Catch up on recent Western Women columns by Jan Cleere
- Jan Cleere For the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
March 8 marks International Women's Day. Here are 25+ stories ofΒ Arizona women who made their mark in the early history of the territory and the state.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Hart took on the job, in which she was senior nurse, at Flagstaff's hospital for the indigent from 1920-38 while also being mother to 10 children.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
From our Western Women series: Samantha Fallon provided rooms for Wyatt Earp's prisoners because Tombstone didn't have a jail. She also boasted of hosting Ulysses S. Grant II.Β
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
βGood schools do not happen. People working together build them," said Best, 1902-1983, who oversaw schools, many of them one-room schoolhouses in remote spots of northern Arizona.Β
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Asenath Phelps Alkire's life onΒ The Triangle Bar, one of Arizonaβs oldest cattle ranches, began in 1889.Β Β
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
She almost solitarily tended to those needs across hundreds of reservation miles in the 1950s and '60s for theΒ U.S. Indian Service.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Janet Bragg lectured throughout the state and volunteered at the Pima Air and Space Museum.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
As the daughter of a calvary officer, she spent her youth moving from one army post to another with her family.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
First place housed members of Arizona Legislature.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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βIn the heart of the Pinal Mountains in Arizona, and the center of what is known as the Apache country, is a little valley of not more than 15…
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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While in private practice, she represented gangster John Dillinger after his arrest in Tucson.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Maricopa master potter Ida Redbird was born in 1892 on the Gila River Indian Reservation.Β
- By Jan Cleere For the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Longtime Tucson resident often vilified for advocating about birth control.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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Helped raised money to restore the town's stately courthouse, other landmarks.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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School on northwest side is named for longtime educator.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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Columnist moved to Paradise Valley, Arizona, in 1971 after falling in love with the desert climate and amazing sunsets.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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She was found not guilty in 1931 of killing her husband.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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She was successful in passing the bill to have the song βArizonaβ adopted as the state anthem.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
For Star subscribers: Later, she and husband owned successful photography business in Tucson.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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For Star subscribers: Travel party endured several attacks as they crossed Arizona to Fort Yuma.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
"A ranchwoman who writes," Rak penned books in the 1930s and '40s that described the hard work, helped along by humor, of maintaining the 22,000-acre spread she and her husband ran. A UA scholarship in her name still assists students in agriculture and home economics.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
She led both the Tucson Museum of Art and the Arizona Historical Society Museum.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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She was arrested several times in Bisbee.
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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She was the subject of a book, movie called "Chicken Every Sunday."
- Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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She spent years working and advocating for Arizona schools.
- By Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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Katharine Cochranβs account of the incident between the soldiers at Fort Apache and White Mountain Apaches illustrates the dangers military families faced on the frontier.
- By Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
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After her husband died, Sue Summers resumed her career as teacher and taught the children of Florence for many years.
- By Jan Cleere Special to the Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
In the fall of 1910, the Louisa Wetherill and her husband opened the Kayenta Trading Post and lodge in the heart of Monument Valley in Northern Arizona.Β
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For over 40 years, Sarah Gorby cared for the animals of the desert and earned the reputation as a cantankerous individual with a big heart.
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