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Selections from A Frontier Documentary: Mexican Tucson, 1821-1856McCarty, Kieran January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Life and leisure in Tucson before 1880Purcell, Margaret Kathleen, 1937- January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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A CENTURY OF MUSICAL DEVELOPMENT IN TUCSON, ARIZONA, 1867-1967Cordeiro, Joseph Lemos, 1926- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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THE ICONOGRAPHY OF TUCSON: A STUDY OF SYMBOLS AND SENSE OF PLACEPeterson, Gary George January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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From family home to slum apartment: archaeological analysis within the urban renewal area, Tucson, ArizonaAnderson, Adrienne Barbara January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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THE SPANISH COLONIAL EXPERIENCE AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY OF SAN AGUSTIN DEL TUCSON: A CASE STUDY OF SPANISH COLONIAL FAILUREYoung, Monica Zappia, Young, Monica Zappia January 2010 (has links)
In the 1690s, Father Kino described Tucson as a highly suitable place to
establish a mission community. Once founded, Mission San Agustin del Tucson became a
visit a of the neighboring Mission San Xavier del Bac, which served as the cabecera.
After Mexico gained its independence from Spain in 1821, the nearby Pima village of El
Pueblito was abandoned, and the mission fell into ruin as the church property was
homesteaded, given away, or sold. Physical evidence of the mission, including a convento
and gardens, was further compromised after a brick manufacturing plant and, later, a
landfill took their toll on the archaeological record. By the middle of the twentieth
century, the last evidence of the mission era was destroyed. Mission San Agustin can be
interpreted as an example of colonial failure that does not conform to traditional culture
contact models of a unilinear sequence from diffusion to acculturation and, ultimately, to
assimilation. San Agustin was for a short period a thriving, productive, complex mission
community that overshadowed its neighboring cabecera, San Xavier del Bac. Using a
historical archaeological approach, this paper describes the cultural context in which
Tucson's mission was constructed, abandoned, fell into ruin, and disappeared. Major
historical events and processes are suggested as possible causes for this failure.
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