A TASTE
OF TEMPE
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THE HISTORY OF TEMPE, ARIZONA
The Hohokam lived in this area and built canals to support their agriculture. They abandoned their settlements during the
15th century,
with a few individuals and families remaining nearby.

Fort McDowell was established approximately 25 miles northeast of present downtown Tempe on the upper Salt River in
1865 allowing for new towns
to be built farther down the Salt River. US military service members and Hispanic workers were hired to grow food and animal
feed to supply the fort,
and less than a year later, had set up small camps near the river that were the first permanent communities in the Valley after
the fall of the Hohokam.
(Phoenix was settled shortly afterward, by 1867-68.) The two settlements were 'Hayden's Ferry', named after a ferry service
operated by Charles T.
Hayden, and 'San Pablo', and were located west and east of Hayden Butte respectively. The ferry became the key river
crossing in the area. The Tempe
Irrigating Canal Company was soon established by William Kirkland and James McKinney to provide water for alfalfa, wheat,
barley, oats, and cotton.

Pioneer Darrell Duppa is credited with suggesting Tempe's name, adopted in 1879, after comparing the Salt River valley near
a
300-foot -tall butte, to the Vale of Tempe near Mount Olympus in Greece.

In 1885, the 13th Arizona Territorial Legislature chose Tempe for the site of the Territorial Normal School, which became
Arizona Normal School,
Arizona State Teachers College, Arizona State College and finally Arizona State University.
Tempe, Arizona