Location

Fort Verde Locator Map

Elevation 3,260 feet

Contact the Park:
(928) 567-3275
Fort Verde SHP
P.O. Box 397
Camp Verde, AZ 86322

Facilities

Visitor Center Restrooms Gift Shop Museum Exhibits Picnic Areas/Shelters

Nearest Services: 1 mile

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511 Speed Code

511 logo

Park's Speed Code: 4213#

Fees

Park Entrance Fees:
Adult (14+): $3.00
Youth (7–13): $1.00
Child (0–6): FREE

Fort Verde State Historic Park

This Park is Scheduled to Close March 29, 2010

At the Janurary 15, 2010 meeting, the Arizona State Parks Board voted to keep nine parks open and close the remaining thirteen State Parks in a phased series of closures starting February 22, 2010, due to six different State Parks funds being swept of $8.6 million. In addition, four parks remain closed due to previous budget reductions. Learn More (Learn More)


5 Day ScheduleFive Day Schedule: This park is closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. The park will be open from 9 am to 5 pm on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, & Mondays. Read Press Release about this Park's five day schedule.


Buffalo SoldiersFeb. 13 & 14: Buffalo Soldiers at Fort Verde

Download Event Information (PDF Document 2.1 MB PDF)

Join the troops of the Tenth Cavalry Association, Buffalo Soldiers, as they provide living history presentations at Fort Verde State Historic Park. The event will take place Saturday, February 13, 2010 from 8 am to 5 pm and on Sunday, February 14, 2010 from 8 am to noon.

Pecan PieBring your special someone or all of your loved ones to Fort Verde State Historic Park and learn about history with the Buffalo Soldiers, and on Sunday (in conjunction with the Town of Camp Verde's Wine, Pecan and Antique Festival External Link), bring a home-made Pecan pie and enter it into the pie baking contest and the best tasting pie will win a $50 gift basket with books and other items from the Fort bookstore. (Guest Judge: Camp Verde Mayor Bob Burnside) There will also be three-legged and potato sack races in the afternoon. On Sunday watch a vintage baseball game with the Fort Verde Excelsiors taking on the Glendale Gophers.

The Buffalo Soldiers will be dressed in period replica uniforms and equipment issued by the United States Army during the 1870s Indian War period. Members of this troop have appeared in feature films, commercials, historical videos, parades and reenactments. The first Buffalo Soldiers troop serving at Fort Verde was Troop I, 10th Cavalry of the Buffalo Soldiers. It was organized in 1866 and came to Fort Verde in 1885, following a distinguished record of military service during the Indian Wars of the Western frontier.

The Wine, Pecan and Antique Festival will be held downtown in the community center during Valentine's Day weekend. It will feature wines from the Verde Valley and Arizona, pecan pies and desserts, booths loaded with antiques and collectibles, agricultural demonstrations, a car show, art, vendors, music, a nut contest, and more.

Daily Schedule

Saturday, February 13th, 2010
8:30 am - Flag ceremony
9:00 am - Cavalry Drill and Show of Horsemanship
10:30 am - Historic Interpretive Presentation
Noon - Lunch break
1:00 pm Cavalry Drill and Show of Horsemanship
1:30 pm - Historic Interpretive Presentation
3:00 pm - Military Uniforms and Fashion show
3:30 pm - Cavalry Drill and Show of Horsemanship
4:30 pm - Flag retreat ceremony
Sundown chats and tales

Sunday, February 14th, 2010
8:30 am - Flag ceremony
9:00 am - Period Church Service
10:00 am - Cavalry Drill and Show of Horsemanship
10:30 am - Historic Interpretive Presentation
Noon - Pecan Pie Judging contest - Mayor Burnside, Buffalo Soldiers
1:00 pm - Vintage Baseball: Glendale Gophers vs. Fort Verde Excelsiors
1:00-3:00 - Games for kids - Relay races, etc
3:30 pm - Flag Retreat Ceremony

Learn more about Buffalo Soldiers in our Feature Story and photo gallery and Read Press Release


 
Introductory Park Video

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About the Park

Fort Verde Days
Fort Verde Days, held annually, gives visitors a chance to experience life at the historic fort in the 1890s.

Experience life through the eyes of a frontier soldier at Fort Verde State Historic Park. The fort was a base for General Crook’s U.S. Army scouts and soldiers in the 1870s and 1880s. From 1865 – 1891 Camp Lincoln, Camp Verde and Fort Verde were home to officers, doctors, families, enlisted men, and scouts. The park is the best-preserved example of an Indian Wars period fort in Arizona. Several of the original buildings still stand and living history programs are scheduled periodically, giving visitors a glimpse into Arizona’s history.

Today visitors can experience three historic house museums, all furnished in the 1880s period, that are listed on the National and State Register of Historic Places. The former Administration building houses the Visitor Center with interpretive exhibits, period artifacts from military life, and history on the Indian Scouts and Indian Wars era. The park offers picnic tables, restrooms, RV and tour bus parking, and is ADA Accessible.

Upcoming Events

February 13–14, 2010 – Buffalo Soldiers
The Buffalo Soldiers will be at Fort Verde to celebrate African American Heritage Month, in conjunction with the Town's Pecan and Wine Festival. They will conduct living history presentations, as well as riding demonstrations.

April 10–11, 2010 – History of the Soldier
A timeline of our military history from the Revolutionary War to present day. Presentations, mock battles, music and stage shows, military drills, fashions show, a historic baseball game and a period church service Sunday morning. The camps, horses, cannons and soldiers will all be on the parade field for this annual event.

History

The New Territory

In 1863 the New Mexico territory was divided, creating the Arizona Territory. The new territorial Capitol was established at Prescott in 1864.

As Anglo settlers entered the rich bottom lands near the Verde River at West Clear Creek, they came into conflict with the Tonto-Apache and Yavapai Indians who were already established in the area. Farms were raided by the Indians for crops and livestock. The settlers fought back bringing about an escalation of hostilities. In May 1865, the settlers demanded military protection.

The Army Arrives

The early volunteer military units were composed of almost entirely Mexican recruits. Often marching barefoot and on half rations, they were known as fierce fighters.

In August 1865 they established a tent camp overlooking the farms at West Clear Creek. Regular U.S. Army troops relieved the Arizona Volunteers in September 1866. Camp Lincoln, the next post, was established December 1865, and was located one mile north of the present site and was used from 1866 to 1871. In 1868 the name was changed to Camp Verde.

Malaria plagued the camp so much that in 1870, the Army made the decision to move again. Construction started at the present post in 1871. All the buildings were completed by 1873. There were twenty-two buildings arranged around a parade ground. Designed to house two companies of cavalry and two of infantry, it averaged only one company of each.

Camp Verde served as a staging base for military operations in the surrounding countryside. Infantry troops built a wagon road west to Fort Whipple near Prescott and east to Fort Apache. With its construction the movement of troops and supplies improved along the Mogollon Rim (pronounced muggy-own). Later it came to be called the Crook Road after General George Crook.

The Rio Verde Reservation

Federal Indian Policy centered on creating reservations as a way of controlling the Indians. The Rio Verde Reservation was established in 1873 with headquarters near present day Cottonwood. Between 1873 and 1875, nearly 1500 Indians from various bands were placed on the 800 square mile reservation. With the Army's help, Indians built an irrigation ditch and had 56 acres under cultivation in 1874.

In 1875, Congress, acting on demands from businessmen in Tucson, ordered the entire population uprooted and moved to the San Carlos Agency near modern day Globe. In cold late February, the 180-mile ten-day trek to the reservation began. It resulted in the death or disappearance of about 100 Indians, from exposure, insufficient food, and a factional fight. The former reservation was opened to miners and settlers in 1877.

Containment on Reservations

After 1875, the Army's main duty was to put and keep Indians on the San Carlos and Fort Apache reservations. The bands were spread out and mobile, and each group had their own chief making it difficult to negotiate peace. The bands were forced together on the reservation, despite tribal rivalries. Renegades frequently left the reservation. They were hunted down by patrols relying on Indian scouts led by Al Sieber.

Cibicue and Big Dry Wash

In August 1881, a nervous Indian Agent ordered the Army to arrest Nakai de Klinni, a prominent Apache medicine man. During a tense confrontation at Cibicue on the White Mountain Reservation someone fired a shot. A firefight erupted leaving six soldiers and the Apache medicine man dead. Through the winter both sides tried to preserve a shaky peace. Finally on July 6, 1882 a band of some 50 warriors jumped the reservation and began raiding throughout the Rim country. The Army, in a textbook example of concentration of force, located the renegades at Big Dry Wash, 37 miles east of Fort Verde. The resulting battle on July 17, 1882 was the last major action of the northern Apache Wars. The Big Dry Wash fight resulted in the death or return to reservations of all the renegades involved.

The Final Days

Camp Verde had been renamed Fort Verde in 1879 to signify permanence, but with the end of raids by 1882, the Post became less important. It was abandoned in 1891 to the Department of the Interior, which sold it at public auction in 1899.

Army Doctors

The quality of Army doctors varied, some had almost no formal training, others were medical school graduates. With few effective medicines their job was a difficult one. All together, 27 doctors served at Ft.Verde. Among the more notable were Dr. Edward Palmer, Dr. Elliot Coues, and Dr. Edgar Mearns.

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