Thanks for the screenshots Dirk! The
terrain shading would make it well worth the $30 by itself, rather than just
looking at a flat 2D map.
Brian
Team A.I.
From:
az-geocaching-bounces@listserv.azgeocaching.com
[mailto:az-geocaching-bounces@listserv.azgeocaching.com] On Behalf Of ShadowAce
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2007
9:33 AM
To:
Subject: Re: [Az-Geocaching]
Anyone using Garmin Topo 2008?
Not that it really
matters I guess but it is still
I believe it might have to do with the fact that it was never officially
renamed (on a federal level). The renaming was a local thing done in
Ah heck, here is the June 2007 report on Name submissions that covers all
this...
Officially it is
http://geonames.usgs.gov/docs/dockets/ReviewList395.pdf
Swilling
Peak: summit; elevation 795 m (2,608 ft); in the City of Phoenix, within
Phoenix Mountains Park
and Recreation Area; named for John "Jack" Swilling (1830-1878), one
of the original founders of the city of
Phoenix; Maricopa County, Arizona; Sec 2, T2N, R3E, Gila and Salt River Mer.;
33°32'50"N, 112°01'15"W;
USGS map - Sunnyslope 1:24,000; Not: Piestewa Peak,
http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?lat=33.54726&lon=-
112.0207&datum=nad83&u=5&layer=DRG&size=l&s=50
Proposal: to eliminate a name considered by some to be derogatory
Map: USGS Sunnyslope 1:24,000
Proponent: Al Bates;
Administrative area:
Previous BGN Action: None
Names associated with feature:
GNIS:
Local Usage:
City of
residents)
Published:
Department; local hiking guides; IndianCountry.com; Navajo Times, 2007),
1954, 1978, 1988)
Case Summary: The new name
prominent summit within the City of
second highest point in the
current name has appeared on Federal maps since at least at least the 1950's,
but is considered by many to be
derogatory. There have been several previous efforts to change the summit's
name, but none were successful.
In April 2003, the
the Governor of Arizona to rename it to Piestewa Peak, in honor of Pfc. Lori
Piestewa, a resident of Arizona
and a member of the Hopi Nation, who had died one month earlier during the
conflict in Iraq. In researching
this proposal, the AZBGHN determined that the change to
Council of
the restrictions of the Commemorative Naming Policy that does not allow a
commemorative name for a
natural feature until the intended honoree has been deceased at least five
years. The proposal is being held
until March 2008, the five-year anniversary of Ms. Piestewa's death.
Although the AZBGHN's renaming of
and the new name is now shown on many local and State maps and products, there
are a large number of
other residents of Phoenix who do not endorse it, either because they do not
believe the longstanding name
Squaw Peak is derogatory, or because they object to the way in which the 2003
proposal was handled by the
State.
Citing these objections, this new proposal, to rename the summit to
historian. An online account of Swilling's life, authored by the proponent,
provides the following: "Born in
North Carolina, he moved to the New Mexico and Arizona Territories around the
1850's, pursuing
prospecting and mining for newly discovered gold. By 1860, with the onset of
the Civil War, he joined the
arrived in
a rider and scout for the
especially the extensive network of canals the ancient Indians had dug to
irrigate their fields. His concept was
that the old canals could be re-built for modern farmers, and that the soil of
the valley could support highly
productive farms. Within a very short time, the Swilling and Duppa team had
water flowing in a canal. By
January 1, 1868, Swilling's home area, where up to fifty more pioneer homes had
been built by this time, was
known as Pumpkinville - so named for the impressive growth of pumpkins Jack had
earlier planted along the
canals. Darrell Duppa suggested the name
a new civilization would soon rise from the ashes of an old. Swilling died in
jail of natural causes while
awaiting trial for a stagecoach robbery he did not commit."
There are two other geographic features in
name found in local use and presumably so named because of its proximity to
Swilling's ranch. The two
features are located 299 km (186 mi) and 61 km (38 mi), respectively, from the
summit in question.
Basically prepare to climb
On 8/30/07, Guy
Aldrich <graldrich@gmail.com>
wrote:
I'm surprised Garmin is still calling it
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