Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Top-of-the-World is located in eastern Pinal County at (33.346856, -110.995172 The CDP extends east into Gila County. U.S. Route 60 passes through the center of the community, leading east 15 miles (24 km) to Globe and southwest 8 miles (13 km) to Superior.
Queen Creek tripoint: 4.40: 7.08: 4: Meridian Road [3] At-grade intersection, future interchange [3] Pinal: Apache Junction–Queen Creek line: 5.48: 8.82: 5: Ironwood Drive: At-grade intersection, future interchange; current eastern terminus [3] Gold Canyon: US 60 – Phoenix, Globe: Planned Interchange; to be US 60 exit 205: 1.000 mi = 1.609 ...
The Queen Creek Tunnel is a 1,217-foot-long (371 m) tunnel on US 60 in the Superstition Mountains, just east of Superior, Arizona. [2] Completed in 1952, the Queen Creek Tunnel links Phoenix with Safford by way of Superior and Globe/Miami. It replaced the smaller Claypool Tunnel that had been built in 1926. The new tunnel was cut through the ...
SR 347 ends at a diamond interchange at I-10, Exit 164, while Queen Creek Road continues east through the Gila River Indian Reservation towards the City of Chandler and Chandler Municipal Airport. [1] [3] The route is maintained by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT), which is responsible for maintaining highways in the state. As ...
The act became the official law governing the district. The townsite of 'Globe City' was officially laid out in July 1876. Globe became the seat of Gila County, a new Arizona county, in February 1881. [1] [2] [3] The price of silver had decreased by 1881, however by the same token the price of copper increased.
Globe (Western Apache: Bésh Baa GowÄ…h "Place of Metal") [3] is a city in and the county seat [4] of Gila County, Arizona, United States. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 7,249. [5] Globe was founded c. 1875 as a mining camp. Mining, tourism, government and retirees are most important in the present-day Globe economy.
SR 88 near Fish Creek Hill. The Apache Trail connected the Old Spanish Trail where Apache Junction is today and Roosevelt Lake with an unpaved road as early as 1925, following much of the modern route. [11] [12] By the next year, SR 66 followed the Apache Trail and the Old Spanish Trail was numbered as US 80. [13]
City/Town/etc. Population (2020 Census) Municipal type Incorporated 1 San Tan Valley: 99,894 CDP: 2 Queen Creek (Mostly in Maricopa County) 59,519 Town 1990 3 Maricopa: 58,125 City 2003 4 Casa Grande: 53,658 City 1879 (founded) 5 Marana (mostly in Pima County) 51,908 Town 1977 6 Apache Junction (partially in Maricopa County) 38,499 City 1978 7 ...