Arizona Colonial Records
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Sources
- Records for Tucson, 1793-1849 available on microfilm at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona and the Magdalena parish archives in Sonora, Mexico (from 1684).
- Parish registers, San José de Tumacácori (near Tubac), 1768-1825 available on microfilm at the Arizona Historical Society in Tucson.
- Catálogo Archivo Histórico de Estado Sonora, 4 Vols. by Cynthia Radding de Murrieta and María Lourdes Torres Chavéz. (Hermosilla, Mexico: Centro Regional de Noroeste, 1974-7). Holdings of parish archives.
- Catálogo de Archivo de las Parroquia de la Purisima Concepcion de los Alamos, 1685-1900 by Cynthia Radding de Murrieta and María Lourdes Torres Chavéz. (Hermosilla, Mexico: Centro Regional de Noroeste, 1976). These registers are available on microfilm at Arizona State University, Tempe.
History
Franciscans began establishing Spanish missions in northeastern Arizona in 1629. The Jesuits established missions in southeast Pima in 1692. A chain of missions, known as the Pimería Alta, dotted the Arizona-Sonora frontier. Arizona became a part of Mexico in 1810, and became a U.S. territory in 1863.[1]
- ↑ Christina K. Schaefer, Genealogical encyclopedia of the colonial Americas : a complete digest of the records of all the counties of the Western Hemisphere (Baltimore, Maryland : Genealogical Publishing Company, c1998), 561. WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 929.11812 D26 1998