The Sunnyslope community is an environment established within the confines of Phoenix, Arizona. Geographical boundaries are 19th Avenue to the west, Cactus Road to the north, 16th Street to the east, and Northern Avenue to the south. This area covers about nine square miles and is divided into nine census tracts. The Sunnyslope community is included in part of three zip code areas: 85020, 85021 and 85029.
After four failed attempts to become a city of its own, Sunnyslope was annexed to the city of Phoenix in 1959. While in the midst of a large metropolitan area, the Sunnyslope community is proud of a small town that has a distinct cultural identity.
Video Sunnyslope, Phoenix
Pendiri "Sunny Slope"
Sunnyslope is known for being solved by poor tuberculers who spend their last money traveling west for a drier climate and cleaner air, but a subdivision called "Bright Slopes" was first patted by architect William R. Norton in 1911.
Norton was born on October 25, 1853, in the state of Massachusetts. He moved to San Francisco, California where he met and married Mary Emma. There he became a leading architect. However, while living in California, her health began to deteriorate. In 1891, he moved to Phoenix, Arizona believed that dry air and sunshine would be beneficial to his health. Norton designed the Carnegie Library, the city's first library, and the Gila Court Building in Globe, Arizona. In 1895, he built a house on Washington Street and in 1907 the rest of his family joined him in Phoenix.
Norton began investing in a large open channel in the desert and plumping "Bright Slopes." He and his family eventually moved into the area and built a house there. Reportedly, one of his daughters saw the sun shining on the Phoenix mountains in the area and exclaimed, "What a beautiful and bright tilt!" Inspired by that phrase, Mr. Norton named the area the Sunny Slope. Norton died in 1938 because of the injuries he received in an automatic pedestrian accident. He is buried in Greenwood/Memory Lawn Mortuary Phoenix & amp; Graves.
Maps Sunnyslope, Phoenix
Sunnyslope
The name appeared as two words until after World War II when combined into one word. The original boundaries of Sunnyslope Subdivision are from Central Avenue to the west, to Dunlap Avenue to the north and from 3rd Street east to Alice in the south. In 1919, the Sunnyslope was a natural desert area with only four or five cottages surrounded by cacti and shrubs.
Without irrigation to the north of the Arizona Canal, the Sunnyslope Desert is a very dry area and is considered a good place to live for people who are recovering from tuberculosis or asthma. During this period, it was common for people from the eastern states, known as "health seekers," to move to Arizona.
Many of these people build tenthouses or small huts, plan to recover and then return to their previous homes. Others, after spending their last money to move west to seek health, set up tents or sleep on the veranda. No road or electricity.
Desert and Desert Angel Mission
Marguerite and William Albert Colley are the second permanent residents of Sunnyslope after purchasing five acres for $ 100 per acre near 3rd Street and Townley.
They came to the desert in 1919 for the health of their son. Marguerite is a practical nurse and social worker. He immediately started visiting his sick neighbors bringing food and maids to their beds. She meets Elizabeth Beatty who also provides help for those suffering from tuberculosis or asthma.
The Sunnyslope neighbors waited and welcomed the visit of Elizabeth Beatty and Marguerite Colley and these women were soon known as the "Desert Angel."
In 1927, the Desert Mission was established. These are comprehensive community-based religious facilities - which provide the medical, social, and religious needs of people living in the community. In 1936, there were about 600 residents in the Sunny Slope. There is still plenty of empty land, covered with vegetation and cacti.
In the late 1940s, after World War II, the population of the community developed remarkably. Many small businesses, churches and schools were established. The first school, the Sunnyslope Elementary School, opened in 1949, the Mountain View Elementary School opened in 1952, and the third elementary school built at Sunnyslope was the Desert View which opened in 1956. The Sunnyslope secondary school opened in 1953.
As the environment grew, the Desert Mission's medical function became a separate entity in the 1950s, later known as the John C. Lincoln Health Network, and is now known as "HonorHealth" (after merger 2013 with Scottsdale Healthcare). The main hospital of Sunnyslope is now one of the eight Level I trauma facilities in Arizona. The Desert mission continues to operate as a subsidiary of this health care group. Through food banks, children's dental clinics, community health centers, behavioral health clinics and licensed and accredited child care facilities, the Desert Mission continues to respond to the needs of Sunnyslope and Northern Phoenix.
John C. Lincoln, inventor and Ohio industrialist who founded Lincoln Electric, moved to the Sunnyslope district in 1931 with his wife Helen to treat tuberculosis; soon, the Lincoln family became the main financial backer of the Desert Mission and took on a key leadership role in the organization for much of the rest of their lives. Helen Lincoln lived until the age of 102 years, after being given just two more years to live by doctors.
In 1946, Charles and Lillian Stough founded "Sand" a biweekly newspaper. It was the first newspaper of Sunnyslope. In 1950, the newspaper was sold and inserted into the Sunnyslope Journal. In 1956, The Stough family re-published and named their paper "Sage".
King Sunnyslope
Dr. Kenneth E. Hall is a native of Oklahoma who lived in Sunnyslope during the 1940s. Hall considered himself a "King of Sunnyslope" and built the largest house in Sunnyslope. Hall, considered by his contemporaries as controversial, operates North Mountain Hospital, a 40-bed hospital on the Sunnyslope, built in 1955. The hospital has a primate zoo located in the hospital grounds. In 1963, he illegally diverted $ 16,564 in Medicare funds to help build El Cid Castle, a bowling track that resembled Moorish Castle.
Hall had undergone unsafe medical surgery, and his doctor's license was revoked in 1971 after four patients died during a gastric bypass surgery. In 1974, he pleaded guilty to divert thousands of dollars in Medicare funds to help build the castle. Hall went bankrupt, and in 1982, the bowling alley of El Cid Castle, which took 20 years to build, closed after just one year of operation. Hall lost the building to resolve the malpractice lawsuit. Hall died in 2001. His son, Walter Eugene Hall, was convicted of child abuse and sexual violence aggravated in 2007.
The Sunnyslope Rock Garden
Sunnyslope Rock Garden is a creation of Grover Cleveland Thompson, a retired heavy machinery operator, who moved to Sunnyslope in 1952. He bought a property and built a house in 13th Place (now 10023 N. 13th Place). Thompson began making his artistic creations using various objects, such as Halloween masks, as prints. Thompson died in 1976 and his abode and gardens were abandoned until 1979 when Marion Blake, a local teacher bought it.
Thompson's creations have been documented and cataloged by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. After his retirement, Blake gave the garden to the University of Arizona.
Annexation
Sunnyslope attempted to be included as a city on four occasions but failed each time. In 1959, Phoenix City annexed the Sunnyslope community along with many other valley areas. These areas eventually became part of the Phoenix City, but Sunnyslope always maintained its identity.
The crime rate
In 2011, Sunnyslope zip code 85021 had an above-average risk for automotive theft at 473, 211 for theft, 167 for personal crime risk and 259 for property crime compared to 100 represented as national averages. Zip code 85020 has 358 for automotive theft, burglary 179, private crimes 170, and 222 for property crimes.
House price
The average home cost in the area code of Sunnyslope 85021 is $ 172,200 and at 85020 (zip 85020) is $ 173,900.
Sunnyslope High School
Sunnyslope High School is located at 35 W. Dunlap Avenue, Phoenix 85021. In 1953, the school became part of the Glendale Union High School District and enrolled nearly 2,000 students. Middle schools have high scores in education, award-winning sports teams, and extra-curricular activities. Sunnsylope is part of the National Placement of 2013 National Council Board and regularly enrolled in US News & amp; List of World's Best High School Rankings.
The emergence of the Sunnyslope Music Scene
Some record labels, record stores, and recording studios contribute to the emergence of music in the Sunnyslope community.
Fervor Records Founded in 1990, Fervor Records has been operating at Sunnyslope since 1991. Its original purpose was to unite the local music community while helping the homeless. Originally operating under the auspices of Central Arizona Shelter Services, the first release of the label "Southwest Holiday" is a multi-genre compilation, multi-artist Christmas music. This release sold over 4000 units in 6 weeks with all proceeds donated to Central Arizona Shelter Services. Fervor Records was originally located in a small mall at 600 W Dunlap but has since moved on to three homes behind the American Indian College campus. Fervor Records is owned and operated by David Hilker (one of the original founders) and Jeff Freundlich. Labels have local and national artists on their list. The company also has a large re-issue catalog of vintage recordings dating from the 1920s.
Slope Records The old Sunnyslope population, Thomas Lopez, founded Slope Records in 2015. Originally started as a hobby, the business has grown into a complete label featuring local and national punk bands, and various punk-problems. Slope Records is located at 11430 N. Cave Creek Rd, Sunnyslope, AZ 85020.
Onus Records Onus Records is a virtual label located on Sunnyslope with a mission it says to "Make music, not money." Onus claims to be the only non-profit music label in the country. Founder Tommy Globbot tells the story that his grandfather Viral created the music label in 1972, but officially started operating in 2014 and is affiliated with freelance music journalist Serene Dominic.
Casa Butthole Record Collective CBRC is a Sunnyslope record label that works to diversify the Phoenix music scene by supporting color musicians and underrepresented artists. The label was founded by Josue Rodriguez and Paris Tejas with their studio located at Sunnyslope's house near Cave Creek Road. This collective offers you a pay-what-you-can-it-price plan, and offers its members access to a lo-fi recording studio and the ability to produce cassettes.
3 Leaf Post Recording 3 Leaf Recording is a full-service recording studio at Hatcher Road in Sunnyslope. The studio focuses on music recording but also offers audio for commercials, videos, and television shows. Address: 307 Hatcher Road, Phoenix, Arizona 85021.
Record and Equipment Crate, Note and Equipment was established in 2016 by Sergio Sanchez and is located at 8841 N. Central Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85020. The business includes record stores and salons. The coffin also operates a full recording studio from the scene. Owners Sergio and Todd broadcast "Crates Radio" radio broadcast live on KDIF 102.9 FM, also available as a podcast.
Today
The Sunnyslope population represents the most diverse socio-economic environment of Phoenix. Many of the richest and most politically active (mayors, board members, and business leaders of the past) in the valley and many of the most financially vulnerable people in the Phoenix area live in Sunnyslope. John C. Lincoln Health Network, a network of two primary care, specialist, ambulatory and emergency care hospitals, grew out of the medical community center of the Desert Mission. (Merger 2013 with Scottsdale Healthcare produces a joint entity known as HonorHealth by 2015.) John C. Lincoln Health Network is the largest Sunnyslope company and surrounding environment. The Desert Service continues to meet the basic needs of the community through the Desert Food Mission Bank, the Dentist Children's Clinic, the Marley Care Clinic, the Lincoln Learning Center, nationally accredited child development and learning facilities, and the Community Development Desert Mission Corporation-based environment).
In April 2011, Sunnyslope was the flagship community for the Modern Phoenix Home Tour, highlighting a number of prominent architects and other creative individuals who have chosen to develop (and live in) the property in the community.
Historic Sunnyslope Gallery
Note
See also
- List of historic properties in Casa Grande, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Chandler, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Florence, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Glendale, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Mesa, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Peoria, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Phoenix, Arizona
- List of historic properties in Tempe, Arizona
- El Cid Fortress
References
External links
- The Sunnyslope History of the Sunnyslope Historical Society and Museum
- Timeline of Sunnyslope History by John C. Lincoln Health Network
- No Place Like the Sunnyslope by Phoenix's Modern Environmental Network
Source of the article : Wikipedia