Linggo, Mayo 10, 2015

Part 0008 2008 THE BEST BEST OF CWK MOUNTAIN BIKING TEXAS NEW MEX AZ BAJA CA LAPAZ MEX

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,http://ift.tt/1F18dbw … THE DOCUMENTARY best best of 2008 cruisinwithkenny Lapaz Baja CA Mexico AZ CA New Mexico Texas Bisbee, about 95 miles southeast of Tucson, boasts a historic district, museum and mine tour that recall its heydey as “Queen of the Copper Camps” and its new life as an artist colony, retirement community and tourist center.

Bisbee was built by Arizona’s copper boom, rising from a desolate Mule Pass Gulch as mining began in 1877 to become the largest city between St. Louis and San Francisco as the population hit 20,000 in the early 1900s.

By the time large-scale operations ended in 1975, Bisbee’s mines had produced 7.7 billion pounds of copper, 355 million pounds of zinc, 324 million pounds of lead, 11 million pounds of manganese, 100 million ounces of silver and 2.7 million ounces of gold.

The town was famous for miners who toiled in the underground mines for as little as .50 a day at the turn of the century and spent their earnings in 50 saloons that lined Brewery Gulch. But it also was recognized as most cultured town in the West, with live theater and the stately Copper Queen Hotel for distinguished visitors.

A day in Bisbee

Start your visit by making a reservation for the Queen Mine Tour, which draws more than 50,000 tourists a year and may get sold out. It’s located across U.S. 80 from Old Bisbee. The Visitor’s Passport offers a package deal for the mine tour and admission to the Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum, another “must” for your visit.

The Queen Mine was one of Bisbee’s richest and operated from 1877 until 1975. The one-hour tour is conducted by retired miners who point out veins of copper and other minerals, explain how the mine was developed and share their personal experiences of life underground.

The tour is offered five times a day, seven days a week, and visitors are issued slickers, helmets and miner’s headlamps for the trip down a narrow mine shaft on a narrow, multi-car train. Bring a jacket, because the temperature underground is 47 degree year-round.

Head to Old Bisbee to see the Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum, which is located in a building that once housed the general offices of the Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Co. The museum tells the story of Bisbee’s rich and colorful past through exhibits on the city’s mining history and samples of its famous ores.

The historic district has more than two dozen well-preserved Victorian buildings. Pick up a free map at the Chamber of Commerce (31 Subway St.) for a walking tour that will take you past the key buildings, many of which now house art galleries, restaurants, shops, small hotels and bed and breakfast establishments.

The best-known of the historic structures is the Copper Queen Hotel, built in 1902 by the Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Co. to accommodate politicians, company executives and other distinguished visitors. Guests have included “Black Jack” Pershing and a young Teddy Roosevelt.

Bisbee regularly offers concerts, fine arts shows, arts and crafts shows and historic home tours. The Bisbee 1000 Stairclimb each October challenges participants to climb 1,000 steps on staircases on the town’s hillsides, while La Vuelta de Bisbee has become a nationally recognized bicycle stage race.

Where to stay

Small hotels and bed and breakfast establishments are scattered across the historic buildings of Old Bisbee. Some of the buildings used to be boarding houses for miners during Bisbee’s heydey.

Copper Queen Hotel

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The Copper Queen, the grande dame of Bisbee hotels, was built in 1902 to serve distinguished visitors to the mining boomtown, and its guests have included Teddy Roosevelt and Black Jack Pershing. The hotel has been renovated over the years but retains its historical charm. No two rooms are the same, and some still feature claw foot bathtubs. There is a saloon on the ground floor and an unheated outdoor swimming pool on the second floor.

Hotel La More (The Bisbee Inn)

http://bisbeeinn.com/

The Hotel La More, also known as The Bisbee Inn, is a historic renovation of a 1917 miners’ hotel above Brewery Gulch. It has private baths in most rooms and a few suites, and the nightly rate includes a full breakfast the next morning. Next door is an old-style saloon featuring a 24-foot

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