Oracle, Arizona: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Luokehao
Climate is actually Csa (threshold is 470 millimetres), plus better ordering and some details
 
imported>Minturn
most of this article is wholly without citations
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{refimprove|date = November 2025}}
{{Short description|CDP in Pinal County, Arizona}}
{{Short description|CDP in Pinal County, Arizona}}
{{Use American English|date=July 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox settlement
{{Infobox settlement
Line 81: Line 83:
On January 1, 2017, in the ''[[Arizona Daily Star]]'' newspaper, historian David Leighton challenged the accepted history of the town of Oracle:
On January 1, 2017, in the ''[[Arizona Daily Star]]'' newspaper, historian David Leighton challenged the accepted history of the town of Oracle:


He wrote that Albert Weldon who was born about 1840 in New Brunswick, Canada, traveled on his uncle Capt. A.D. Wood's ship Oracle around [[Cape Horn]] at the tip of South America and arrived in California between 1857 and 1860. Weldon enlisted as a private in Company E, 5th California Infantry, of the Union Army, in 1861. This unit was attached to the California Column and soon marched to [[Tucson]] where Weldon was posted at a nearby stage station before moving east and eventually being honorably discharged in Mesilla New Mexico in 1864.
He wrote that Albert Weldon, who was born about 1840 in [[New Brunswick]], Canada, traveled on his uncle Capt. A.D. Wood's ship ''Oracle'' around [[Cape Horn]] at the tip of South America and arrived in California between 1857 and 1860. Weldon enlisted as a private in Company E, [[5th California Infantry Regiment|5th California Infantry]], of the [[Union Army]] in 1861. This unit was attached to the [[California Column]] and soon marched to [[Tucson]] where Weldon was posted at a nearby stage station before moving east and eventually being honorably discharged in [[Mesilla, New Mexico]] in 1864.


After his military service he returned to [[California]] and was involved in mining and also lumber. In 1876 he returned to [[Arizona]]. Within a couple of years he found a partner in Irishman Jimmie Lee and both men traveled northeast of Tucson into the Santa Catalina Mountains in search of precious metal. Soon he found a mining claim and named it Oracle in honor of his uncle's ship.
After his military service he returned to [[California]] and was involved in mining and also lumber. In 1876 he returned to [[Arizona]]. Within a couple of years he found a partner in [[Ireland|Irishman]] Jimmie Lee and both men traveled northeast of Tucson into the [[Santa Catalina Mountains]] in search of precious metal. Soon he found a mining claim and named it Oracle in honor of his uncle's ship.


The ship Oracle was built under the supervision of Captain Charles E. Ranlett and was constructed for the shipbuilding firm Chapman & Flint of Maine. It was launched in 1853 and was a temperance ship (one that didn't allow alcohol aboard) and sailed to ports across the globe including Melbourne, Australia and Shanghai, China. It was captained by Weldon's uncle for several years.
The ship Oracle was built under the supervision of Captain Charles E. Ranlett and was constructed for the shipbuilding firm Chapman & Flint of Maine. It was launched in 1853 and was a temperance ship (one that didn't allow alcohol aboard) and sailed to ports across the globe including [[Melbourne]], Australia and [[Shanghai]], China. It was captained by Weldon's uncle for several years.


Weldon was soon joined by Alexander McKay, an immigrant from [[Scotland]] who located two mining claims named Christmas and New Years because of the days they were discovered. McKay also built a one-room house, the first in the area, and from it, the village grew. When it was time for a post office to be named, Oracle was the name eventually chosen.
Weldon was soon joined by Alexander McKay, an immigrant from [[Scotland]] who located two mining claims named Christmas and New Years because of the days they were discovered. McKay also built a one-room house, the first in the area, and from it, the village grew. When it was time for a post office to be named, Oracle was the name eventually chosen.


Leighton stated that the town of Oracle takes its name from the Oracle Mine which took its name from the ship Oracle and that he believes the ship took its name from an oracle{{snd}}a shrine dedicated to a particular god where people went to consult a priest or priestess in times of trouble or uncertainty{{snd}}called the Temple of Apollo at [[Didyma]] in present-day Aydin Province, Turkey, not the oracle at Delphi, Greece believed by some to be the origin of the name. He also explained that there were two ships named Oracle made by the same shipbuilder, the second one being launched in 1876 but that this later ship wasn't the boat that Weldon traveled on, as some sources have said.<ref>[http://tucson.com/news/local/street-smarts-how-oracle-road-came-to-be-named-for/article_f3bf19c2-e2b0-5192-92c6-f7dabe3204a0.html  David Leighton, "Street Smarts: How Oracle Road came to be named for a fast ship with a teetotaling crew," ''Arizona Daily Star'', Jan. 1, 2017]</ref>
Leighton stated that the town of Oracle takes its name from the Oracle Mine which took its name from the ship Oracle and that he believes the ship took its name from an oracle{{snd}}a shrine dedicated to a particular god where people went to consult a priest or priestess in times of trouble or uncertainty{{snd}}called the Temple of Apollo at [[Didyma]] in present-day [[Aydın Province]], Turkey, not the oracle at Delphi, Greece believed by some to be the origin of the name. He also explained that there were two ships named Oracle made by the same shipbuilder, the second one being launched in 1876 but that this later ship wasn't the boat that Weldon traveled on, as some sources have said.<ref>[http://tucson.com/news/local/street-smarts-how-oracle-road-came-to-be-named-for/article_f3bf19c2-e2b0-5192-92c6-f7dabe3204a0.html  David Leighton, "Street Smarts: How Oracle Road came to be named for a fast ship with a teetotaling crew," ''Arizona Daily Star'', Jan. 1, 2017]</ref>


==Geography==
==Geography==
Line 286: Line 288:


== Ecology ==
== Ecology ==
Flora includes [[Quercus emoryi|emory oak]], [[Arctostaphylos pungens|point-leaf manzanita]], [[Rhamnus crocea subsp. ilicifolia|holly-leaf buckthorn]], [[Juniperus deppeana|alligator juniper]], [[Prosopis velutina|velvet mesquite]], [[Celtis reticulata|netleaf hackberry]], [[Rhus trilobata|lemonade berry]],  [[Aloysia wrightii|oreganillo]], [[Anisacanthus|Thurber’s desert honeysuckle]], [[Fouquieria splendens|ocotillo]], [[Ericameria laricifolia|turpentine bush]], [[Tecoma stans|yellow bells]], [[Agave chrysantha|golden-flowered agave]], [[Agave parryi|mescal agave]], [[Dasylirion wheeleri|sotol]], [[Yucca elata|soaptree yucca]], [[Nolina microcarpa|beargrass]], [[Opuntia engelmannii|Engelman’s prickly pear]], [[Ferocactus wislizeni|fishhook barrel cactus]], [[Cylindropuntia spinosior|cane cholla]], [[Penstemon eatonii|firecracker penstemon]], [[Mirabilis multiflora|showy four o’clock]], [[Datura wrightii|sacred datura]], [[Glandularia gooddingii|Goodding verbena]], [[Calliandra eriophylla|fairy duster]], [[Oenothera caespitosa|tufted evening primrose]], [[Calochortus ambiguus|Arizona mariposa lily]],  [[Muhlenbergia rigens|deer grass]], and [[Bouteloua parryi|Parry’s grama]].
Flora includes [[Quercus emoryi|emory oak]], [[Arctostaphylos pungens|point-leaf manzanita]], [[Rhamnus crocea subsp. ilicifolia|holly-leaf buckthorn]], [[Juniperus deppeana|alligator juniper]], [[Prosopis velutina|velvet mesquite]], [[Celtis reticulata|netleaf hackberry]], [[Rhus trilobata|lemonade berry]],  [[Aloysia wrightii|oreganillo]], [[Anisacanthus|Thurber’s desert honeysuckle]], [[Fouquieria splendens|ocotillo]], [[Ericameria laricifolia|turpentine bush]], [[Tecoma stans|yellow bells]], [[Agave chrysantha|golden-flowered agave]], [[Agave parryi|mescal agave]], [[Dasylirion wheeleri|sotol]], [[Yucca elata|soaptree yucca]], [[Nolina microcarpa|beargrass]], [[Opuntia engelmannii|Engelman’s prickly pear]], [[Ferocactus wislizeni|fishhook barrel cactus]], [[Cylindropuntia spinosior|cane cholla]], [[Penstemon eatonii|firecracker penstemon]], [[Mirabilis multiflora|showy four o’clock]], [[Datura wrightii|sacred datura]], [[Glandularia gooddingii|Goodding verbena]], [[Calliandra eriophylla|fairy duster]], [[Oenothera caespitosa|tufted evening primrose]], [[Calochortus ambiguus|Arizona mariposa lily]],  [[Muhlenbergia rigens|deer grass]], and [[Bouteloua parryi|Parry’s grama]].{{citation needed|date = November 2025}}


Fauna includes [[greater roadrunner]], [[common raven]], [[acorn woodpecker]], [[great horned owl]], [[zone-tailed hawk]], [[Cooper’s hawk]], [[Meleagris gallopavo|wild turkey]], [[Callipepla gambelii|Gambel’s quail]], [[cactus wren]], [[curve-billed thrasher]], [[hooded oriole]], [[northern cardinal]], [[Leiothlypis luciae|Lucy’s warbler]], [[vermilion flycatcher]], [[broad-billed hummingbird]], [[Gila monster]], [[Sceloporus clarkii|Clark’s spiny lizard]], [[Madrean alligator lizard]], [[Masticophis flagellum|coachwhip]], [[Pituophis catenifer|gopher snake]], [[red-spotted toad]], [[canyon tree frog]], [[Papilio polyxenes|black swalllowtail]], [[Hyles lineata|white-lined sphinx]], [[Adelpha eulalia|Arizona sister]], [[Bombus sonorus|Sonoran bumblebee]], [[Pepsis thisbe|tarantula hawk]], [[Parabacillus hesperus|western short-horn walkingstick]], [[Xyloryctes thestalus|western rhinoceros beetle]], [[Eleodes|darkling beetles]], [[Dactylotum bicolor|rainbow grasshopper]], [[flame skimmer]], [[Stagmomantis limbata|Arizona mantis]], [[Peucetia viridans|green lynx spider]], [[Aphonopelma chalcodes|desert blonde tarantula]], [[Arizona bark scorpion]], [[mule deer]], [[Puma concolor|cougar]], [[bobcat]], [[gray fox]], [[coyote]], [[striped skunk]], [[collared peccary|javelina]], [[white-nosed coati]], [[rock squirrel]], [[desert cottontail]], and [[big brown bat]].
Fauna includes [[greater roadrunner]], [[common raven]], [[acorn woodpecker]], [[great horned owl]], [[zone-tailed hawk]], [[Cooper’s hawk]], [[Meleagris gallopavo|wild turkey]], [[Callipepla gambelii|Gambel’s quail]], [[cactus wren]], [[curve-billed thrasher]], [[hooded oriole]], [[northern cardinal]], [[Leiothlypis luciae|Lucy’s warbler]], [[vermilion flycatcher]], [[broad-billed hummingbird]], [[Gila monster]], [[Sceloporus clarkii|Clark’s spiny lizard]], [[Madrean alligator lizard]], [[Masticophis flagellum|coachwhip]], [[Pituophis catenifer|gopher snake]], [[red-spotted toad]], [[canyon tree frog]], [[Papilio polyxenes|black swalllowtail]], [[Hyles lineata|white-lined sphinx]], [[Adelpha eulalia|Arizona sister]], [[Bombus sonorus|Sonoran bumblebee]], [[Pepsis thisbe|tarantula hawk]], [[Parabacillus hesperus|western short-horn walkingstick]], [[Xyloryctes thestalus|western rhinoceros beetle]], [[Eleodes|darkling beetles]], [[Dactylotum bicolor|rainbow grasshopper]], [[flame skimmer]], [[Stagmomantis limbata|Arizona mantis]], [[Peucetia viridans|green lynx spider]], [[Aphonopelma chalcodes|desert blonde tarantula]], [[Arizona bark scorpion]], [[mule deer]], [[Puma concolor|cougar]], [[bobcat]], [[gray fox]], [[coyote]], [[striped skunk]], [[collared peccary|javelina]], [[white-nosed coati]], [[rock squirrel]], [[desert cottontail]], and [[big brown bat]].{{citation needed|date = November 2025}}


The Oracle region once sustained more extensive and biodiverse grassland ecosystems, but widespread and poorly regulated cattle ranching has largely depleted them. An ongoing transition to a mesquite/opuntia/invasive grass-dominated landscape is occurring.
The Oracle region once sustained more extensive and biodiverse grassland ecosystems, but widespread and poorly regulated cattle ranching has largely depleted them. An ongoing transition to a mesquite/opuntia/invasive grass-dominated landscape is occurring.{{citation needed|date = November 2025}}


==Attractions and events==
==Attractions and events==
Line 297: Line 299:
* [[Acadia Ranch|Acadia Ranch Museum]], operated by the Oracle Historical Society, local history
* [[Acadia Ranch|Acadia Ranch Museum]], operated by the Oracle Historical Society, local history
* GLOW,<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.trianglelranch.com/glow.htm |title=GLOW art event website |access-date=October 18, 2009 |archive-date=October 5, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091005082031/http://www.trianglelranch.com/glow.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> an annual nighttime multimedia art event coinciding with the [[full moon]].
* GLOW,<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.trianglelranch.com/glow.htm |title=GLOW art event website |access-date=October 18, 2009 |archive-date=October 5, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091005082031/http://www.trianglelranch.com/glow.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> an annual nighttime multimedia art event coinciding with the [[full moon]].
* [[Peppersauce Cave]], a limestone cave with approximately one mile of mapped passages.
* [[Peppersauce Cave]], a limestone cave with approximately 1.6 kilometers of mapped passages.
* YMCA Triangle Y Ranch Camp[[File:A spectacular sunset over Oracle, AZ USA during the 2020 monsoon season.png|thumb|Oracle, Arizona has many spectacular sunsets, especially during the monsoon season. This is a truly exceptional example.]]
* YMCA Triangle Y Ranch Camp[[File:A spectacular sunset over Oracle, AZ USA during the 2020 monsoon season.png|thumb|Oracle, Arizona has many spectacular sunsets, especially during the monsoon season. This is a truly exceptional example.]]


Line 318: Line 320:


The median income for a household in the CDP was $38,267, and the median income for a family was $46,026. Males had a median income of $37,667 versus $30,667 for females. The [[per capita income]] for the CDP was $19,459.  About 8.0% of families and 10.0% of the population were below the [[poverty line]], including 10.8% of those under age 18 and 3.2% of those age 65 or over.
The median income for a household in the CDP was $38,267, and the median income for a family was $46,026. Males had a median income of $37,667 versus $30,667 for females. The [[per capita income]] for the CDP was $19,459.  About 8.0% of families and 10.0% of the population were below the [[poverty line]], including 10.8% of those under age 18 and 3.2% of those age 65 or over.
==Notable people==
*[[Roger Avary]], film director, screenwriter and producer
*[[Robert D. Cocke]], painter
*[[James G. Davis]], contemporary artist
*[[Ella Howard Estill]], painter
*[[Joanna McClure]], poet
*[[Tullis Onstott]], geoscientist
*[[John A. Roebling II]], civil engineer and philanthropist


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 16:57, 19 November 2025

Template:Refimprove Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Main other

Oracle is a census-designated place (CDP) in Pinal County, Arizona, United States. The population was 3,686 at the 2010 Census, falling to 3,051 at the 2020 Census.

Oracle State Park is adjacent. The Arizona Trail passes through the Park and community. Oracle is the gateway to the road up the north face of Mount Lemmon, which starts off of American Avenue and currently offers a secondary route to the top. Prior to the construction of the Catalina Highway on the opposite side of the Santa Catalina range, the Oracle Control Road was the only road access to the mountain community of Summerhaven. The term "control road" derives from the fact that the direction of traffic was restricted to one-way only, either up or down at alternate times of day, to prevent motorists from having to pass one another on the narrow, steep road. This route is now popular mainly with off-road 4x4 drivers and with off-road or dual-purpose motorcyclists, and should not be attempted by regular passenger cars or street motorcycles. This road ends at the Catalina Highway near Loma Linda.

The community is the location of the Biosphere 2 experiment. Oracle was also the postal address for environmentalist author Edward Abbey, who never lived in the town but visited often. Buffalo Bill Cody owned the High Jinks Gold Mine in Oracle briefly and, in 1911, appeared as "Santa" for a group of local children.[1] Oracle is becoming a bedroom community for Tucson, but large-scale development is opposed by many residents.

History

The name "Oracle" comes from early prospectors. Albert Weldon came to the area looking for gold and silver. He and some other companions named their first mine The Oracle after the ship Weldon had traveled on. The community was later named after its first mine, and thus, indirectly, after a ship.

The community began to grow in the late 1870s, as gold and silver were discovered, and the Christmas and New Year mines opened. By 1880, a post office had been established.

The community also became a retreat for people suffering from tuberculosis. The Acadia Ranch – built in Oracle in 1882 by Edwin S. and Lillian Dodge – was, during this time, a sanitorium.

Alternative history

On January 1, 2017, in the Arizona Daily Star newspaper, historian David Leighton challenged the accepted history of the town of Oracle:

He wrote that Albert Weldon, who was born about 1840 in New Brunswick, Canada, traveled on his uncle Capt. A.D. Wood's ship Oracle around Cape Horn at the tip of South America and arrived in California between 1857 and 1860. Weldon enlisted as a private in Company E, 5th California Infantry, of the Union Army in 1861. This unit was attached to the California Column and soon marched to Tucson where Weldon was posted at a nearby stage station before moving east and eventually being honorably discharged in Mesilla, New Mexico in 1864.

After his military service he returned to California and was involved in mining and also lumber. In 1876 he returned to Arizona. Within a couple of years he found a partner in Irishman Jimmie Lee and both men traveled northeast of Tucson into the Santa Catalina Mountains in search of precious metal. Soon he found a mining claim and named it Oracle in honor of his uncle's ship.

The ship Oracle was built under the supervision of Captain Charles E. Ranlett and was constructed for the shipbuilding firm Chapman & Flint of Maine. It was launched in 1853 and was a temperance ship (one that didn't allow alcohol aboard) and sailed to ports across the globe including Melbourne, Australia and Shanghai, China. It was captained by Weldon's uncle for several years.

Weldon was soon joined by Alexander McKay, an immigrant from Scotland who located two mining claims named Christmas and New Years because of the days they were discovered. McKay also built a one-room house, the first in the area, and from it, the village grew. When it was time for a post office to be named, Oracle was the name eventually chosen.

Leighton stated that the town of Oracle takes its name from the Oracle Mine which took its name from the ship Oracle and that he believes the ship took its name from an oracleTemplate:Snda shrine dedicated to a particular god where people went to consult a priest or priestess in times of trouble or uncertaintyTemplate:Sndcalled the Temple of Apollo at Didyma in present-day Aydın Province, Turkey, not the oracle at Delphi, Greece believed by some to be the origin of the name. He also explained that there were two ships named Oracle made by the same shipbuilder, the second one being launched in 1876 but that this later ship wasn't the boat that Weldon traveled on, as some sources have said.[2]

Geography

Oracle is located at Template:Coord (32.616030, -110.781854).[3]

According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of Template:Convert, all land.

File:Oracle, Arizona on Christmas day 2016.jpg
Oracle, Arizona from the air looking south with the Santa Catalina Mountains in the background

Geology

Oracle and the surrounding area sit largely on a slab of granite called "Oracle granite" that is visible as red or grey-and-white speckled "boulders" rising over the scrub and grass. It is mostly porphyritic biotite Precambrian granite with large microcline phenocrysts, and has occasional inclusions of white and milky quartz and pegmatite. The granite rarely contains ore and veins of gold or silver, and sometimes copper.

Climate

At an altitude of Template:Convert, Oracle has a Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csa), somewhat similar to Prescott further northwestward. Unlike most climates of its type, only the early summer is dry, with monsoonal thunderstorms producing substantial rain in July and August. The winter season from October to March is cool to pleasant by day and chilly by night, with occasional wet spells.

Summer temperatures are hot, though less extreme than lowland Arizona: 86 afternoons typically exceed Template:Convert, only about half as many as Tucson, but only ten top Template:Convert, which is one-seventh the number expected in Tucson. The average window for temperatures of 90 degrees is from May 13 to September 30, and for century temperatures from June 25 to July 28. Freezing temperatures occur on 45 mornings annually; the record low is Template:Convert on January 22, 1937, part of the coldest month on record with an average of Template:Convert and a mean minimum of Template:Convert. The hottest temperature has been Template:Convert on June 16, 2021.

The wettest month has been January 1993 with Template:Convert, the wettest calendar year 1983 with Template:Convert, and the driest 2020 with Template:Convert. The wettest day has been July 14, 2021 with Template:Convert. Snowfall may occur during cold spells in winter: the most snow in one month was Template:Convert in January 1937. The most snow in one season was Template:Convert between July 1990 and June 1991; in contrast no measurable snow fell in 1926–27, 1973–74 and 2021–22. The most snow on the ground has been Template:Convert on January 9, 1937.

Template:Weather box

View of Oracle, AZ looking south with Mt. Lemmon in background.
Oracle, AZ – Mt. Lemmon in background.

Ecology

Flora includes emory oak, point-leaf manzanita, holly-leaf buckthorn, alligator juniper, velvet mesquite, netleaf hackberry, lemonade berry, oreganillo, Thurber’s desert honeysuckle, ocotillo, turpentine bush, yellow bells, golden-flowered agave, mescal agave, sotol, soaptree yucca, beargrass, Engelman’s prickly pear, fishhook barrel cactus, cane cholla, firecracker penstemon, showy four o’clock, sacred datura, Goodding verbena, fairy duster, tufted evening primrose, Arizona mariposa lily, deer grass, and Parry’s grama.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Fauna includes greater roadrunner, common raven, acorn woodpecker, great horned owl, zone-tailed hawk, Cooper’s hawk, wild turkey, Gambel’s quail, cactus wren, curve-billed thrasher, hooded oriole, northern cardinal, Lucy’s warbler, vermilion flycatcher, broad-billed hummingbird, Gila monster, Clark’s spiny lizard, Madrean alligator lizard, coachwhip, gopher snake, red-spotted toad, canyon tree frog, black swalllowtail, white-lined sphinx, Arizona sister, Sonoran bumblebee, tarantula hawk, western short-horn walkingstick, western rhinoceros beetle, darkling beetles, rainbow grasshopper, flame skimmer, Arizona mantis, green lynx spider, desert blonde tarantula, Arizona bark scorpion, mule deer, cougar, bobcat, gray fox, coyote, striped skunk, javelina, white-nosed coati, rock squirrel, desert cottontail, and big brown bat.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The Oracle region once sustained more extensive and biodiverse grassland ecosystems, but widespread and poorly regulated cattle ranching has largely depleted them. An ongoing transition to a mesquite/opuntia/invasive grass-dominated landscape is occurring.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Attractions and events

File:GLOW 2007, Oracle.jpg
GLOW 2007 exhibit

Demographics

Template:US Census population

File:Rancho Linda Vista (2).JPG
Rancho Linda Vista, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Pinal County, Arizona

As of the census[5] of 2000, there were 3,563 people, 1,384 households, and 1,004 families residing in the CDP. The population density was Template:Convert. There were 1,534 housing units at an average density of Template:Convert. The racial makeup of the CDP was 77.0% White or European American, 0.1% Black or African American, 1.5% Native American, 0.1% Asian, 0.2% Pacific Islander, 17.3% from other races, and 3.8% from two or more races. 38.3% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 1,384 households, out of which 31.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 57.0% were married couples living together, 10.4% had a female householder with no spouse present, and 27.4% were non-families. 23.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 7.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.6 and the average family size was 3.0.

In the CDP, the population was spread out, with 26.4% under the age of 18, 7.7% from 18 to 24, 24.6% from 25 to 44, 27.8% from 45 to 64, and 13.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females, there were 97.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.8 males.

The median income for a household in the CDP was $38,267, and the median income for a family was $46,026. Males had a median income of $37,667 versus $30,667 for females. The per capita income for the CDP was $19,459. About 8.0% of families and 10.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 10.8% of those under age 18 and 3.2% of those age 65 or over.

Notable people

See also

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Sister project Template:Wikivoyage

Template:Pinal County, Arizona

Template:Authority control

  1. Marriott,Barbara."Annie's Guests". Catymatt Productions. 2002. p. 160.
  2. David Leighton, "Street Smarts: How Oracle Road came to be named for a fast ship with a teetotaling crew," Arizona Daily Star, Jan. 1, 2017
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".