The Ghost Town of Stanwix, Arizona - The Civil War, Buffalo Bill, & Weird Rooms
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- čas přidán 29. 03. 2022
- The American Civil War largely happened in the South, but few people realized there was a battle only 80 miles from California. Stanwix Station in Arizona, a long forgotten stage station, was the site of the western most battle of the civil war. Later, Stanwix Station became a train stop, a gas station along the highway, then faded away.
Nate Salsbury was the owner and business manager of Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show and supposedly owned a ranch in the area. We visit the building that has been long rumored to be Salsbury's ranch, and where Bill Cody may have even etched his name on a wall.
Photo's of the ranch house from about 10 years ago: www.ghosttownaz.info/abandoned...
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The "Gas Station" was indeed a Stuckey's store. I lived there with my parents and attended Dateland School. The exit is Spot Exit and it has always been known as Spot AZ. The long concrete section at the rear of the ruin of the gas station was supposed to be for a mobile home to be parked so they could put an onsite Assistant Manager, but they never got around to following through. Further to the back is the remnant of a horse corral that was built by my dad and we kept our horses back there. We left the area around 1970 and moved to Wickenburg.
The building was Stuckey's. It was up till around 1987. Stop there to go to the restroom. I was stuck at Stuckey's
That is really cool to know. Wish we still had some Stuckey's in the area.
I wish we had Stuckeys here in California and Arizona. I took a trip to Florida in 2013 and saw a Stuckeys and had to stop.
We bought one of the well-known Stuckey's nut rolls, and somehow one got put in the cupboard at home and forgotten -- for years! Then it ended up in someone's Christmas stocking one year. And that past-due, hard-as-a-rock Stuckey's bar got passed back and forth on birthdays and holidays for the next 20 years! 😅
Stanwix station is long gone. It was on a shelf not very high above the river. Washed away long ago but still a great spot to see far from any pavement.
@@denisehazlett508There was a Stuckeys off I-10 exit 312 East of Benson south side of interstate till late 1980s
That was more than a gas station! That was a Stuckey's restaurant. I actually stopped there many years ago for gas and some snacks. The last Stuckey's I know of in Az was east of Tucson back in the early 90s.
My supposition is that these ruins and some artifacts (including stories) were 'arranged' by the people who ran/worked at the Stuckey's. They were famous for roadside attractions! Signs would begin to advertise some of these places 100 miles away. But there was always a hook to draw people in. I don't remember the specific signs at this particular Stuckey's, but rest assured they had some 'historic' things for people to gawk at! The Stuckey's east of Tucson advertised some kind of mummified cave critter. In the early 90s, most of those signs were gone except for the ones within a few miles of the establishment.
As I recall - There were lots of mobile homes and travel trailers parked there which housed the workers. It was quite an operation in its day!
We drive to Tucson every year or two, just because we like to visit there, and see abandoned buildings and ruins and wonder what they are or were. Thanks for uncovering these little mysteries a bit at a time.
When the video starts you are standing where a Stuckeys used to be. I used to stop there in the late 70s- early 80s.
You have incredible attention to detail, that date was a jaw dropping moment I'm sure. Even if the ranch house wasn't famous I appreciate your tour of it. It is interesting to think who and how they lived in the past. Thanks for the post 😊
Thank you very much!
We were always taught in school that Picacho Peak was the westernmost battle. Maybe the westernmost with casualties.
Love, love, love your channel and it's neat to see how you're able to branch out into other states. As always, wonderful videos, and I enjoy your consistent updates. Hoping your channel continues to grow!!
Thank you so much!
@@SidetrackAdventuresYup, I enjoy the Cali episodes but mostly have been watching the posts from the Arizona desert! 😎✌️
I couldn’t click on this fast enough. It seems like the majority of the attention given the Civil War were the battles in the eastern and western theater and the trans Mississippi. The war in New Mexico and Arizona have been treated like afterthoughts. Thank you for showing these places and bringing attention to them. A few of your commenters have mentioned Picacho Pass. Has Sidetrack Adventures visited the site? It’s gorgeous at this time of year with all the wildflowers in bloom.
We haven't done a video on Pichaco Peak but we have been. Always love seeing it when driving on the 10. It will show up in an upcoming video too.
Hi Steve, I've been enjoying your videos for some time. I wanted to comment on the portion of the wall with the date 1902. I did a comparison between your video shot at 7:56 and the wall photo taken by Ghost Town AZ, and the piece of wall above the 1902 date does have the upper portion of Cody. It is kind of faint, but can be made out. Anyway, great video!
Its pretty interesting. Too bad there's no way to know if it was really him or not.
How strange. I always hear that Picacho Peak was the westernmost battle of the American Civil War. Curious! Funny how even history gets changed. 😂
I always thought the same thing about Picacho Peak and just happened to be looking something up and saw that it wasn't. Picacho Peak has a better PR department I guess.
@@Jislas442 Never made a single claim on our channel.
6:15 Chupacabra feeding area
They have big ones in that part of the country!
They eat mostly jackalope
Thanks for posting your awesome videos and letting my imagination tag along with your great commentary.
Glad you enjoyed it.
You should add Fort Grant, AZ. Known to hold Geranamo(sp) & Billy the kid, who escaped
Are they allowing visits? I thought I read its still an active prison somewhere. I'll look into it, would love to see it.
@@SidetrackAdventures SE AZ. YOU WOULD NEED AN INMATE TO INVITE YOU. THE WARDEN IS SLAMMED IN TATS. STATE GARAGE IS CROOKED AS HELL. LOOK FOR THE BIG TELESCOPE ON THE MT ABOVE & EAST. SORRY FOR SHOUTING
Interesting share, land deeds could show who owned the property.
Always interesting subject matter. I'm not a California fan but old places and events are intriguing no matter what state they're in. Thanks for the history and on-site video.
You find the most interesting places off the beaten track. I looked up the Battle of Stanwix Station to find out more about it. I never knew there were any Confederate soldiers that far west. Really fascinating! Thanks & keep exploring. 👍☮️🌞🌟🗺📍❤️
Texicans.
They wanted California from becoming Yankee.
Loved the music soundtrack on this. I like your taste in music Steve.
Another fine trek ! Thanks so much for your time..
Glad you enjoyed it.
So disheartening to see how much the site has been destroyed by jackholes in just the last ten years.
The location at the start of the video, was a Nickerson Farms Family Restaurant. Search for the one at Aztec, there is an old post card of it, on the web.
Historians typically cite the battle of Glorietta Pass in NM as the last battle. I hadn't heard of this, but it sounds interesting
Glorietta was the Gettysburg or turning point of the war in the west. Then, there was the blowout at Valverde.
we LOVE you. Steve!~ :)
First, I LOVE your video. Good scenery, good locations and good stories. I was lucky enough to see Buffalo Bill's grave in CO. One thing I gotta say tho: the western-most battle of the Civil War really was in California; a Confederate officer started a partisan militia in California in 1864. People died. Harsh times lol
Interesting stuff!
Great videos by the way.
I’ve watched many and though mentioned, I have not seen you have a snake encounter.
Stay safe in the ruins.
Very cool. What a nice place it must've been.
I don't believe that was stanwix station. The Butterfield route was toward Yuma more maybe a few miles in Aztec. You can see the ruins there but it may be grizwells station. The route, from Yuma turned north in Aztec the went nne and practically goes right to stanwix. It bypassed it to go to flapjack ranch
Thank you.
Former Flagstaff resident inPrescott for eight years now. Really enjoy your videos wherever they take us. I hope this suggestion does not offend you, it's certainly not my intent. As a career broadcaster I was told early on to ID myself on camera or mic by saying "I'm ____ _____..." not "This is ___ _____". The reasoning is, were I introducing myself to someone I wouldn't say,
"Hi, this is ___ _____", I'd say "Hi, I'm ___ _____". Please forgive my suggestion which is only well-intended. Incidentally, I have to think you have spent time in radio. Right?
I was always told the western most civil war battle was at Picacho peak near Tucson.
I thought that too until I looked into it. Pichaco Peak is the western most battle anyone was killed at though.
@@SidetrackAdventures Keep up the good work. I really like your videos.
ME TOO ASK WALLACE.
Such a cool place! I just found your channel and I´m loving it! :)
Glad you enjoy it!
Like to have heard more about the battle
ro i have past that gas station so many times going to yuma and never knew this thats bad ass
Thanks!
Thank you. I truly appreciate it.
Western most Civil War battle…”Battle of Picacho Pass”…113 miles east. Between Phoenix and Tucson.
Don't know about California but you are correct about the West most battle. The gas station was still operational in 1979. Remember getting gas there.
Another super cool video! You find the most interesting places. Was it just you out there this time?
My wife and son were there too but they are more camera shy.
What a shame on all the graffiti and vandalism. We last traveled and stopped at those locations a year ago. If you walk behind the 'ranch' house you will find debris and other smaller foundations. Been stopping there for a leg stretch probably the last 10 years. Sad to see the house being destroyed.
Shorter trips were more expensive because they took a seat that could be sold for a portion of a longer trip.
Westernmost skirmish was at New Almaden, California. Captain Ingalls Partisan Rangers vs. Santa Clara County Sheriff's posse. Two Confederates killed, and the rest disbanded and fled.
love the vid - if you haven't already, I think you'd really enjoy the Buffalo Bill Museum and grave outside of Golden Colorado
I planned on going there this summer but we got stuck in traffic do to an accident on the freeway and weren't able to make. Hoping to go back in the summer.
Have you done anything in Sentinel yet. I stopped by there last November and it’s history looks really interesting.
I was all set to tell you about the Battle of San Pasqual in California, but then I looked it up. Lol...wrong war. It's funny how many places in the southwest have the same or similar names. People have mentioned a Picacho Peak near Tucson, but there is also a Picacho Peak in California, north of Yuma (south of the 78), just west of the Colorado River. It's definitely hard to determine the age of old buildings when there is so little left. Cement has been around since the Roman days, and the sun blasts anything made of wood. I've driven many times from San Diego to various places in Arizona, and there's always an old gas station, or lone house built of rocks, standing out in the middle of nowhere. The charm of the desert...
If you think the buildings might have been used after 1903 and those rooms were later added on, that small door might have been used during prohibition to hide some sort of boot legging operation or hide booze coming from Mexico.
I'd be shocked if it wasn't used after 1903.
Do you have the battle reports from the commanding officers for this battle?
0:13 "The engagement at Picacho Peak was the westernmost battle of the American Civil War and also one of the smallest in terms of numbers engaged."
Picacho Peak is east of here. Stanwix Station was the westernmost.
I thought Picacho Peak was the western most battle of the American Civil War? In 1862 Confedearate Soldiers under Cpt. Hunter were expanding out West for dominance. They were occupying Tucson when 2,400 Union Soldiers under Col. Carleton came into Arizona to push out the 120 +/- Confederates. On 15 April 1862 a squad of Union Soldiers under the command of Lt. Barrett crossed paths with a squad of Confederate Rangers/Soldiers under the command of Sgt. Holmes near the Northeast side of Picacho Peak. An Intense one or two hour battle took place. Lt. Barrett was killed. But anyways I am sure there were other battles out West with Union and Confederate Soldiers.
To the best of my knowledge, a fight or skirmish in Military Terms did not constitute a battle. The battle at Picacho Peak was a documented battle with a Confederate Victory. It was of a larger scale and the North and South reenactment groups stage a reenactment there every year.
$8.79 back then would have been about five nights in a small town hotel, or a little less than a week's wages. If that was the price, then the chances are that it was a stop built by the man himself and was a special stop, not part of the regular route, thus justifying the railroad's time to stop long enough for passengers to board/deboard.
👍👍👍👍👍
The bones, sacrifices?
I'm not sure what they were from/for. I hope no sacrifices are taking place there.
2:11 and they payed in gold or silver coins. Or U.S. paper money that by law had to be backed by an equal stored amount of gold and silver. So money has harder to get in those days. In this area and part of the state sites of WW2 military training areas can still be located.
Patton's tank tacks are all over YPG
👍
Please use better contrast characters in you sub titles. Thanks
If I remember correctly, Southern Arizona declared it's allegiance to the confederacy.
Only after Sibley's invasion and Baylor's side trip west from that debacle. However, the Mesilla area has always been Democrat and a refuge for outlaws. The Clantons were partly based there. The elections are often suspect.
if one union soldier was injured then you had casualties here in Stanwix too. A casualty isn't always death. A casualty is injury OR death.
Seems this one was hardly worth the drive - but sorting out the less interesting is also helpful.
This house is not the location of the battle. Look up Stanwix museum to get map location west of Sears Point.
I mention that the battle took place to the north in the video with the drone footage.
Thanks for posting. Have you visited Charleston yet? You take Charleston road from Sierra Vista and go northeast. Just as you past the bridge it should be on your left. If you see the ruins off to the north of the road, that is Millville which is where the residents of Charleston worked. I walked around MV right around 96 before the government intruded and made it one of their sites. Guess to many people pillaged the site. Lol.
Nice channel. I wish we didn’t have to tolerate tiggers and graffiti perps.
Your all about Az!!
But wtf is with San Diego Padres hat!!! Support Az team if your from Az!!!
I'm not from Arizona, I'm from San Diego. I post videos from all over. Have to support my team though!
$241 to go to somewhere that no one really wants to be. Yeah, that's steep.
It's always disgusting when they graffiti an historical place, something that old should be left alone, but they never do! No matter the age, it's very old.
All those animal bones could be prey caught by coyotes or sadly humans who abuse animals.
So sad it's trashed by spray paint. Disgusting how no respect or regard.
I cursed the invention of the spray paint can every time I see how these fools have defaced history!
Why would anyone ever want to live there??? 🤔🫤. Na not me!
Thank you for sharing!!! As for the bones , they used to BBQ a lot
For the railroad.