Fort Lowell was a U.S. Army post established in 1873 near what is now Craycroft Road and Glenn Street, after moving from its original location in downtown Tucson. The fort was named for General Charles Russell Lowell, who died from…
was named for General Charles Russell Lowell, who died from wounds after the Battle of Cedar Creek in the Civil War.The fort was decommissioned and abandoned in 1891.
Fort Lowell, Post Hospital , 1937. Historic American Buildings Survey, John P. O'Neill, photographer.A panorama between two existing, deteriorated adobe officer's quarters buildings at Fort Lowell, on the west side of Craycroft Road, looking north, on March 1, 2023.Deteriorating adobe walls of one of three existing officer's quarters building at Ft.
The quartermaster and commissary storehouse at Fort Lowell on Fort Lowell Road, west of Craycroft Road on March 1, 2023. The original buildings were modified and converted to residences after the fort was abandoned. The City of Tucson now owns the property.The Bolsius home, photographed in 1954. It is formerly the sutter's store, built ca. 1870, at the Ft. Lowell calvary post, 5425 E. Ft. Lowell Road.Ft.
1st Calvary E Troop, Mesa; 4th Calvary B Troop, Ft. Huachuca; and 6th Calvary E Troop, Tucson; demonstrate their horsemenship at Ft. Lowell Park in 1985.In this 1981 photo, David Faust, curator of the Ft. Lowell Museum, works with members of the Youth Conservation Corps to repair adobe walls at the Ft. Lowell hospital, built in 1873.Arizona Daily Star
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