 14 million years ago.[9] Colonel William A. Glassford traveled the area in the 1880s and helped build a system of 27 heliograph stations to monitor the movements of Apache Indians, U.S. military troops and civilians. Glassford Hill was a part of that early communications system.[10]

Demographics

According to 2020 census,[11] there were 46,785 people and 21,276 households residing in the town. The racial makeup of the town was 78.7% non-Hispanic White, 0.9% Black or African American, 1.3% American Indian, 1.6% Asian, 0.2% Pacific Islander and 10.4% from two or more races. 19.3% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

As of 2020, there were 19,357 households and the average household size was 2.37. The median income for a household in the Town was $60,033 and the per capita income for the town was $30,686. About 11.6% of the population were below the poverty line.

Economy

Prescott Valley's economy consists of industrial, manufacturing, retail and service businesses. Many retirees live there due to relatively inexpensive housing and the mild climate.

Top employers

According to the Prescott Valley Economic Development Foundation,[12] the top employers in the town as of April 2022 are:

Employer
  1. of Employees
1Yavapai Regional Medical Center - East Campus756
2Humboldt Unified School District679
3MI Windows and Doors440
4Ace Hardware Retail Support Distribution Center418
5Walmart380
6Town of Prescott Valley273
7Fry's Food Store232
8Mountain Valley Regional Rehabilitation Hospital195
9Home Depot180
10Safeway, Inc.160
11Superior Industries150

Climate

According to the Köppen climate classification, Prescott Valley has a cold semi arid climate (abbreviated BSk).

Culture

Prescott was the location of Arizona's first Elks Lodge (BPOE). In December 1895 a group of enterprising businessmen in Prescott, sturdy products of the early west, chartered the original petition for a dispensation and later established the Prescott Elks Lodge #330. "Mother Lodge of Arizona" The Prescott Elks Opera House was built by the lodge in 1905. The Prescott Elks Lodge is now located in Prescott Valley and has served the community for more than 116 years.

Attractions

Prescott Valley is located within 10 minutes of the Prescott National Forest, with lakes, fishing, hiking and camping. The Entertainment District is located downtown and offers a variety of restaurants, a 6,000-seat events center,[13] a multi-screen movie theater, and retail shops. There are 27 parks. Fain Park preserves remnants of early 20th century gold mining along Lynx Creek.[14] [15]

Sports

The Northern Arizona Suns, a minor league basketball team in the NBA G League, played in the Findlay Toyota Center from 2016 to 2020.

The Arizona Sundogs minor professional ice hockey team called Prescott Valley its home from 2006 to 2014. The team won the Central Hockey League championship in 2008.

The Arizona Adrenaline indoor football team also played two seasons in the Tim's Toyota Center (now the Findlay Toyota Center.) A new team, the Northern Arizona Wranglers of the Indoor Football League, began play in 2021 and won the league's National Championship in 2022.

Prescott Valley's Mountain Valley Splash is an outdoor community pool that seasonally offers children's swim lessons, water aerobics, school swim team practices, and recreational swim. The pool features a splash pad, fountains and a water slide.

Parks and trails

Prescott Valley has over 300 acres of community parks and trails [16] that are open to the public. Parks range from athletic fields to playgrounds, walking paths, and waterways. The trails offer a variety of terrain and views depending on time of year/seasons.

Fain Park

The Fain family, who were one of the original pioneer families to settle in Prescott Valley, donated the land in which Fain Park is located to the citizens of Prescott Valley. The Fain Lake is located within the park. Also located in the park is the Victorian British Manor known as “The Castle”. The structure was built in 1891, by English entrepreneur Thomas Gibson Barlow-Massicks. Barlow-Massicks established a gold mining operation and some of the equipment which he used is on display there. The Chapel of the Valley opened in 2002. The stained glass windows of the chapel, made in 1906 in Germany, once belonged to the Mercy Hospital which burned to the ground in 1940. Henry Lovell Brooks (1912–2006), an educator and organist for the First Congregational Church in Prescott, helped build the Chapel of the Valley and donated the windows and a 1877 Estey Reed Pipe Organ. Fain Park was listed in the National Register of Historic Places, as part of the Lynx Creek District, on August 31, 1978, reference # 78000571. Fain Park is located at south of Arizona State Route 69 and east of Stoneridge Drive.[17]

Pictured are the following:

Transportation

There are three main thoroughfares in and around Prescott Valley which include Arizona State Route 89A, Arizona State Route 69 and Fain Road. Arizona State Route 89A is a four lane divided highway that connects Prescott Valley to northern Prescott and Ernest A. Love Field Airport to the west and to the east Jerome, Cottonwood and Sedona. Arizona State Route 69 is a six lane roadway that connects Prescott Valley to downtown Prescott and Interstate 17. Fain Road is a four lane limited access freeway that links Arizona State Route 89A and Arizona State Route 69 in the east. In 2006 the town of Prescott Valley proposed the Great western Corridor from Arizona State Route 89A to Outer Loop road in Chino Valley, Arizona.[18]

Created in 2022, the YavaLine Regional Transit System (“YAV”) is the first-ever transit service in the Prescott Valley area. The YAV is starting with a shared ride, on-demand service.[19]

Notable people

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files. United States Census Bureau. October 29, 2021.
  2. Web site: Population and Housing Unit Estimates. May 21, 2020.
  3. Web site: Prescott History . townsquarepublications.com.
  4. Lynx Creek https://highlandscenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Highlands-Trail-Geology-Map.pdf
  5. Web site: USD Gold Price Charts & Historical Data. APMEX. August 30, 2019.
  6. Web site: Sharlot Hall Museum. August 30, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20110727033945/http://www.sharlot.org/archives/history/dayspast/days_show.pl?name=1997_10_12&h=%7CMassicks%7C. July 27, 2011. dead.
  7. Jean Cross, 2009, Images of America: Prescott Valley, Arcadia Publishing.
  8. Web site: Arizona's Hometown Radio.
  9. Web site: About Prescott Valley . https://web.archive.org/web/20150706003443/http://www.pvaz.net/279/History . January 4, 2018 . July 6, 2015 . live . Town of Prescott Valley.
  10. Web site: Prescott Valley Historical Society .
  11. Web site: U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Prescott Valley town, Arizona. www.census.gov. August 30, 2019.
  12. Web site: About Prescott Valley . June 14, 2020.
  13. Web site: Prescott Valley Event Center . Prescott Valley Event Center . November 30, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141011153743/http://prescottvalleyeventcenter.com/ . live . October 11, 2014.
  14. Web site: Prescott . nationalforests.org.
  15. News: Great Reasons to Move to Prescott, AZ . February 28, 2017 . prescottenews.
  16. Web site: Parks Prescott Valley, AZ - Official Website . December 19, 2022 . www.prescottvalley-az.gov.
  17. Web site: Fain Park. August 30, 2019.
  18. Web site: Archived copy . May 2, 2017 . April 7, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170407172527/http://www.pvaz.net/DocumentCenter/Home/View/656 . dead .
  19. Web site: YavaLine Regional Transit System Prescott Valley, AZ - Official Website . December 9, 2022 . www.prescottvalley-az.gov.
  20. Web site: Orchard Ranch history. August 30, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20100523023535/http://www.orchardrvresort.com/About%20Us/historical.htm. May 23, 2010. dead.