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George J. Roskruge

George James Roskruge (April 10, 1845[a] – July 27, 1928) was the surveyor general of Arizona Territory from 1896 to 1897. Born in England, he emigrated to the United States in his mid-20s and became a naturalized citizen in 1876.[2] He spent most of his life in Tucson, Arizona, where he held many prominent positions and is considered a city pioneer. He was an expert rifleman and is called the "father of Masonry" in Arizona.

George J. Roskruge
United States Surveyor General of the Arizona Territory
In office
1896–1897
Chief clerk of the United States Surveyor General of the Arizona Territory
In office
1893–1896
City engineer of Tucson, Arizona
In office
1896–1894
County surveyor of Pima County
In office
1894–1890
United States deputy land and mineral surveyor
In office
1880–1889
Chief draftsman for the Surveyor General of Arizona
In office
1874–1889
Assistant county recorder for Yavapai County
In office
1873–1874
Member or President of the Tucson Board of education
In office
1881 – 1914 (not continuous)
Member of the Arizona Board of Regents
In office
1887 – 1911 (not continuous)
Personal details
Born(1845-04-10)April 10, 1845
near Helston, Cornwall, England
DiedJuly 27, 1928(1928-07-27) (aged 83)
Resting placeMasonic Cemetery, Tucson
Affiliations
  • President, Association of Civil Engineers of Arizona
  • Member, American Society of Irrigation Engineers
  • VP (1888) and P (1889), Tucson Building and Loan Association
  • President of the Tucson Rifle Club
Namesakes
  • Roskruge Mountains
  • Roskruge School
  • Roskruge Hotel

Early life edit

Roskruge was born on April 10, 1845,[a] near Helston, Cornwall, England, where he began working at age 15 as a messenger for a law office. Beginning April 12, 1860, he served for 10 years in the Duke of Cornwall's rifle volunteers, where he became known as a "remarkably accurate rifle shot" and for two years was the champion rifle shot of his company.[3]

He emigrated to the United States in 1870, arriving in New York and then traveling for five days with only cheese, crackers, and bread to eat,[4] to Denver, Colorado, where he lived and worked for two years. In May 1872, he left for the Arizona Territory in a party of 17. The journey included shortages of food and water, and encounters with hostile Apache Indians. After camping at Volunteer Springs (near present-day Bellemont, Arizona), he walked three and one-half days alone from there to Prescott in June 1872, as his companions were too sick and weak to continue.[4][2][b][c] He soon found work as a cook and packer for Omar H. Case, Deputy Surveyor General, and began assisting in surveying work as a chainman. In 1873, he was appointed assistant county recorder for Yavapai County.[5]

Surveyor edit

 
Roskruge with surveying transit, undated

He relocated to Tucson, arriving on July 22, 1874[1][5] where he prepared maps and field notes and then became chief draftsman for John Wasson, Surveyor General of Arizona.[3]

He was in that position until appointed a United States deputy land and mineral surveyor in 1880. Subsequently, he was the county surveyor of Pima County for four years and city engineer of Tucson for three years. Roskruge became the chief clerk of the Surveyor General of the United States on July 1, 1893, and Surveyor General of Arizona from 1896 to 1897 as appointed by President Grover Cleveland.[4] It was his belief that he was the only person without a college education to hold this position.[5]

Roskruge produced a hand-drawn detailed topographical map of Pima County, officially adopted on July 22, 1883.[d] The map measured 4 by 8 feet (1.2 m × 2.4 m) and showed "every stream, arroya, road, town, river, and mountain range" in the county. The map was the reference for later maps, and was characterized decades later as "a remarkable piece of work". Forty-seven years later, it was framed under glass and hung in the office of the current county engineer.[7]

Roskruge was appointed superintendent of irrigating ditches for the Papago Indian Reservation in San Xavier by President Chester Arthur, and later appointed special inspector of public surveys by President Cleveland.[3]

Roskruge laid out the grid pattern for the streets of Tucson in 1902.[8]

Places named edit

Roskruge named Kitt Peak, the highest point in the Quinlan Mountains of southern Arizona and home of the Kitt Peak National Observatory, for his sister, Mary Phillippa Roskruge Kitt.[e][f][9]

He named the Roskruge Mountains, a 22-mile (35 km)-long range approximately 20 miles (32 km) west of Tucson, after himself.[11]

Private positions edit

He was vice-president (1888) and president (1889) of the Tucson Building and Loan Association.[4]

In 1891, Roskruge became chairman of the newly formed the Santa Cruz Water Storage Company. Selim M. Franklin, a former Territorial Representative credited with securing the University of Arizona for Tucson was the counsel and William "Billy" Breakenridge, who later popularized the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral was chief engineer.[12] The company planned to construct a series of dams, reservoirs, and a 70-mile (110 km) canal to divert the Santa Cruz River to irrigate 75,000 to 300,000 acres (30,000 to 121,000 ha)[13] of land and add "millions to the wealth of Pima County." Due to financial irregularities and the financial panic of 1893–1897, the canal was not built.[12]

Educational positions edit

Roskruge was a trustee of the first school built in Tucson, in 1874. This building was designed by Roskruge and named after him.[5]

He was a member and President of the Tucson Board of education several times between 1881 and 1914.[3] He resigned once after the "great teacher scandal of 1906", an incident where five female school teachers were caught smoking cigarettes and drinking wine in the presence of men in Sabino Canyon.[14] Roskruge felt that the teachers' action violated their "duty to provide mental and moral guidance for their students at all times". He called for either their resignation or their suspension, but the other board members did not support him, so Roskruge resigned from the board in protest. He was re-elected to the board a few years later.[14]

He was a member of the Arizona Board of Regents (1887–1889) during the administration of Governor Zulick, and again (1903–1911) under Governors Brodie, Kibbey, and Sloan.[3][5]

Professional associations edit

In 1897, he was the first elected president of the Association of Civil Engineers of Arizona and was a member of the American Society of Irrigation Engineers.[3]

He was a member of the Archaeological Association of Arizona and investigated the state's pre-historic culture. He made many photographs of the Tumacacori mission in 1889, later donated to the Arizona Historical Society.[5]

Masonry edit

 
Tucson Masonic Lodge officers, c. 1881 (Roskruge on right)

Roskruge has an extensive association with Masonry, having been called the "father of Masonry" in Arizona. He was made a Master Mason in 1870 in his birthplace of Helston, Cornwall, England. He claimed that when he arrived in Prescott in 1872, he went to the Masonic lodge there and identified himself with the secret Masonic sign. His Masonic brothers rescued his stranded traveling companions and helped him find work in Prescott.[2][b][c] After relocating to Tucson, Roskruge was instrumental in founding lodges there and eventually became Grand Secretary of the Royal Arch Masons of Arizona.[3]

Honors edit

In 1998, the Tucson/Pima Arts Council awarded Steve Farley $171,000 to create tile murals for the walls of the underpass of Broadway Boulevard at the Aviation Parkway in downtown Tucson. The murals are based on historical photographs; the mural on one wall to be of a c. 1920 photograph of Roskruge standing at Broadway and Stone.[17]

Tucson's first high school, which opened in 1907, was also named for him. In 1923, the high school moved to a new location and the building became the Roskruge Junior High School. It later became an elementary school and is still in use as the Roskruge Bilingual K-8 School.[18][19] Roskruge himself protested against giving the school his name.[15]: 43 

The Roskruge Hotel, at Broadway and Scott Avenue, opened in 1924. It was owned by Freemasons and was named to honor Roskruge, the "father of Masonry in Arizona".[20] At the time, it was one of the "most modern small hotels in Arizona" with each room having hot and cold running water and a shower.[21]

The library at the Masonic Temple in downtown Phoenix is named the George Roskruge & S. Barry Casey Masonic Memorial Library & Museum.[22]

Death edit

He died July 27, 1928, in his Tucson home after suffering from an illness for several months. His funeral was held per his wishes at the Masonic temple, with services conducted by the Grand Masonic lodge of Arizona with a guard of the Knights Templar. Flags at the University of Arizona, public schools and other public buildings were flown at half-mast after his death.[23] He was buried at the Masonic Cemetery in Tucson, and an endowment fund was created to pay for a perpetual memorial wreath to be placed each year on May 9, the anniversary of the day Roskruge received his thirty-second degree.[23]

Personal edit

Roskruge married Lena Wood, a California native in May 1896. They had no children. Wood had moved to Tucson in 1875, and died there on September 16, 1937.[24]

His house, built in 1896 at 318 E 13th Street, is a Queen Anne style house that is a contributing property of the Armory Park Historic Residential District in Tucson. As of 1976, it was owned by his niece.[8]

His marksman skills were still quite sharp at age 65. In 1910, he accompanied five young men from the Tucson Rifle club attempting to qualify as marksmen in the National Guard. Roskruge shot better than all of the five, only two of whom qualified. He had never shot before at the 500-yard (460 m) distance and still made 44 of 50 shots on target, including four bullseyes.[25]

He served as president of the Tucson Rifle Club, secretary of the Arizona Rifle Association, and state secretary for Arizona of the National Rifle Association.[26]

When he was the President of the Tucson Rifle club, he secured a land grant from the federal government, signed by President Woodrow Wilson, for 360 acres (150 ha) for a rifle range. He contributed to the allied effort in World War I by training over 500 men on this range who joined the U.S. Army.[5]

Gallery edit

 
Roskruge's official map of Pima County

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Some sources list Roskruge's year of birth as 1834.[1]
  2. ^ a b One account also attributed to Roskruge himself make no mention of walking alone or his companions being rescued by Masons.[15]: 44 
  3. ^ a b An account told by Roskruge to the Arizona State Historian said he made the trip with three others and upon reaching Prescott, asked General Crook to send soldiers to rescue two others who did not return to camp after leaving to hunt for food. Crook refused citing the number of hostile Indians but provided horses and equipment. Roskruge and three others went back and found the two men.[16]
  4. ^ An "Official Map of Pima County" carries an 1893 copyright, most sources refer to his 1893 map[6]
  5. ^ On his 1893 Pima County Survey map, Roskruge spelled the name 'Kits'. At the request of the wife of George F. Kitt, the spelling was changed by decision in 1930.[9]
  6. ^ An alternate story says he took the name from a man on his survey crew named Kit.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Goff, John S. (1988). Arizona Territorial Officials Volume IV: The Secretaries, United States Attorneys, Marshals, Surveyors General, and Superintendents of Indian Affairs, 1863–1912. Cave Creek, Arizona: Black Mountain Press. p. 140. OCLC 20054492.
  2. ^ a b c Abbott, Mary Huntington (1982). "Beginnings of Freemasonry in Tucson 1875–1882". Arizona and the West. 24 (2): 105–118. JSTOR 40169190.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g McClintock, James H. (1916). Arizona, Prehistoric, Aboriginal, Pioneer, Modern: The Nation's Youngest Commonwealth Within a Land of Ancient Culture. Vol. III. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co. pp. 200=204. OCLC 5398889.
  4. ^ a b c d A Historical and Biographical Record of the Territory of Arizona. Chicago: McFarland & Poole. 1896. pp. 523–527. OCLC 4074521.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Roskruge Funeral Services to Be In Charge of Masons". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. July 28, 1928. pp. 1, 12. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  6. ^ "Official map of Pima County, Arizona". loc.gov. Library of Congress. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  7. ^ "Ancient Roskruge Map Gets Honored Position in Office". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. July 22, 1930. p. 2. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  8. ^ a b "National Register Information System – (#76000378)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  9. ^ a b "Kitt Peak". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  10. ^ "How Kitts Peak Got Its Name". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. February 13, 2011. p. F019. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ "Roskruge Mountains". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  12. ^ a b Prezelski, Tom (May 20, 2018). "Dreaming of canals". Tucson Sentinel.com. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  13. ^ "A Los Angeles Man Contracts to Build a Seventy-Mile Canal". Los Angeles Herald. April 13, 1892. p. 1. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  14. ^ a b Turner, Jim (November 14, 2010). "Parties, teacher scandal part of Saving Canyon lore". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. p. E006. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  15. ^ a b Duffy, Ida Myrtle (1941). Pioneer characters for whom some Tucson public schools have been named (Thesis). University of Arizona. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  16. ^ "Geo. J. Roskruge Passes Away". Arizona Historical Review. 1. 1928. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  17. ^ Wagner, Raina (April 28, 1998). "Downtown characters Old city photos will serve as the basis for huge tile murals on Broadway underpass walls". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. p. 23. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  18. ^ "Appendix A Descriptions of Important Historic Sites" (PDF). Archeology Southwest. p. 245. Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  19. ^ "Roskruge Bilingual K8". Tucson Unified School District. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  20. ^ Martin, J. C. (October 14, 1973). "Dusting Off The History Of A Hotel". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. p. 9. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  21. ^ "New Hotel Will Be Opened By Griffin". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. September 14, 1924. p. 2. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  22. ^ . azmasoniclibrary.org. Archived from the original on January 28, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  23. ^ a b "Memory of George Roskruge To Be Forever Perpetuated". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. May 8, 1929. p. 14. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  24. ^ "Lena Roskruge Called By Death". Arizona Republic. Phoenix, Arizona. September 16, 1937. p. 67. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  25. ^ "Pioneer Shows Boys How To Shoot". Arizona Journal-Miner. Prescott, Arizona. August 17, 1910. p. 7. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  
  26. ^ "Company D of Mesa Wins Cup In Rifle Shoot". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson, Arizona. July 9, 1913. p. 5. Retrieved January 18, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.  

External links edit

  • Roskruge papers at the Arizona Historical Society archive
  • Roskruge photograph c. 1880 at the Arizona Memory Project
  • Roskruge photo collection at the Arizona Historical Society
  • George Roskruge & S. Barry Casey Masonic Memorial Library & Museum January 28, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  • George J. Roskruge at Find a Grave

george, roskruge, george, james, roskruge, april, 1845, july, 1928, surveyor, general, arizona, territory, from, 1896, 1897, born, england, emigrated, united, states, became, naturalized, citizen, 1876, spent, most, life, tucson, arizona, where, held, many, pr. George James Roskruge April 10 1845 a July 27 1928 was the surveyor general of Arizona Territory from 1896 to 1897 Born in England he emigrated to the United States in his mid 20s and became a naturalized citizen in 1876 2 He spent most of his life in Tucson Arizona where he held many prominent positions and is considered a city pioneer He was an expert rifleman and is called the father of Masonry in Arizona George J RoskrugeUnited States Surveyor General of the Arizona TerritoryIn office 1896 1897Chief clerk of the United States Surveyor General of the Arizona TerritoryIn office 1893 1896City engineer of Tucson ArizonaIn office 1896 1894County surveyor of Pima CountyIn office 1894 1890United States deputy land and mineral surveyorIn office 1880 1889Chief draftsman for the Surveyor General of ArizonaIn office 1874 1889Assistant county recorder for Yavapai CountyIn office 1873 1874Member or President of the Tucson Board of educationIn office 1881 1914 not continuous Member of the Arizona Board of RegentsIn office 1887 1911 not continuous Personal detailsBorn 1845 04 10 April 10 1845near Helston Cornwall EnglandDiedJuly 27 1928 1928 07 27 aged 83 Resting placeMasonic Cemetery TucsonAffiliationsPresident Association of Civil Engineers of ArizonaMember American Society of Irrigation EngineersVP 1888 and P 1889 Tucson Building and Loan AssociationPresident of the Tucson Rifle ClubNamesakesRoskruge MountainsRoskruge SchoolRoskruge Hotel Contents 1 Early life 2 Surveyor 2 1 Places named 3 Private positions 4 Educational positions 5 Professional associations 6 Masonry 7 Honors 8 Death 9 Personal 10 Gallery 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly life editRoskruge was born on April 10 1845 a near Helston Cornwall England where he began working at age 15 as a messenger for a law office Beginning April 12 1860 he served for 10 years in the Duke of Cornwall s rifle volunteers where he became known as a remarkably accurate rifle shot and for two years was the champion rifle shot of his company 3 He emigrated to the United States in 1870 arriving in New York and then traveling for five days with only cheese crackers and bread to eat 4 to Denver Colorado where he lived and worked for two years In May 1872 he left for the Arizona Territory in a party of 17 The journey included shortages of food and water and encounters with hostile Apache Indians After camping at Volunteer Springs near present day Bellemont Arizona he walked three and one half days alone from there to Prescott in June 1872 as his companions were too sick and weak to continue 4 2 b c He soon found work as a cook and packer for Omar H Case Deputy Surveyor General and began assisting in surveying work as a chainman In 1873 he was appointed assistant county recorder for Yavapai County 5 Surveyor edit nbsp Roskruge with surveying transit undated He relocated to Tucson arriving on July 22 1874 1 5 where he prepared maps and field notes and then became chief draftsman for John Wasson Surveyor General of Arizona 3 He was in that position until appointed a United States deputy land and mineral surveyor in 1880 Subsequently he was the county surveyor of Pima County for four years and city engineer of Tucson for three years Roskruge became the chief clerk of the Surveyor General of the United States on July 1 1893 and Surveyor General of Arizona from 1896 to 1897 as appointed by President Grover Cleveland 4 It was his belief that he was the only person without a college education to hold this position 5 Roskruge produced a hand drawn detailed topographical map of Pima County officially adopted on July 22 1883 d The map measured 4 by 8 feet 1 2 m 2 4 m and showed every stream arroya road town river and mountain range in the county The map was the reference for later maps and was characterized decades later as a remarkable piece of work Forty seven years later it was framed under glass and hung in the office of the current county engineer 7 Roskruge was appointed superintendent of irrigating ditches for the Papago Indian Reservation in San Xavier by President Chester Arthur and later appointed special inspector of public surveys by President Cleveland 3 Roskruge laid out the grid pattern for the streets of Tucson in 1902 8 Places named edit Roskruge named Kitt Peak the highest point in the Quinlan Mountains of southern Arizona and home of the Kitt Peak National Observatory for his sister Mary Phillippa Roskruge Kitt e f 9 He named the Roskruge Mountains a 22 mile 35 km long range approximately 20 miles 32 km west of Tucson after himself 11 Private positions editHe was vice president 1888 and president 1889 of the Tucson Building and Loan Association 4 In 1891 Roskruge became chairman of the newly formed the Santa Cruz Water Storage Company Selim M Franklin a former Territorial Representative credited with securing the University of Arizona for Tucson was the counsel and William Billy Breakenridge who later popularized the Gunfight at the O K Corral was chief engineer 12 The company planned to construct a series of dams reservoirs and a 70 mile 110 km canal to divert the Santa Cruz River to irrigate 75 000 to 300 000 acres 30 000 to 121 000 ha 13 of land and add millions to the wealth of Pima County Due to financial irregularities and the financial panic of 1893 1897 the canal was not built 12 Educational positions editRoskruge was a trustee of the first school built in Tucson in 1874 This building was designed by Roskruge and named after him 5 He was a member and President of the Tucson Board of education several times between 1881 and 1914 3 He resigned once after the great teacher scandal of 1906 an incident where five female school teachers were caught smoking cigarettes and drinking wine in the presence of men in Sabino Canyon 14 Roskruge felt that the teachers action violated their duty to provide mental and moral guidance for their students at all times He called for either their resignation or their suspension but the other board members did not support him so Roskruge resigned from the board in protest He was re elected to the board a few years later 14 He was a member of the Arizona Board of Regents 1887 1889 during the administration of Governor Zulick and again 1903 1911 under Governors Brodie Kibbey and Sloan 3 5 Professional associations editIn 1897 he was the first elected president of the Association of Civil Engineers of Arizona and was a member of the American Society of Irrigation Engineers 3 He was a member of the Archaeological Association of Arizona and investigated the state s pre historic culture He made many photographs of the Tumacacori mission in 1889 later donated to the Arizona Historical Society 5 Masonry edit nbsp Tucson Masonic Lodge officers c 1881 Roskruge on right Roskruge has an extensive association with Masonry having been called the father of Masonry in Arizona He was made a Master Mason in 1870 in his birthplace of Helston Cornwall England He claimed that when he arrived in Prescott in 1872 he went to the Masonic lodge there and identified himself with the secret Masonic sign His Masonic brothers rescued his stranded traveling companions and helped him find work in Prescott 2 b c After relocating to Tucson Roskruge was instrumental in founding lodges there and eventually became Grand Secretary of the Royal Arch Masons of Arizona 3 Honors editIn 1998 the Tucson Pima Arts Council awarded Steve Farley 171 000 to create tile murals for the walls of the underpass of Broadway Boulevard at the Aviation Parkway in downtown Tucson The murals are based on historical photographs the mural on one wall to be of a c 1920 photograph of Roskruge standing at Broadway and Stone 17 Tucson s first high school which opened in 1907 was also named for him In 1923 the high school moved to a new location and the building became the Roskruge Junior High School It later became an elementary school and is still in use as the Roskruge Bilingual K 8 School 18 19 Roskruge himself protested against giving the school his name 15 43 The Roskruge Hotel at Broadway and Scott Avenue opened in 1924 It was owned by Freemasons and was named to honor Roskruge the father of Masonry in Arizona 20 At the time it was one of the most modern small hotels in Arizona with each room having hot and cold running water and a shower 21 The library at the Masonic Temple in downtown Phoenix is named the George Roskruge amp S Barry Casey Masonic Memorial Library amp Museum 22 Death editHe died July 27 1928 in his Tucson home after suffering from an illness for several months His funeral was held per his wishes at the Masonic temple with services conducted by the Grand Masonic lodge of Arizona with a guard of the Knights Templar Flags at the University of Arizona public schools and other public buildings were flown at half mast after his death 23 He was buried at the Masonic Cemetery in Tucson and an endowment fund was created to pay for a perpetual memorial wreath to be placed each year on May 9 the anniversary of the day Roskruge received his thirty second degree 23 Personal editRoskruge married Lena Wood a California native in May 1896 They had no children Wood had moved to Tucson in 1875 and died there on September 16 1937 24 His house built in 1896 at 318 E 13th Street is a Queen Anne style house that is a contributing property of the Armory Park Historic Residential District in Tucson As of 1976 it was owned by his niece 8 His marksman skills were still quite sharp at age 65 In 1910 he accompanied five young men from the Tucson Rifle club attempting to qualify as marksmen in the National Guard Roskruge shot better than all of the five only two of whom qualified He had never shot before at the 500 yard 460 m distance and still made 44 of 50 shots on target including four bullseyes 25 He served as president of the Tucson Rifle Club secretary of the Arizona Rifle Association and state secretary for Arizona of the National Rifle Association 26 When he was the President of the Tucson Rifle club he secured a land grant from the federal government signed by President Woodrow Wilson for 360 acres 150 ha for a rifle range He contributed to the allied effort in World War I by training over 500 men on this range who joined the U S Army 5 Gallery edit nbsp Roskruge s official map of Pima CountyNotes edit a b Some sources list Roskruge s year of birth as 1834 1 a b One account also attributed to Roskruge himself make no mention of walking alone or his companions being rescued by Masons 15 44 a b An account told by Roskruge to the Arizona State Historian said he made the trip with three others and upon reaching Prescott asked General Crook to send soldiers to rescue two others who did not return to camp after leaving to hunt for food Crook refused citing the number of hostile Indians but provided horses and equipment Roskruge and three others went back and found the two men 16 An Official Map of Pima County carries an 1893 copyright most sources refer to his 1893 map 6 On his 1893 Pima County Survey map Roskruge spelled the name Kits At the request of the wife of George F Kitt the spelling was changed by decision in 1930 9 An alternate story says he took the name from a man on his survey crew named Kit 10 References edit a b Goff John S 1988 Arizona Territorial Officials Volume IV The Secretaries United States Attorneys Marshals Surveyors General and Superintendents of Indian Affairs 1863 1912 Cave Creek Arizona Black Mountain Press p 140 OCLC 20054492 a b c Abbott Mary Huntington 1982 Beginnings of Freemasonry in Tucson 1875 1882 Arizona and the West 24 2 105 118 JSTOR 40169190 a b c d e f g McClintock James H 1916 Arizona Prehistoric Aboriginal Pioneer Modern The Nation s Youngest Commonwealth Within a Land of Ancient Culture Vol III Chicago S J Clarke Publishing Co pp 200 204 OCLC 5398889 a b c d A Historical and Biographical Record of the Territory of Arizona Chicago McFarland amp Poole 1896 pp 523 527 OCLC 4074521 a b c d e f g Roskruge Funeral Services to Be In Charge of Masons Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona July 28 1928 pp 1 12 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Official map of Pima County Arizona loc gov Library of Congress Retrieved January 27 2019 Ancient Roskruge Map Gets Honored Position in Office Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona July 22 1930 p 2 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b National Register Information System 76000378 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 a b Kitt Peak Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved January 18 2019 How Kitts Peak Got Its Name Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona February 13 2011 p F019 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Roskruge Mountains Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved January 18 2019 a b Prezelski Tom May 20 2018 Dreaming of canals Tucson Sentinel com Retrieved January 27 2019 A Los Angeles Man Contracts to Build a Seventy Mile Canal Los Angeles Herald April 13 1892 p 1 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Turner Jim November 14 2010 Parties teacher scandal part of Saving Canyon lore Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona p E006 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Duffy Ida Myrtle 1941 Pioneer characters for whom some Tucson public schools have been named Thesis University of Arizona Retrieved January 27 2019 Geo J Roskruge Passes Away Arizona Historical Review 1 1928 Retrieved January 27 2019 Wagner Raina April 28 1998 Downtown characters Old city photos will serve as the basis for huge tile murals on Broadway underpass walls Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona p 23 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Appendix A Descriptions of Important Historic Sites PDF Archeology Southwest p 245 Retrieved January 18 2009 Roskruge Bilingual K8 Tucson Unified School District Retrieved January 19 2019 Martin J C October 14 1973 Dusting Off The History Of A Hotel Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona p 9 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp New Hotel Will Be Opened By Griffin Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona September 14 1924 p 2 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp George Roskruge amp S Barry Casey Masonic Memorial Library amp Museum Preserving the rich history of Arizona Freemasonry azmasoniclibrary org Archived from the original on January 28 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 a b Memory of George Roskruge To Be Forever Perpetuated Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona May 8 1929 p 14 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Lena Roskruge Called By Death Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona September 16 1937 p 67 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Pioneer Shows Boys How To Shoot Arizona Journal Miner Prescott Arizona August 17 1910 p 7 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Company D of Mesa Wins Cup In Rifle Shoot Arizona Daily Star Tucson Arizona July 9 1913 p 5 Retrieved January 18 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp External links editRoskruge papers at the Arizona Historical Society archive Roskruge photograph c 1880 at the Arizona Memory Project Roskruge photo collection at the Arizona Historical Society George Roskruge amp S Barry Casey Masonic Memorial Library amp Museum Archived January 28 2019 at the Wayback Machine George J Roskruge at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George J Roskruge amp oldid 1176593912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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