The
Wickedest Town in AZJerome, AZ (Sedona.biz)
- Jerome is an old copper-mining town about a 45 minute drive
from Sedona that is rich in history and filled with interesting
boutiques and restaurants.
The town is located in Yavapai County in
North Central Arizona, and teeters at a 30 degree incline on the
Cleopatra Hill on the northeast side of the Mingus and Woodchute
Mountains.
Brief History
Jerome's early success can be traced to its
rich ore deposits, primarily copper. In 1889 mining claims and a mill
owned by Eugene Jerome, James A. Macdonald and Governor Frederick
Tritle of Arizona were sold to the United Verde Copper Company owned by Montana Senator William
A. Clark. It was then that the town of Jerome was incorporated.
The town was named after Eugene Jerome. The town of Clarkdale
below was named after Senator
Clark.
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View of Verde Valley from Jerome, AZ
(Red rocks of Sedona in the distance) |
Over the years, the United Verde Mine
extracted
over $1 billion of ore from the northeast side of the Mingus and
Woodchute Mountains. At one time, Jerome boasted more than
15,000 inhabitants and was Arizona's fifth largest city.
Jerome became so successful that the
ponderosa pines atop Woodchute Mountain were needed for shoring
timber for the expanding copper mines and as lumber for the growing
number of homes. To transport the logs to the town below, the
town constructed an enormous wooden trough along the northern face
of the mountain and slid the logs down these water filled chutes to
railcars below. Hence, "Woodchute" Mountain was named.
The town became a melting pot for immigrant
settlers seeking their fortunes. It also became infamous for
gambling, prostitution, and alcohol abuse. Four times in the
late 1800's the town was leveled by fires, and in 1903 Jerome
became known as the "Wickedest Town in Arizona." A new
building code established in the early 1990's requiring masonry
prevented further disasters and the homes in present day Jerome are
largely those built at that earlier time; making a walk through
Jerome a walk through history.
In the 1950's the mines were shut down and
the town received a new name; "Ghost Town." In the 1960's and
70's a counter-culture of hippies, craftsmen, artists, and musicians
rediscovered Jerome as an inexpensive place to live.
Present
Today Jerome has less than 500 residents but
attracts more than 500,000 visitors each year. Its rich and
vibrant history coupled with its counter-culture arts and copper
crafts is a compelling mixture.
The town sports rickety homes perched
precariously on rock ledges to art boutiques, museums, a historic
society, and fine dining and lodging.

Location
The town lies 111 miles directly north of Phoenix
and 75 miles southwest of Flagstaff. Sedona and Prescott are about 45
minute drives northeast and southwest, respectively.
From the town of Clarkdale 4 miles below, be
prepared for a series of tight hairpin turns as you ascend to a
5,057 foot elevation
in your car.
For more about Jerome click:
A Journey to Jerome
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