City of Mesa Officially Renames Mesa Grande Cultural Park
November 4, 2024 at 1:08 pm
The City of Mesa is pleased to announce the official renaming of Mesa Grande Cultural Park to reflect our region's rich cultural heritage and profound connection to the O'odham (AWE-thumb) and Piipaash (Pee-PAHSH) peoples and their ancestors. The name given to the site is Sce:dagi Mu:val Vaaki. In the Oodham language, it means Blue Flys place of dwelling or Blue Flys house. Sce:dagi Mu:val Vaaki, pronounced CHUH-dag MOO-vahl VAH-kee, comes from a series of songs originating at the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, located only about one milefrom the ancestral site.
The renaming ceremony at Sce:dagi Mu:val Vaaki, located at 1000 N Date, Mesa, Arizona honored the ancestral lands of the Native communities who have inhabited this landscape for generations, demonstrating the Citys ongoing commitment to acknowledging and preserving the historical and cultural link that exists between the Oodham, the Piipaash and Mesas cultural heritage.
"The lands that comprise present-day Mesa are culturally affiliated with the O'odham, Piipaash and their ancestors, who have lived on and stewarded this land from time immemorial," said John Giles, Mayor of Mesa. "This renaming pays tribute to their enduring legacy and the sacred significance of these lands to the O'odham and Piipaash way of life."
The City has long partnered with Indigenous communities, including the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community (SRPMIC) and the Gila River Indian Community (GRIC), to preserve and steward important cultural sites within the region. This renaming is a testament to these collaborative efforts and the deep connections the O'odham and the Piipaash maintain with the landscape.
SRPMIC has awarded the Arizona Museum of Natural History (AZMNH) a $200,000 grant to develop new signage, interpretive labels and an educational curriculum related to Sce:dagi Mu:val Vaaki.
The City of Mesa acknowledges that it gathers on the homeland of Native peoples and their ancestors, whose cultural values are deeply embedded in this landscape.
Sce:dagi Mu:val Vaaki will open to the public for the season on Saturday, Nov. 9. It will be open until mid-April on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sundays from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, visit azmnh.org.
08 October 2018
On Columbus Day Here In Mesa/Honoring The People Who Were Here Before: Re-Discovering Another Historic Treasure
Today it is important to take a look at our heritage that goes back for centuries reminding us that even though generations of The First Peoples (The Salt River-Pima Maricopa "Indians")are relegated to live on reservations directly north of the current man-made boundaries, you can see by the pre-historic map above.
We now live on territories where thousands lived for centuries way before a few hundred settlers came to expand what they thought was their Kingdom of Deseret ruled by a religion - The Church of Jesus Christ of The Latter Day Saints. Other religions from Spain attempted to colonize The New World in the late 15th Century that explains the Spanish place names you see on the map: Let's take a closer look
Note the section markings on an enlargement of the lands south of the Rio Salado or The Salt River
> Note section 22 south of the Salt River: MESA (on the east-west line of what's marked as a sedimentation basin)
> Note the names of areas marked with dots and squares: PUEBLO or CASA or PLAZA
These are areas of existing settlements where the people who lived were before, digging canals and cultivating the land did leave evidence and artifacts of their lives in what the map-marker called "pre-history".
> Please note the area Pueblo de Lehi Why you might ask? Simply because . . . The time is right TODAY with all the engaged public debate over the expanded development plans for the Mesa LDS Temple Area ( a twenty-acre tract at what is now the corner of Main and Hobson Streets just outside the original town site) and the current media narrative of 'preservation vs progress' or 'balancing-the-past-and-the-future' simply leaves out or ignores whose past is here in Mesa now? We need to re-discover and un-bury more of that - The time is right TODAY to restore our lost history.
It's the right time right now when the grounds around the Mesa Temple are getting cleared and other buildings in the area getting demolished to ask for a commitment to look more deeply into what could be more of Mesa's lost history. It's the right time to ask for a team of archeologists when the grounds are dug-deep for a three-story underground parking garage - what lays buried in the earth might be more authentic in keeping to preserve and protect Mesa's history.
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At one time about 100 years ago there was a Mormon group called the Pioneers of Preservation with some amazing and surprising people who managed to save and restore the heritage of people who were here before on the site marked Pueblo de Lehi - it was Mesa's first historic preservation project: Mesa Grande Cultural Park.
In the 1920's there was a drive to preserve and protect the historic site When this effort started is unknown but the first public event was a parade down Main Street organized by the chamber of commerce in 1927. This was the year that Pueblo Grande, the other great mound of the Hohokam, opened to the public.
What else happened here in Mesa in 1927?
On October 23,1927 the LDS Temple was dedicated, although it had been planned on some twenty acres just east of the original town site. The construction of the LDS Temple achieved the realization of many generations of LDS pioneers. The earliest recorded donation for the Temple dated back to 1897, when a Graham County widow donated $5.00 to the construction fund when it was thought a temple would be erected in the town of Pima.
Mesa LDS official began actively promoting the idea in 1912. By the end of World War One over $200,000 had been collected for construction. Church officials visited Mesa after the war and on September 24, 1919 selected a twenty-acre tract at what is now the corner of Main and Hobson Streets just outside the original townsite.
Preliminary planning took place from 1919 to 1921.
Mesa Grande by air from the northwest.
Many such efforts followed and community support for a public facility has remained very strong through the years. In the early 1950s Frank and Grace Midvale organized the Mesa Grande Archaeological Society to promote the opening of the mound. This organization was transformed in 1955 into the Mesa Archaeological and Historical Society.
Acquanetta married Jack Ross, a three time gubernatorial candidate and owner of a car dealership. Acquanetta appeared in television ads for the dealership and became a beloved local celebrity.
Acquanetta's mother was Native American and Acquanetta grew up in the Arapaho community in Montana. She had strong feelings for Mesa Grande and worked for many years to preserve the mound and to open it to the public.
In the 1970s, she worked tirelessly with the Mesa Historical and Archaeological Society and the City of Mesa to open the mound to the public.
Having failed to get adequate support for the project, she played the key role in the 1980s in getting Mesa Grande into public ownership.
More fascinating details in this story >> http://arizonamuseumofnaturalhistory.org
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Following his early experiences with archaeology in the 1920s, Midvale directed excavations of a platform mound at the site of La Ciudad covered today by Saint Luke's Hospital, for Dwight Heard, a wealthy Phoenix business man and founder of the Heard Museum
24 October 2019
Grubby Philanthropy & The Real Nitty-Gritty @ Mesa Grande Cultural Park. . . It Could Have Been One of The Best Public Spaces In Central Mesa
- Any element below grade required archaeology to be performed.
- The design was reviewed by tribal leaders and the State Historic Preservation Office.
The story of the modern Mesa Grande Ruins is tied to volunteers that work to preserve the story of the past.
Readers of this blog can access earlier posts about the Mesa Grande Cultural Park, Frank Midvale and Anna Madera Baker and at least one more unusual person named ""Acquanetta".
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21 July 2021
The Hohokam: Triumph in The Desert (Part 2 with Content Added from Earlier Posts on this Blog)
20 July 2021
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RELATED CONTENT ON THIS BLOG:
Quite fortunately, we do have maps of The Salt River Valley that clearly mark the locations and sites of earlier pueblos, plazas, canals, casas and casitas, las acequias(swamps), and reservoirs and even more temples - one of which is in an area called 'Pueblo Moroni' .
- Any element below grade required archaeology to be performed.
- The design was reviewed by tribal leaders and the State Historic Preservation Office.
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Note how the 4-Corner States divided up the land
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1 Just like a recent image shown on this blog from a press release about a "Trees For The Dead" - "Shade-and-Shelter" campaign at the Mesa City Cemetery, this site in Nogales at Kino Springs certainly looks serene.
Other than that, adjacent to the city cemetery here in Mesa is the Mesa Country Club where some people play golf. Both are on high ground close to ancient Hohokam canals in the Salt River Valley. Kino Springs, in the Santa Cruz River Valley, has an long documented history of early settlements.
Here in Mesa - and in Tempe and Phoenix and Scottsdale - there's documentation as well for what Frank Midvale called "The Pre-Historic Irrigation of the Salt River Valley" of earlier indigenous cultures that were established for centuries before anyone recorded their versions of that history when evidence of those who were here before was "discovered" and their settlements patterns were mapped.
< Here's a closer look from a Digital Geo Map 2003 uploaded by Richard A. Neely.
Major Hohokam Irrigation Systems in the Lower Salt River Valley
The link is below if you're interested in more details.
But let's note at this point, that it was the usual practice to bury the dead on higher ground above the irrigation canals close to settlements and housing patterns.
Finding artifacts or human remains is often the result of chance - or new construction.
Research Gate
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2 Hohokam Human Remains Found in Arizona
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