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Tanque Verde, Arizona

Tanque Verde, Arizona
CDP
Location in Pima County and the state of Arizona
Location in Pima County and the state of Arizona
Tanque Verde, Arizona is located in the US
Tanque Verde, Arizona
Tanque Verde, Arizona
Location in the United States
Coordinates: 32°16′17″N 110°45′6″W / 32.27139°N 110.75167°W / 32.27139; -110.75167Coordinates: 32°16′17″N 110°45′6″W / 32.27139°N 110.75167°W / 32.27139; -110.75167
Country United States
State Arizona
County Pima
Area
 • Total 32.9 sq mi (85.1 km2)
 • Land 32.9 sq mi (85.1 km2)
 • Water 0.0 sq mi (0.0 km2)
Elevation 2,671 ft (814 m)
Population (2000)
 • Total 16,195
 • Density 492.2/sq mi (190.3/km2)
Time zone MST (no DST) (UTC-7)
FIPS code 04-72000
GNIS feature ID 0037549

Tanque Verde is a suburban census-designated place (CDP) in Pima County, Arizona, United States, northeast of Tucson. The population was 16,195 at the 2000 census.

Tanque Verde began as a small community, remote from Tucson, and settled by ranchers arriving to the American West around the 1860s. The name of the area, which means "green tank," is a reference to the algae in a large and prominent stock water tank in the area in the late 19th century.

The Tanque Verde Valley was used by the Apache, a Native American tribe throughout the 19th century. Soldiers from Fort Lowell operated by the U.S. Army in the late 19th century also frequented the Tanque Verde Valley.

In 1886, the residents of the Tanque Verde valley established the Tanque Verde School District as the first significant political entity of the community.

The army closed Fort Lowell in 1891, and when some Hispanic immigrants from Baja California and Sonora saw the fort's buildings standing empty, they moved into the abandoned adobes. Soon they began farming the rich floodplain northeast of the fort, where Pantano Wash feeds into Tanque Verde Creek to form the Rillito (Little River), and by the turn of the century the community they came to call El Fuerte was thriving. Upstream from El Fuerte, in the canyons and nooks (rincons) of the front range of the Santa Catalina Mountains and the Rincon range--the area they came to call Tanque Verde--Hispanic families with names like Escalante, Estrada, Andrade, Vindiola, Lopez, Riesgo, Benitez, Telles, Martinez, and Gallegos began establishing homes and ranches. Initially the largely self-sufficient community of homesteads thrived, but over time many of the smaller ranches were swallowed up by larger ones or sold to speculators. According to Frank Escalante, a descendant of Tanque Verde homesteaders, some non-Hispanic Americans robbed some of these families of their land titles and ranches by fraud or force. Some Hispanics who became Mexican Americans after the Gadsden Purchase had limited understanding of English and a naivete regarding American property law even four decades after the transition, and made easy marks for the unscrupulous. The infamous Arizona Rangers sometimes enforced interlopers' property claims. The First World War brought a rise in the market for cotton and the value of farmland, and still more of the original homesteaders felt pressured to sell. Ultimately the growth of Tucson and the demand for land for housing priced most of the remaining pioneers off their ranches.


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