Arizona

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Feb 05, 2025 / 07:30

Arizona is a state in the Southwestern region of the United States sharing the Four Corners region of the western United

Arizona
Arizona
Arizona

Arizona is a state in the Southwestern region of the United States, sharing the Four Corners region of the western United States with Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. Its other neighboring states are Nevada to the northwest and California to the west. It also shares an international border with the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California to the south and southwest. It is the 6th-largest and the 14th-most-populous of the 50 states. Its capital and largest city is Phoenix, which is the most populous state capital in the United States.

Arizona
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Nicknames
The Grand Canyon State;
The Copper State;
The Valentine State
Motto
Ditat Deus ('God enriches')
Anthem: "The Arizona March Song" and "Arizona"
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Location of Arizona within the United States
CountryUnited States
Before statehoodArizona Territory
Admitted to the UnionFebruary 14, 1912; 112 years ago (1912-02-14) (48th)
Capital
(and largest city)
Phoenix
Largest county or equivalentMaricopa
Largest metro and urban areasPhoenix
Government
 • GovernorKatie Hobbs (D)
 • Secretary of StateAdrian Fontes (D)
LegislatureArizona State Legislature
 • Upper houseSenate
 • Lower houseHouse of Representatives
JudiciaryArizona Supreme Court
U.S. senators Mark Kelly (D)
Ruben Gallego (D)
U.S. House delegation6 Republicans
3 Democrats (list)
Area
 • Total
113,998 sq mi (295,254 km2)
 • Rank6th
Dimensions
 • Length400 mi (645 km)
 • Width310 mi (500 km)
Elevation
4,100 ft (1,250 m)
Highest elevation
(Humphreys Peak)
12,637 ft (3,852 m)
Lowest elevation
(Colorado River at the Mexico border)
72 ft (22 m)
Population
 (2024)
 • Total
image 7,582,384
 • Rank14th
 • Density63/sq mi (24/km2)
  • Rank32nd
 • Median household income
$77,300 (2023)
 • Income rank
28th
DemonymArizonan
Language
 • Official languageEnglish
 • Spoken languageAs of 2010
  • English 74.1%
  • Spanish 19.5%
  • Navajo 1.9%
  • Other 4.5%
Time zones
Most of stateUTC−07:00 (Mountain)
Navajo NationUTC−07:00 (Mountain)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−06:00 (MDT)
USPS abbreviation
AZ
ISO 3166 codeUS-AZ
Traditional abbreviationAriz.
Latitude31°20′ N to 37° N
Longitude109°03′ W to 114°49′ W
Websiteaz.gov
State symbols of Arizona
List of state symbols
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Flag of Arizona
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Seal of Arizona
SloganThe Grand Canyon State
Living insignia
AmphibianArizona tree frog
BirdCactus wren
ButterflyTwo-tailed swallowtail
FishApache trout
FlowerSaguaro cactus blossom
MammalRingtail
ReptileArizona ridge-nosed rattlesnake
TreePalo verde
Inanimate insignia
Color(s)Blue, old gold
DinosaurSonorasaurus
FirearmColt Single Action Army revolver
FossilPetrified wood
GemstoneTurquoise
MineralCopper
RockPetrified wood
ShipUSS Arizona
State route marker
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State quarter
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Released in 2008
Lists of United States state symbols

Arizona is the 48th state and last of the contiguous states to be admitted to the Union, achieving statehood on February 14, 1912. Historically part of the territory of Alta California and Nuevo México in New Spain, it became part of independent Mexico in 1821. After being defeated in the Mexican–American War, Mexico ceded much of this territory to the United States in 1848, where the area became part of the territory of New Mexico. The southernmost portion of the state was acquired in 1853 through the Gadsden Purchase.

Southern Arizona is known for its desert climate, with extremely hot summers and mild winters. Northern Arizona features forests of pine, Douglas fir, and spruce trees; the Colorado Plateau; mountain ranges (such as the San Francisco Mountains); as well as large, deep canyons, with much more moderate summer temperatures and significant winter snowfalls. There are ski resorts in the areas of Flagstaff, Sunrise, and Tucson. In addition to the internationally known Grand Canyon National Park, which is one of the world's seven natural wonders, there are several national forests, national parks, and national monuments.

Arizona is home to a diverse population. About one-quarter of the state is made up of Indian reservations that serve as the home of 27 federally recognized Native American tribes, including the Navajo Nation, the largest in the state and the country, with more than 300,000 citizens. Since the 1980s, the proportion of Hispanics has grown significantly owing to migration from Mexico and Central America. A substantial portion of the population are followers of the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Arizona's population and economy have grown dramatically since the 1950s because of inward migration, and the state is now a major hub of the Sun Belt. Cities such as Phoenix and Tucson have developed large, sprawling suburban areas. Many large companies, such as PetSmart and Circle K, have headquarters in the state, and Arizona is home to major universities, including the University of Arizona, Arizona State University, and Northern Arizona University. The state is known for a history of conservative politicians such as Barry Goldwater and John McCain, though it has become a swing state in recent years.

Etymology

The state's name appears to originate from an earlier Spanish name, Arizonac, derived from the O'odham name alĭ ṣonak, meaning 'small spring'. Initially this term was applied by Spanish colonists only to an area near the silver mining camp of Planchas de Plata, Sonora. To the European settlers, the O'odham pronunciation sounded like Arissona. The area is still known as alĭ ṣonak in the O'odham language.

Another possible origin is the Basque phrase haritz ona 'the good oak', as there were numerous Basque sheepherders in the area. A native-born Mexican of Basque ancestry established the ranchería (small rural settlement) of Arizona between 1734 and 1736 in the current Mexican state of Sonora. It became notable after a significant discovery of silver there around 1737.

The misconception that the state's name purportedly originated from the Spanish term Árida Zona 'Arid Zone' is considered a case of folk etymology.

History

For thousands of years before the modern era, Arizona was home to many ancient Native American civilizations. Hohokam, Mogollon, and Ancestral Puebloan cultures were among those that flourished throughout the state. Many of their pueblos, cliffside dwellings, rock paintings and other prehistoric treasures have survived and attract thousands of tourists each year. [citation needed]

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La conquista del Colorado, by Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau, depicts Francisco Vázquez de Coronado's 1540–1542 expedition. García López de Cárdenas can be seen overlooking the Grand Canyon.

In 1539, Marcos de Niza, a Spanish Franciscan, became the first European to contact Native Americans. He explored parts of the present state and made contact with native inhabitants, probably the Sobaipuri. The expedition of Spanish explorer Coronado entered the area in 1540–1542 during its search for Cíbola. Few Spanish settlers migrated to Arizona. One of the first settlers in Arizona was José Romo de Vivar.

Father Kino was the next European in the region. A member of the Society of Jesus ("Jesuits"), he led the development of a chain of missions in the region. He converted many of the Indians to Christianity in the Pimería Alta (now southern Arizona and northern Sonora) in the 1690s and early 18th century. Spain founded presidios ("fortified towns") at Tubac in 1752 and Tucson in 1775.

When Mexico achieved its independence from the Kingdom of Spain and its Spanish Empire in 1821, what is now Arizona became part of its Territory of Nueva California, ("New California"), also known as Alta California ("Upper California"). Descendants of ethnic Spanish and mestizo settlers from the colonial years still lived in the area at the time of the arrival of later European-American migrants from the United States. [citation needed]

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Mexico in 1824. Alta California is the northwesternmost state.

During the Mexican–American War (1847–1848), the U.S. Army occupied the national capital of Mexico City and pursued its claim to much of northern Mexico, including what later became Arizona Territory in 1863 and later the State of Arizona in 1912. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) specified that, in addition to language and cultural rights of the existing inhabitants of former Mexican citizens being considered as inviolable, the sum of $15 million in compensation (equivalent to $528,230,769.23 in 2023) be paid to the Republic of Mexico. In 1853, the U.S. acquired the land south below the Gila River from Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase along the southern border area as encompassing the best future southern route for a transcontinental railway.

What is now the state of Arizona was administered by the United States government as part of the Territory of New Mexico from 1850 until the southern part of that region seceded from the Union to form the Territory of Arizona. This newly established territory was formally organized by the federal government of the Confederate States on Saturday, January 18, 1862, when President Jefferson Davis approved and signed An Act to Organize the Territory of Arizona, marking the first official use of the name "Territory of Arizona". The Southern territory supplied the Confederate government with men, horses, and equipment. Formed in 1862, Arizona scout companies served with the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Arizona has the westernmost military engagement on record during the Civil War with the Battle of Picacho Pass (1862).

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Geronimo (far right) and his Apache warriors fought against both Mexican and American settlers.

The Federal government declared a new U.S. Arizona Territory, consisting of the western half of earlier New Mexico Territory, in Washington, D.C., on February 24, 1863. These new boundaries would later form the basis of the state. The first territorial capital, Prescott, was founded in 1864 following a gold rush to central Arizona. The capital was later moved to Tucson, back to Prescott, and then to its final location in Phoenix in a series of controversial moves as different regions of the territory gained and lost political influence with the growth and development of the territory.

Although names including "Gadsonia", "Pimeria", "Montezuma" and "Arizuma" had been considered for the territory, when 16th President Abraham Lincoln signed the final bill, it read "Arizona", and that name was adopted. (Montezuma was not derived from the Aztec emperor, but was the sacred name of a divine hero to the Pima people of the Gila River Valley. It was probably considered – and rejected – for its sentimental value before Congress settled on the name "Arizona".) [citation needed]

Brigham Young, leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City in Utah, sent Mormons to Arizona in the mid- to late 19th century. They founded Mesa, Snowflake, Heber, Safford, and other towns. They also settled in the Phoenix Valley (or "Valley of the Sun"), Tempe, Prescott, and other areas. The Mormons settled what became northern Arizona and northern New Mexico. At the time these areas were in a part of the former New Mexico Territory.

During the nineteenth century, a series of gold and silver rushes occurred in the territory, the best known being the 1870s stampede to the silver bonanzas of Tombstone, Arizona, in southeast Arizona, also known for its legendary outlaws and lawmen. By the late 1880s, copper production eclipsed the precious metals with the rise of copper camps like Bisbee, Arizona, and Jerome, Arizona. The boom and bust economy of mining also left hundreds of ghost towns across the territory, but copper mining continued to prosper with the territory producing more copper than any other state by 1907, which earned Arizona the nickname "the Copper State" at the time of statehood. During the first years of statehood the industry experienced growing pains and labor disputes with the Bisbee Deportation of 1917 the result of a copper miners' strike.

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Children of Depression-era migrant workers, Pinal County, 1937

20th century to present

During the Mexican Revolution from 1910 to 1920, several battles were fought in the Mexican towns just across the border from Arizona settlements. Throughout the revolution, many Arizonans enlisted in one of the several armies fighting in Mexico. Only two significant engagements took place on U.S. soil between U.S. and Mexican forces: Pancho Villa's 1916 Columbus Raid in New Mexico and the Battle of Ambos Nogales in 1918 in Arizona.

After Mexican federal troops fired on U.S. soldiers, the American garrison launched an assault into Nogales, Mexico. The Mexicans eventually surrendered after both sides sustained heavy casualties. A few months earlier, just west of Nogales, an Indian War battle had occurred, considered the last engagement in the American Indian Wars, which lasted from 1775 to 1918. U.S. soldiers stationed on the border confronted Yaqui Indians who were using Arizona as a base to raid the nearby Mexican settlements, as part of their wars against Mexico. [citation needed]

Arizona became a U.S. state on February 14, 1912, coinciding with Valentine's Day. Arizona was the 48th state admitted to the U.S. and the last of the contiguous states to be admitted.[citation needed]

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Eleanor Roosevelt at the Gila River relocation center, April 23, 1943

Cotton farming and copper mining, two of Arizona's most important statewide industries, suffered heavily during the Great Depression. But during the 1920s and even the 1930s, tourism began to develop as the important Arizonan industry it is today. Dude ranches, such as the K L Bar and Remuda in Wickenburg, along with the Flying V and Tanque Verde in Tucson, gave tourists the chance to take part in the flavor and activities of the "Old West". Several upscale hotels and resorts opened during this period, some of which are still top tourist draws. They include the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in central Phoenix (opened 1929) and the Wigwam Resort on the west side of the Phoenix area (opened 1936).

Arizona was the site of German prisoner of war camps during World War II and Japanese American internment camps. Because of wartime fears of a Japanese invasion of the U.S. West Coast (which in fact materialized in the Aleutian Islands Campaign in June 1942), from 1942 to 1945, persons of Japanese descent were forced to reside in internment camps built in the interior of the country. Many lost their homes and businesses. The camps were abolished after World War II.

The Phoenix-area POW camp site for Germans was purchased after the war by the Maytag family (of major home appliance fame). It was developed as the site of the Phoenix Zoo. A Japanese-American internment camp was on Mount Lemmon, just outside the state's southeastern city of Tucson. Another POW camp was near the Gila River in eastern Yuma County. Arizona was also home to the Phoenix Indian School, one of several federal Indian boarding schools designed to assimilate Native American children into mainstream European-American culture. Children were often enrolled in these schools against the wishes of their parents and families. Attempts to suppress native identities included forcing the children to cut their hair, to take and use English names, to speak only English, and to practice Christianity rather than their native religions.

Numerous Native Americans from Arizona fought for the United States during World War II. Their experiences resulted in a rising activism in the postwar years to achieve better treatment and civil rights after their return to the state. After Maricopa County did not allow them to register to vote, in 1948 veteran Frank Harrison and Harry Austin, of the Mojave-Apache Tribe at Fort McDowell Indian Reservation, brought a legal suit, Harrison and Austin v. Laveen, to challenge this exclusion. The Arizona Supreme Court ruled in their favor.

Arizona's population grew tremendously with residential and business development after World War II, aided by the widespread use of air conditioning, which made the intensely hot summers more comfortable. According to the Arizona Blue Book (published by the Arizona Secretary of State's office each year), the state population in 1910 was 294,353. By 1970, it was 1,752,122. The percentage growth each decade averaged about 20% in the earlier decades, and about 60% each decade thereafter. [citation needed]

In the 1960s, retirement communities were developed. These age-restricted subdivisions catered exclusively to the needs of senior citizens and attracted many retirees who wanted to escape the harsh winters of the Midwest and the Northeast. Sun City, established by developer Del Webb and opened in 1960, was one of the first such communities. Green Valley, south of Tucson, was another such community, designed as a retirement subdivision for Arizona's teachers. Many senior citizens from across the United States and Canada come to Arizona each winter and stay only during the winter months; they are referred to as snowbirds. [citation needed]

In March 2000, Arizona was the site of the first legally binding election ever held over the internet to nominate a candidate for public office. In the 2000 Arizona Democratic Primary, under worldwide attention, Al Gore defeated Bill Bradley. Voter turnout in this state primary increased more than 500% over the 1996 primary.

In the 21st century, Arizona has frequently garnered national attention for its efforts to quell illegal immigration into the state. In 2004, voters passed Proposition 200, requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. The Supreme Court of the United States struck this restriction down in 2013. In 2010, Arizona enacted SB 1070 which required all immigrants to carry immigration papers at all times, but the Supreme Court also invalidated parts of this law in Arizona v. United States in 2012.

On January 8, 2011, a gunman shot congresswoman Gabby Giffords and 18 others at a gathering in Tucson. Giffords was critically wounded. The incident sparked national attention regarding incendiary political rhetoric.

Three ships named USS Arizona have been christened in honor of the state, although only USS Arizona (BB-39) was so named after statehood was achieved.

Geography

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Köppen climate types of Arizona
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The Grand Canyon

Arizona is in the Southwestern United States as one of the Four Corners states. Arizona is the sixth largest state by area, ranked after New Mexico and before Nevada. Of the state's 113,998 square miles (295,000 km2), approximately 15% is privately owned. The remaining area is public forest and parkland, state trust land and Native American reservations. There are 24 National Park Service maintained sites in Arizona, including the three national parks of Grand Canyon National Park, Saguaro National Park, and the Petrified Forest National Park.

Arizona is well known for its desert Basin and Range region in the state's southern portions, which is rich in a landscape of xerophyte plants such as the cactus. This region's topography was shaped by prehistoric volcanism, followed by the cooling-off and related subsidence. Its climate has exceptionally hot summers and mild winters. The state is less well known for its pine-covered north-central portion of the high country of the Colorado Plateau (see Arizona Mountains forests).

Like other states of the Southwest United States, Arizona is marked by high mountains, the Colorado plateau, and mesas. Despite the state's aridity, 27% of Arizona is forest, a percentage comparable to modern-day Romania or Greece. The world's largest stand of ponderosa pine trees is in Arizona.

The Mogollon Rim (/ ˌmoʊ gəˈyoʊn /), a 1,998-foot (609 m) escarpment, cuts across the state's central section and marks the southwestern edge of the Colorado Plateau. In 2002, this was an area of the Rodeo–Chediski Fire, the worst fire in state history until 2011.

Located in northern Arizona, the Grand Canyon is a colorful, deep, steep-sided gorge, carved by the Colorado River. The canyon is one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World and is largely contained in the Grand Canyon National Park – one of the first national parks in the United States. President Theodore Roosevelt was a major proponent of designating the Grand Canyon area as a National Park, often visiting to hunt mountain lion and enjoy the scenery. The canyon was created by the Colorado River cutting a channel over millions of years, and is about 277 miles (446 km) long, ranges in width from 4 to 18 miles (6 to 29 km) and attains a depth of more than 1 mile (1.6 km). Nearly two billion years of the Earth's history have been exposed as the Colorado River and its tributaries cut through layer after layer of sediment as the Colorado Plateau uplifted.

Arizona is home to one of the most well-preserved meteorite impact sites in the world. Created around 50,000 years ago, the Barringer Meteorite Crater (better known simply as "Meteor Crater") is a gigantic hole in the middle of the high plains of the Colorado Plateau, about 25 miles (40 km) west of Winslow. A rim of smashed and jumbled boulders, some of them the size of small houses, rises 150 feet (46 m) above the level of the surrounding plain. The crater itself is nearly a mile (1.6 kilometers) wide and 570 feet (170 m) deep.

Arizona is one of two U.S. states, along with Hawaii, that does not observe Daylight Saving Time, though the large Navajo Nation in the state's northeastern region does.

Adjacent states

  • Utah (north)
  • Colorado (northeast)
  • Nevada (northwest)
  • Sonora, Mexico (south)
  • Baja California, Mexico (southwest)
  • New Mexico (east)
  • California (west)

Climate

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Köppen climate map of Arizona.

Due to its large area and variations in elevation, the state has a wide variety of localized climate conditions. In the lower elevations the climate is primarily desert, with mild winters and extremely hot summers. Typically, from late fall to early spring, the weather is mild, averaging a minimum of 60 °F (16 °C). November through February are the coldest months, with temperatures typically ranging from 40 to 75 °F (4 to 24 °C), with occasional frosts.

About midway through February, the temperatures start to rise, with warm days, and cool, breezy nights. The summer months of June through September bring a dry heat from 90 to 120 °F (32 to 49 °C), with occasional high temperatures exceeding 125 °F (52 °C) having been observed in the desert area. Arizona's all-time record high is 128 °F (53 °C) recorded at Lake Havasu City on June 29, 1994, and July 5, 2007; the all-time record low of −40 °F (−40 °C) was recorded at Hawley Lake on January 7, 1971.

Due to the primarily dry climate, large diurnal temperature variations occur in less-developed areas of the desert above 2,500 ft (760 m). The swings can be as large as 83 °F (46 °C) in the summer months. In the state's urban centers, the effects of local warming result in much higher measured night-time lows than in the recent past.

Arizona has an average annual rainfall of 12.7 in (323 mm), which comes during two rainy seasons, with cold fronts coming from the Pacific Ocean during the winter and a monsoon in the summer. The monsoon season occurs toward the end of summer. In July or August, the dewpoint rises dramatically for a brief period. During this time, the air contains large amounts of water vapor. Dewpoints as high as 81 °F (27 °C) have been recorded during the Phoenix monsoon season. This hot moisture brings lightning, thunderstorms, wind, and torrential, if usually brief, downpours. These downpours often cause flash floods, which can turn deadly. In an attempt to deter drivers from crossing flooding streams, the Arizona Legislature enacted the Stupid Motorist Law. It is rare for tornadoes or hurricanes to occur in Arizona.

Arizona's northern third is a plateau at significantly higher altitudes than the lower desert, and has an appreciably cooler climate, with cold winters and mild summers, though the climate remains semiarid to arid. Extremely low temperatures are not unknown; cold air systems from the northern states and Canada occasionally push into the state, bringing temperatures below 0 °F (−18 °C) to the state's northern parts.

Indicative of the variation in climate, Arizona is the state which has both the metropolitan area with the most days over 100 °F (38 °C) (Phoenix), and the metropolitan area in the lower 48 states with the most days with a low temperature below freezing (Flagstaff).

Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected cities in Arizona
Location July (°F) July (°C) December (°F) December (°C)
Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min
Phoenix 106 83 41 28 66 45 19 7
Tucson 100 74 38 23 65 39 18 4
Yuma 107 82 42 28 68 46 20 8
Flagstaff 81 51 27 11 42 17 6 −8
Prescott 89 60 32 16 51 23 11 −5
Kingman 98 66 37 19 56 32 13 0

Arizona is considered as relatively vulnerable to climate change, which can make six of Arizona`s 15 counties uninhabitable for humans by the years 2040–2060. This was the cautionary warning made by a December 2020 study released by ProPublica and Rhodium Group.

Cities and towns

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View of suburban development in Scottsdale, 2006

Phoenix, in Maricopa County, is Arizona's capital and largest city. Other prominent cities in the Phoenix metro area include Mesa (Arizona's third largest city), Chandler (Arizona's fourth largest city), Glendale, Peoria, Buckeye, Sun City, Sun City West, Fountain Hills, Surprise, Gilbert, El Mirage, Avondale, Tempe, Tolleson and Scottsdale, with a total metropolitan population of just over 4.7 million. The average high temperature in July, 106 °F (41 °C), is one of the highest of any metropolitan area in the United States, offset by an average January high temperature of 67 °F (19 °C), the basis of its winter appeal.

Tucson, with a metro population of just over one million, is the state's second-largest city. Located in Pima County, approximately 110 miles (180 km) southeast of Phoenix, it was incorporated in 1877, making it the oldest incorporated city in Arizona. It is home to the University of Arizona. Major incorporated suburbs of Tucson include Oro Valley and Marana northwest of the city, Sahuarita south of the city, and South Tucson in an enclave south of downtown. It has an average July temperature of 100 °F (38 °C) and winter temperatures averaging 65 °F (18 °C). Saguaro National Park, just west of the city in the Tucson Mountains, is the site of the world's largest collection of Saguaro cacti.

The Prescott metropolitan area includes the cities of Prescott, Cottonwood, Camp Verde and many other towns in the 8,123 square miles (21,000 km2) of Yavapai County area. With 212,635 residents, this cluster of towns is the state's third largest metropolitan area. The city of Prescott (population 41,528) lies approximately 100 miles (160 km) northwest of the Phoenix metropolitan area. Situated in pine tree forests at an elevation of about 5,500 feet (1,700 m), Prescott enjoys a much cooler climate than Phoenix, with average summer highs around 88 °F (31 °C) and winter temperatures averaging 50 °F (10 °C).

Yuma is the center of the fourth-largest metropolitan area in Arizona. Located in Yuma County, it is near the borders of California and Mexico. It is one of the hottest cities in the United States, with an average July high of 107 °F (42 °C). For comparison, the same month's average in Death Valley is 115 °F (46 °C). The city features sunny days about 90% of the year. The Yuma Metropolitan Statistical Area has a population of 160,000. Yuma attracts many winter visitors from all over the United States.

Flagstaff, in Coconino County, is the largest city in northern Arizona, and is at an elevation of nearly 7,000 feet (2,100 m). With its large Ponderosa pine forests, snowy winter weather and picturesque mountains, it is a stark contrast to the desert regions typically associated with Arizona. It is sited at the base of the San Francisco Peaks, the highest mountain range in the state of Arizona, which contains Humphreys Peak, the highest point in Arizona at 12,633 feet (3,851 m). Flagstaff has a strong tourism sector, due to its proximity to numerous tourist attractions including: Grand Canyon National Park, Sedona, and Oak Creek Canyon. Historic U.S. Route 66 is the main east–west street in the town. The Flagstaff metropolitan area is home to 134,421 residents and the main campus of Northern Arizona University.

Lake Havasu City, in Mohave County, known as "Arizona's playground", was developed on the Colorado River and is named after Lake Havasu. Lake Havasu City has a population of about 57,000 people. It is famous for huge spring break parties, sunsets and the London Bridge, relocated from London, England. Lake Havasu City was founded by real estate developer Robert P. McCulloch in 1963. It has two colleges, Mohave Community College and ASU Colleges in Lake Havasu City.

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Arizona
Source:
Rank Name County Pop. Rank Name County Pop.
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Phoenix
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Tucson
1 Phoenix Maricopa 1,624,569 11 Goodyear Maricopa 101,733 image
Mesa
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Chandler
2 Tucson Pima 543,242 12 Buckeye Maricopa 101,315
3 Mesa Maricopa 509,475 13 Yuma Yuma 97,093
4 Chandler Maricopa 279,458 14 Avondale Maricopa 90,564
5 Gilbert Maricopa 273,136 15 Flagstaff Coconino 76,989
6 Glendale Maricopa 249,630 16 Queen Creek Maricopa / Pinal 66,346
7 Scottsdale Maricopa 242,753 17 Maricopa Pinal 62,720
8 Peoria Maricopa 194,917 18 Lake Havasu City Mohave 58,284
9 Tempe Maricopa 184,118 19 Casa Grande Pinal 57,699
10 Surprise Maricopa 149,191 20 Marana Pima 54,895

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18606,482
18709,65849.0%
188040,440318.7%
189088,243118.2%
1900122,93139.3%
1910204,35466.2%
1920334,16263.5%
1930435,57330.3%
1940499,26114.6%
1950749,58750.1%
19601,302,16173.7%
19701,770,90036.0%
19802,718,21553.5%
19903,665,22834.8%
20005,130,63240.0%
20106,392,01724.6%
20207,151,50211.9%
2024 (est.)7,582,3846.0%
Sources: 1910–2020
Note that early censuses
may not include
Native Americans in Arizona

2024

The United States Census Bureau records Arizona's population as 7,151,502 in the 2020 census, a 12% increase since the 2010 United States census.

Arizona remained sparsely settled for most of the 19th century. The 1860 census reported the population of "Arizona County" to be 6,482, of whom 4,040 were listed as "Indians", 21 as "free colored", and 2,421 as "white". Arizona's continued population growth has put an enormous stress on the state's water supply. As of 2011, 61% of Arizona's children under age one belonged to racial groups of color.

The population of metropolitan Phoenix increased by 45% from 1991 through 2001, helping to make Arizona the second fastest-growing state in the U.S. in the 1990s (the fastest was Nevada).

According to the 2010 United States census, Arizona had a population of 6,392,017. In 2010, illegal immigrants constituted an estimated 8% of the population. This was the second highest percentage of any state in the U.S.

Metropolitan Phoenix (4.7 million) and Tucson (1.0 million) are home to about five-sixths of Arizona's people (as of the 2010 census). Metro Phoenix alone accounts for two-thirds of the state's population.

According to HUD's 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, there were an estimated 13,553 homeless people living in Arizona.

As of 2018, the top countries of origin for Arizona's immigrant population were Mexico, Canada, India, the Philippines and China.

Race and ethnicity

Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census
Race and ethnicity Alone Total
White (non-Hispanic) 53.4% 53.4
 
56.8% 56.8
 
Hispanic or Latino 30.7% 30.7
 
African American (non-Hispanic) 4.4% 4.4
 
5.5% 5.5
 
Native American (non-Hispanic) 3.7% 3.7
 
4.9% 4.9
 
Asian 3.5% 3.5
 
4.5% 4.5
 
Pacific Islander 0.2% 0.2
 
0.4% 0.4
 
Other 0.4% 0.4
 
1.2% 1.2
 
Historical racial demographics
Racial composition 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020
White (non-Hispanic) 73.3% 74.5% 71.7% 63.8% 57.8% 53.4%
Native (NH) 5.4% 5.4% 5.2% 4.6% 4% 3.7%
Black (NH) 3% 2.7% 2.9% 2.9% 4.1% 4.4%
Asian (NH 0.5% 0.8% 1.4% 1.7% 2.8% 3.6%
Native Hawaiian and
other Pacific Islander
0.1% 0.2% 0.2%
Other race (NH) 0.5% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.4%
Two or more races (NH) 1.5% 3.4% 3.7%
Hispanic or Latino 17.3% 16.2% 18.8% 25.3% 29.6% 30.7%

Arizona's largest ancestry groups, as of 2022, were:

  1. Mexican (27.7%)
  2. German (12%)
  3. English (9.8%)
  4. Irish (8.5%)
  5. African (6.4%)
  6. Navajo (2.2%)

Languages

Top 10 non-English languages spoken in Arizona
Language Percentage of population
(as of 2010)
Spanish 21%
Navajo 2%
German <1%
Chinese (including Mandarin) <1%
Tagalog <1%
Vietnamese <1%
Other North American indigenous languages (especially indigenous languages of Arizona) <1%
French <1%
Arabic <1%
Apache <1%
Korean <1%
image
A Navajo man on horseback in Monument Valley

As of 2010, 73% (4,215,749) of Arizona residents age five and older spoke only English at home, while 21% (1,202,638) spoke Spanish, 2% (85,602) Navajo, <1% (22,592) German, <1% (22,426) Chinese (which includes Mandarin), <1% (19,015) Tagalog, <1% (17,603) Vietnamese, <1% (15,707) Other North American Indigenous Languages (especially indigenous languages of Arizona), and French was spoken as a main language by <1% (15,062) of the population over the age of five. In total, 27% (1,567,548) of Arizona's population age five and older spoke a mother language other than English.

Arizona is home to the largest number of speakers of Native American languages in the 48 contiguous states, as more than 85,000 individuals reported speaking Navajo, and 10,403 people reported Apache, as a language spoken at home in 2005. Arizona's Apache County has the highest concentration of speakers of Native American Indian languages in the United States.

Religion

image
The Spanish mission of San Xavier del Bac, founded in 1700

Religious self-identification, per Public Religion Research Institute's 2022 American Values Survey

  Protestantism (32%)
  Catholicism (24%)
  Mormonism (6%)
  Jehovah's Witness (1%)
  Unaffiliated (31%)
  Judaism (2%)
  New Age (1%)
  Other (3%)

The 2010 U.S. Religion Census: Religious Congregations & Membership Study by ARDA reported that the three largest denominational groups in Arizona were the Catholic Church, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and non-denominational Evangelical Protestants. The Catholic Church had the highest number of adherents in Arizona (at 930,001), followed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with 392,918 members reported and then non-denominational Evangelical Protestant churches, reporting 281,105 adherents. The religious body with the largest number of congregations is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (with 811 congregations) followed by the Southern Baptist Convention (with 323 congregations). This census accounted for about 2.4 million of Arizona's 6.4 million residents in 2010.

According to the study, the fifteen largest denominations by number of adherents in 2010 and 2000 were:

U.S. Religion Census: Religious Congregations & Membership Studies
Religion 2010 population 2000 population
Unclaimed 4,012,089
Catholic Church 930,001 974,884
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 392,918 251,974
Non-denominational Christianity 281,105 63,885
Southern Baptist Convention 126,830 138,516
Assemblies of God 123,713 82,802
United Methodist Church 54,977 53,232
Christian Churches and Churches of Christ 48,386 33,162
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 42,944 69,393
Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod 26,322 24,977
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) 26,078 33,554
Episcopal Church (United States) 24,853 31,104
Seventh-day Adventist Church 20,924 11,513
Church of the Nazarene 16,991 18,143
Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ 14,350 0
Churches of Christ 14,151 14,471

Hinduism became the largest non-Christian religion (when combining all denominations) in 2010 with more than 32,000 adherents, followed by Judaism with more than 20,000 and Buddhism with more than 19,000.

By the publication of the Public Religion Research Institute's 2020 study, 68% of the population identified as Christian. At the Pew Research Center's 2014 study, 67% of Arizona was Christian. Among the irreligious population from 2014 to 2020 per both studies, they have decreased from 27% of the population to 24% of self-identified irreligious or agnostic Arizonans. Additionally, a third separate study by the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 determined Christianity as the dominant religion in the state, with Catholics numbering 1,522,410 adherents and non-denominational Christians increasing to 402,842 Arizonan Christians.

Native American tribes

At the onset of European colonization what is now Arizona was inhabited by many Native American tribes, they included mainly the Navajo, the Apache, the Akimel O'odham, the Cocopah, the Halchidhoma, the Havasupai, Yavapai, and Hualapai, the Hopi, the Jocome and Jano, the Maricopa, the Mohave, the southern Paiute, the Tohono O'odham, the Yaqui, the Yuma and the Zuni Pueblo. Some of them still live in the state today.

The largest Native American tribes in Arizona according to the 2010 census are listed in the table below:

Tribal groupings with over 500 members in Arizona in 2010 census
Tribal grouping American Indian and

Alaska Native alone

AIAN in combination with

one or more other races

Total AIAN alone or

in any combination

Total AIAN population 296529 56857 353386
Navajo 133669 6594 140263
Apache 25761 2388 28149
Akimel O'odham 20233 1886 22119
Tohono Oʼodham 17314 1687 19001
Yaqui 14602 2760 17362
Hopi 10789 823 11612
Cherokee 3345 7833 11178
Mexican American Indian 4115 1681 5796
Quechan 4867 623 5490
Choctaw 1669 1847 3516
Sioux 2162 1316 3478
Pueblo 1818 452 2270
Ojibwe 1043 887 1930
Colorado River Indian Tribes 1763 156 1919
Blackfeet 420 1116 1536
Iroquois 650 625 1275
Yavapai Apache Nation 1024 179 1203
Muscogee 489 533 1022
Chickasaw 409 439 848
Ak-Chin Indian Community 650 194 844
Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation 721 59 780
Paiute 549 118 667
Potawatomi 345 229 574
Tribe not specified 44673 19341 64014

Economy

image
Arizona's Meteor Crater is a tourist attraction.

Arizona's total gross state product in 2023 was $508 billion. The composition of the state's economy is moderately diverse, although health care, transportation and the government remain the largest sectors.

Arizona's per capita income was $61,652 in 2023, ranking 33rd in the U.S. The state's 2023 median household income was $74,568, ranking 19th in the country and just below the U.S. national mean.

Early in its history, Arizona's economy relied on the "five C's": copper (see Copper mining in Arizona), cotton, cattle, citrus, and climate (tourism). Copper is still extensively mined from many expansive open-pit and underground mines, accounting for two-thirds of the nation's output.

Employment

  • Total employment (2016): 2,379,409
  • Total employer establishments (2016): 139,134

The state government is Arizona's largest employer, while Banner Health is the state's largest private employer, with more than 39,000 employees (2016). As of August 2020, the state's unemployment rate was 5.9%.

The largest employment sectors in Arizona are (August 2020, Nonfarm Employment):

Sector Employees
Trade, transportation, and utilities 553,300
Education and health services 459,400
Government 430,400
Professional and business services 419,200
Leisure and hospitality 269,400
Financial activities 231,900
Manufacturing 170,900
Construction 169,900
Other services 95,600
Information 46,100
Mining and logging 13,300

Largest employers

According to The Arizona Republic, the largest private employers in the state as of 2019 were:

Rank Company Employees Industry
1 Banner Health 44,718 Healthcare
2 Walmart Stores, Inc. 34,071 Discount retailer
3 Kroger Co. 20,530 Grocery stores
4 Wells Fargo & Co. 16,161 Financial services
5 Albertsons Inc. 14,500 Grocery stores, retail drugstores
6 McDonald's Corp. 13,000 Food service
7 CVS Health 12,100 Healthcare
8 Raytheon Co. 12,000 Defense
9 HonorHealth 11,919 Healthcare
10 Dignity Health 10,562 Healthcare
11 Intel Corp. 10,400 Semiconductor manufacturing
12 Home Depot Inc. 10,200 Retail home improvement
13 (tie) JP Morgan Chase & Co. 10,000 Financial services
American Airlines 10,000 Airline
15 Tenet Healthcare 9,483 Healthcare
16 Bank of America Corp. 9,200 Financial services
17 Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. 8,759 Mining
18 Bashas' Supermarkets 8,519 Grocery stores
19 Amazon.com 8,500 Online shopping
20 Target Corp. 8,400 Discount retailer
21 Honeywell International Inc. 7,792 Aerospace manufacturing
22 Circle K Corp. 7,478 Convenience stores
23 Mayo Foundation 7,436 Healthcare
24 State Farm 7,200 Insurance
25 UnitedHealthcare 7,194 Healthcare

Agriculture

image
Romaine, Yuma

Multiple crops are grown in Arizona, including lettuce, spinach, cantaloupe, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, and watermelon.

Federal crop insurance is available for grape (Vitis vinifera and other Vitis spp.) here. Together with California's crop it falls under special provisions of the relevant crop insurance statutes. and diseases are covered, excluding Phylloxera (Daktulosphaira vitifoliae) or failure to correctly apply insect control or apply disease control.

The whitefly Bemisia tabaci B was introduced through the poinsettia trade in the 1980s, displacing the previous A biotype. In 2004 the Q biotype (from the Mediterranean) was first found here, also on poinsettia.

The Colorado Potato Beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) is either native or an early introduction here. Unusually, the population here commonly feeds on Silverleaf Nightshade (Solanum elaeagnifolium), which is usually a less attractive host for this beetle. The CPB is an occasional pest of tomato.

Transportation

image
Entering Arizona on I-10 from New Mexico

Highways

Interstate highways

image I-8 | image I-10 | image Future I-11 | image I-15 | image I-17 | image I-19 | image I-40

U.S. routes

image US 60 | image US 64 | image Historic US 66 | image US 70 | image Historic US 80 | image US 89 | image US 89A | image US 91 | image US 93 | image US 95 | image US 160 | image US 163 | image US 180 | image US 191

Main Interstate routes include I-17, and I-19 traveling north–south, I-8, I-10, and I-40, traveling east–west, and a short stretch of I-15 traveling northeast–southwest through the extreme northwestern corner of the state. In addition, the various urban areas are served by complex networks of state routes and highways, such as the Loop 101, which is part of Phoenix's vast freeway system.

Public transportation, Amtrak, and intercity bus

The Phoenix and Tucson metropolitan areas are served by public bus transit systems. Yuma and Flagstaff also have public bus systems. Greyhound Lines serves Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, Yuma, and several smaller communities statewide.

A light rail system, called Valley Metro Rail, was completed in December 2008; it connects Central Phoenix with the nearby cities of Mesa and Tempe.

In Tucson, the Sun Link streetcar system travels through the downtown area, connecting the main University of Arizona campus with Mercado San Agustin on the western edge of downtown Tucson. Sun Link, loosely based on the Portland Streetcar, launched in July 2014.

Amtrak Southwest Chief route serves the northern part of the state, stopping at Winslow, Flagstaff, Williams and Kingman. The Texas Eagle and Sunset Limited routes serve South-Central Arizona, stopping at Tucson, Maricopa, Yuma and Benson. Phoenix lost Amtrak service in 1996 with the rerouting of the Sunset Limited, and now an Amtrak bus runs between Phoenix and the station in Maricopa. As of 2021, Amtrak has proposed to restore rail service between Phoenix and Tucson.

Law and government

Capitol complex

image
The original Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix

The capital of Arizona is Phoenix. The original Capitol building, with its distinctive copper dome, was dedicated in 1901 (construction was completed for $136,000 in 1900) when the area was a territory. Phoenix became the official state capital with Arizona's admission to the union in 1912.

The House of Representatives and Senate buildings were dedicated in 1960, and an Executive Office Building was dedicated in 1974 (the ninth floor of this building is where the Office of the Governor is located). The original Capitol building was converted into a museum.

The Capitol complex is fronted and highlighted by the richly landscaped Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza, named after Wesley Bolin, a governor who died in office in the 1970s. The site also includes many monuments and memorials, including the anchor and signal mast from the USS Arizona (one of the U.S. Navy ships sunk in Pearl Harbor) and a granite version of the Ten Commandments.

State legislative branch

The Arizona Legislature is bicameral and consists of a thirty-member Senate and a 60-member House of Representatives. Each of the thirty legislative districts has one senator and two representatives. Legislators are elected for two-year terms.

Each Legislature covers a two-year period. The first session following the general election is known as the first regular session, and the session convening in the second year is known as the second regular session. Each regular session begins on the second Monday in January and adjourns sine die (terminates for the year) no later than Saturday of the week in which the 100th day from the beginning of the regular session falls. The President of the Senate and Speaker of the House, by rule, may extend the session up to seven additional days. Thereafter, the session can be extended only by a majority vote of members present of each house.

The majority party is the Republican Party, which has held power in both houses since 1993. The Democratic Party picked up several legislative seats in recent elections, bringing both chambers one seat away from being equally divided as of 2021.

Arizona state senators and representatives are elected for two-year terms and are limited to four consecutive terms in a chamber, though there is no limit on the total number of terms. When a lawmaker is term-limited from office, it is common for him or her to run for election in the other chamber.

State executive branch

State of Arizona
elected officials
Governor Katie Hobbs (D)
Secretary of State Adrian Fontes (D)
Attorney General Kris Mayes (D)
State Treasurer Kimberly Yee (R)
Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne (R)
State Mine Inspector Paul Marsh (R)
Corporation Commissioner
  • Nick Myers (R)
  • James O'Connor (R)
  • Lea Márquez Peterson (R)
  • Anna Tovar (D)
  • Kevin Thompson (R)
Speaker of the House

Ben Toma (R)

President of the Senate

Warren Petersen (R)

Arizona's executive branch is headed by a governor, who is elected to a four-year term. The governor may serve any number of terms, though no more than two in a row. Arizona is one of the few states that has no governor's mansion. During their term, the governors reside within their private residence, with executive offices housed in the executive tower at the state capitol. The governor of Arizona is Katie Hobbs (D).

Governor Jan Brewer assumed office in 2009 after Janet Napolitano had her nomination by Barack Obama for Secretary of Homeland Security confirmed by the Senate. Arizona has had four female governors and a fifth currently serving, more than any other state.

Other elected executive officials include the Secretary of State, State Treasurer, State Attorney General, Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Mine Inspector, and a five-member Corporation Commission. All elected officials hold a term of four years, and are limited to two consecutive terms (except the office of the State Mine Inspector, which is limited to four terms).

Arizona is one of five states that do not have a lieutenant governor. The elected secretary of state is first in line to succeed the governor in the event of death, disability, resignation, or removal from office. If appointed, the Secretary of State is not eligible and the next governor is selected from the next eligible official in the line of succession, including the attorney general, state treasurer, and superintendent of public instruction. Since 1977, four secretaries of state and one attorney general have succeeded to the state's governorship.

On November 8, 2022, Arizona voters approved a state constitutional amendment (Proposition 131) that created the position and office of the lieutenant governor beginning with the 2026 elections. The position will be elected on a joint ticket with the governor. The lieutenant governor ascends to the governorship if the incumbent governor dies, resigns, or is removed (via impeachment conviction) from office. The proposition, through a law pre-passed by the state legislature, also tasks the governor with assigning a job to her or his running mate, such as chief of staff, the director of the state Department of Administration, or "any position" to which the governor can appoint someone by law.

State judicial branch

The Arizona Supreme Court is the highest court in Arizona, consisting of a chief justice, a vice chief justice, and five associate justices. Justices are appointed by the governor from a list recommended by a bipartisan commission and must be sustained in office by election after the first two years following their appointment. Subsequent sustaining elections occur every six years. The supreme court has appellate jurisdiction in death penalty cases, but nearly all other appellate cases go through the Arizona Court of Appeals first. The court has original jurisdiction in a few other circumstances, as outlined in the state constitution. The court meets in the Arizona Supreme Court Building at the capitol complex (at the southern end of Wesley Bolin Plaza).

The Arizona Court of Appeals, subdivided into two divisions, is the intermediate court in the state. Division One is based in Phoenix, consists of nineteen judges, and has jurisdiction in the Western and Northern regions of the state, along with the greater Phoenix area. Division Two is based in Tucson, consists of nine judges, and has jurisdiction over the Southern regions of the state, including the Tucson area. Judges are selected in a method similar to the one used for state supreme court justices.

Each county of Arizona has a superior court, the size and organization of which are varied and generally depend on the size of the particular county.

Counties

image
Art Deco doors of the Cochise County Courthouse in Bisbee

Arizona is divided into 15 counties, ranging in size from 1,238 square miles (3,210 km2) to 18,661 square miles (48,330 km2).

Arizona counties
County name County seat Founded 2020 population Percent of total Area (sq mi) Percent of total
Apache St. Johns February 24, 1879 66,021 0.9% 11,218 9.8%
Cochise Bisbee February 1, 1881 125,447 1.8% 6,219 5.5%
Coconino Flagstaff February 18, 1891 145,101 2.0% 18,661 16.4%
Gila Globe February 8, 1881 53,272 0.7% 4,796 4.2%
Graham Safford March 10, 1881 38,533 0.5% 4,641 4.1%
Greenlee Clifton March 10, 1909 9,563 0.1% 1,848 1.6%
La Paz Parker January 1, 1983 16,557 0.2% 4,513 4.0%
Maricopa Phoenix February 14, 1871 4,420,568 61.8% 9,224 8.1%
Mohave Kingman November 9, 1864 213,267 3.0% 13,470 11.8%
Navajo Holbrook March 21, 1895 106,717 1.5% 9,959 8.7%
Pima Tucson November 9, 1864 1,043,433 14.6% 9,189 8.1%
Pinal Florence February 1, 1875 425,264 6.0% 5,374 4.7%
Santa Cruz Nogales March 15, 1899 47,669 0.7% 1,238 1.1%
Yavapai Prescott November 9, 1864 236,209 3.3% 8,128 7.1%
Yuma Yuma November 9, 1864 203,881 2.9% 5,519 4.8%
Totals: 15 7,151,502 113,997

Federal representation

Arizona's two United States senators are and Mark Kelly (D) and Ruben Gallego (D).

Arizona's United States representatives are David Schweikert (R-1), Eli Crane (R-2), Yassamin Ansari (D-3), Greg Stanton (D-4), Andy Biggs (R-5), Juan Ciscomani (R-6), Raul Grijalva (D-7), Abraham Hamadeh (R-8), and Paul Gosar (R-9). Arizona gained a ninth seat in the House of Representatives due to redistricting based on the 2010 United States census.

Political culture

Voter registration as of October, 2024
Party Number of voters Percentage
Republican 1,562,091 35.76%
Other 1,471,309 33.69%
Democratic 1,266,536 28.99%
No Labels 32,338 0.74%
Libertarian 31,132 0.71%
Minor parties 4,187 0.09%
Total 4,367,593 100.00%
image
Party registration by Arizona county (January 2023)
  Democrat ≥ 30%
  Democrat ≥ 40%
  Democrat ≥ 50%
  Republican ≥ 30%
  Republican ≥ 40%
  Republican ≥ 50%
  Unaffiliated ≥ 30%

From statehood through the late 1940s, Arizona was primarily dominated by the Democratic Party. During this time, the Democratic candidate for the presidency carried the state each election, the only exceptions being the elections of 1920, 1924 and 1928 – all three were national Republican landslides.

In 1924, Congress had passed a law granting citizenship and suffrage to all Native Americans, some of whom had previously been excluded as members of tribes on reservations. Legal interpretations of Arizona's constitution prohibited Native Americans living on reservations from voting, classifying them as being under "guardianship". This interpretation was overturned as being incorrect and unconstitutional in 1948 by the Arizona Supreme Court, following a lawsuit by World War II Indian veterans and Harry Austin, both of the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation. The landmark case is Harrison and Austin v. Laveen. After the men were refused the opportunity to register in Maricopa County, they filed lawsuit against the registrar. The National Congress of American Indians, the Department of Justice, the Department of the Interior, and the American Civil Liberties Union all filed amicus curiae (friends of the court) briefs in the case. The State Supreme Court established the rights of Native Americans to vote in the state; at the time, they comprised about 11% of the population. That year, a similar provision was overturned in New Mexico when challenged by another Indian veteran in court. These were the only two states that had continued to prohibit Native Americans from voting.

Arizona voted Republican in every presidential election from 1952 to 1992, with Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan winning the state by particularly large margins. During this forty-year span, it was the only state not to be carried by a Democrat at least once.

Democrat Lyndon Johnson, in 1964, lost the state by fewer than 5,000 votes to Arizona Senator and native Barry Goldwater. (This was the most closely contested state in what was otherwise a landslide victory for Johnson that year.) Democrat Bill Clinton ended this streak in 1996, when he won Arizona by a little over two percentage points (Clinton had previously come within less than two percent of winning Arizona's electoral votes in 1992). From 2000 until 2016, the majority of the state continued to support Republican presidential candidates by solid margins. In the 2020 United States presidential election, Joe Biden again broke the streak by becoming the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Arizona since 1996.

Since the mid 20th century, the Republican Party has also dominated Arizona politics in general. The fast-growing Phoenix and Tucson suburbs became reliably Republican areas from the 1950s onward. During this time, many "Pinto Democrats", or conservative Democrats from rural areas, became increasingly willing to support Republicans at the state and national level. While the state normally supports Republicans at the federal level, Democrats are often competitive in statewide elections. Two of the last six governors have been Democrats.

On March 4, 2008, Senator John McCain effectively clinched the Republican nomination for 2008, becoming the first major party presidential nominee from the state since Barry Goldwater in 1964.

Arizona politics is dominated by a longstanding rivalry between its two largest counties, Maricopa and Pima – home to Phoenix and Tucson, respectively. The two counties have almost 75 percent of the state's population and cast almost 80 percent of the state's vote. They also elect a substantial majority of the state legislature.

Maricopa County is home to almost 60 percent of the state's population, and most of the state's elected officials live there. Before Joe Biden won Maricopa County in 2020, it had voted Republican in every presidential election since 1952. This includes the 1964 run of native son Barry Goldwater; he would not have carried his home state without his 20,000-vote margin in Maricopa County. Similarly, McCain won Arizona by eight percentage points in 2008, aided by his 130,000-vote margin in Maricopa County.

In contrast, Pima County, home to Tucson, and most of southern Arizona have historically voted more Democratic. While Tucson's suburbs lean Republican, they hold to a somewhat more moderate brand of Republicanism than is common in the Phoenix area.

image
Arizona teacher's strike and rally on April 26, 2018

Arizona rejected a same-sex marriage ban in a referendum as part of the 2006 elections. Arizona was the first state in the nation to do so. Same-sex marriage was not recognized in Arizona, but this amendment would have denied any legal or financial benefits to unmarried homosexual or heterosexual couples. In 2008, Arizona voters passed Proposition 102, an amendment to the state constitution to define marriage as a union of one man and one woman. It passed by a more narrow majority than similar votes in a number of other states. In 2024, Arizona voters passed a constitutional amendment recognising abortion access within the Arizona state constitution, becoming the southernmost continental state to codify abortion rights.

In 2010, Arizona adopted SB 1070, called the "toughest immigration law" in the United States. A fierce debate erupted between supporters and detractors of SB 1070. The United States Supreme Court struck down portions of the Arizona law, which required all immigrants to carry immigration papers at all times, in Arizona v. United States.

The West Virginia teachers' strike in 2018 inspired teachers in other states, including Arizona, to take similar action.

Arizona retains the death penalty. There is currently a gubernatorial hold on executions. Authorized methods of execution include the gas chamber.

Same-sex marriage and civil unions

In 2006, Arizona became the first state in the United States to reject a proposition, Prop 107, that would have banned same-sex marriage and civil unions. However, in 2008, Arizona voters approved of Prop 102, a constitutional amendment that prohibited same-sex marriage but not other unions. Prior to same-sex marriage being legal, the City of Bisbee became the first jurisdiction in Arizona to approve of civil unions. The state's Attorney General at the time, Tom Horne, threatened to sue, but rescinded the threat once Bisbee amended the ordinance; Bisbee approved of civil unions in 2013. The municipalities of Clarkdale, Cottonwood, Jerome, Sedona, and Tucson also passed civil unions.

A November 2011 Public Policy Polling survey found 44% of Arizona voters supported the legalization of same-sex marriage, while 45% opposed it and 12% were not sure. A separate question on the same survey found 72% of respondents supported legal recognition of same-sex couples, with 40% supporting same-sex marriage, 32% supporting civil unions, 27% opposing all legal recognition and 1% not sure. Arizona Proposition 102, known by its supporters as the Marriage Protection Amendment, appeared as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment on the November 4, 2008 ballot in Arizona, where it was approved: 56–43%. It amended the Arizona Constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman.

On October 17, 2014, Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne announced his office would no longer object to same-sex marriage, in response to a U.S. District Court Ruling on Arizona Proposition 102. On that day, each county's Clerk of the Superior Court began to issue same-sex marriage licenses, and Arizona became the 31st state to legalize same-sex marriage.

The 2023 American Values Atlas by Public Religion Research Institute found that an overwhelming majority of residents support same-sex marriage.

Education

Elementary and secondary education

Public schools in Arizona are separated into about 220 local school districts which operate independently, but are governed in most cases by elected county school superintendents; these are in turn overseen by the Arizona State Board of Education and the Arizona Department of Education. A state Superintendent of Public Instruction (elected in partisan elections every even-numbered year when there is not a presidential election, for a four-year term). In 2005, a School District Redistricting Commission was established with the goal of combining and consolidating many of these districts.

Higher education

image
The University of Arizona (the Mall) in Tucson
image
Arizona State University (a biodesign building) in Tempe
image
Northern Arizona University (The Skydome) in Flagstaff

Arizona is served by three public universities: The University of Arizona, Arizona State University, and Northern Arizona University. These schools are governed by the Arizona Board of Regents.

Private higher education in Arizona is dominated by a large number of for-profit and "chain" (multi-site) universities.

Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University, Prescott and Prescott College are Arizona's only non-profit four-year private colleges.

Arizona has a wide network of two-year vocational schools and community colleges. These colleges were governed historically by a separate statewide board of directors but, in 2002, the state legislature transferred almost all oversight authority to individual community college districts. The Maricopa County Community College District includes 11 community colleges throughout Maricopa County and is one of the largest in the nation.

Public universities in Arizona

  • Arizona State University, (Sun Devils) Tempe/Phoenix/Mesa/Glendale/Lake Havasu
  • Northern Arizona University, (Lumberjacks) Flagstaff/Yuma/Prescott
  • University of Arizona, (Wildcats) Tucson/Sierra Vista, MD college in downtown Phoenix and UA Agricultural Center in Yuma/Maricopa

Private colleges and universities in Arizona

  • American Indian College
  • Carrington College
  • Arizona Christian University
  • Art Center College of Design
  • Art Institute of Tucson
  • Art Institute of Phoenix
  • A.T. Still University
  • Brookline College
  • Brown Mackie College
  • Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
  • Grand Canyon University
  • Midwestern University
  • Northcentral University
  • Ottawa University
  • Park University
  • University of Phoenix
  • Penn Foster College
  • Prescott College
  • Thunderbird School of Global Management
  • University of Advancing Technology
  • Western International University
  • Conservatory of Recording Arts and Sciences

Community colleges

  • Arizona Western College
  • Central Arizona College
  • Cochise College
  • Coconino Community College
  • Diné College
  • Eastern Arizona College
  • Maricopa Community College District:
    • Chandler-Gilbert Community College
    • Estrella Mountain Community College
    • GateWay Community College
    • Glendale Community College
    • Mesa Community College
    • Paradise Valley Community College
    • Phoenix College
    • Rio Salado College
    • Scottsdale Community College
    • South Mountain Community College
  • Mohave Community College
  • Northland Pioneer College
  • Pima Community College
  • Yavapai College

Art and culture

Visual arts and museums

Phoenix Art Museum, on the historic Central Avenue Corridor in Phoenix, is the Southwest's largest collection of visual art from across the world. The museum displays international exhibitions alongside the museum's collection of more than 18,000 works of American, Asian, European, Latin American, Western American, modern and contemporary art, and fashion design. With a community education mandate since 1951, Phoenix Art Museum holds a year-round program of festivals, live performances, independent art films and educational programs. The museum also has PhxArtKids, an interactive space for children; photography exhibitions through the museum's partnership with the Center for Creative Photography; the landscaped Sculpture Garden and dining at Arcadia Farms.

Arizona is a recognized center of Native American art, with a number of galleries showcasing historical and contemporary works. The Heard Museum, also in Phoenix, is a major repository of Native American art. Some of the signature exhibits include a full Navajo hogan, the Mareen Allen Nichols Collection containing 260 pieces of contemporary jewelry, the Barry Goldwater Collection of 437 historic Hopi kachina dolls, and an exhibit on the 19th-century boarding school experiences of Native Americans. The Heard Museum has about 250,000 visitors a year.

Sedona, Jerome, and Tubac are known as budding artist colonies, and small arts scenes exist in the larger cities and near the state universities.

Film

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View of Monument Valley from John Ford's Point

Several major Hollywood films, such as Billy Jack, U Turn, Waiting to Exhale, Just One of the Guys, Can't Buy Me Love, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, The Scorpion King, The Banger Sisters, Used Cars, and Raising Arizona have been made there (as have many Westerns). The 1993 science fiction movie Fire in the Sky, based on a reported alien abduction in the town of Snowflake, was set in Snowflake. It was filmed in the Oregon towns of Oakland, Roseburg, and Sutherlin.

The 1974 film Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, for which Ellen Burstyn won the Academy Award for Best Actress, and also starring Kris Kristofferson, was set in Tucson. The climax of the 1977 Clint Eastwood film The Gauntlet takes place in downtown Phoenix. The final segments of the 1984 film Starman take place at Meteor Crater outside Winslow. The Jeff Foxworthy comedy documentary movie Blue Collar Comedy Tour was filmed almost entirely at the Dodge Theatre. Some of Alfred Hitchcock's classic film Psycho was shot in Phoenix, the ostensible home town of the main character.

Some of the television shows filmed or set in Arizona include The New Dick Van Dyke Show, Medium, Alice, The First 48, Insomniac with Dave Attell, Cops, and America's Most Wanted. The TV sitcom Alice, which was based on the movie was set in Phoenix. Twilight had passages set in Phoenix at the beginning and the end of the film.

Music

Arizona is prominently featured in the lyrics of many Country and Western songs, such as Jamie O'Neal's hit ballad "There Is No Arizona". George Strait's "Oceanfront Property" uses "ocean front property in Arizona" as a metaphor for a sucker proposition. The line "see you down in Arizona Bay" is used in a Tool song in reference to the possibility (expressed as a hope by comedian Bill Hicks) that Southern California will one day fall into the ocean. Glen Campbell, a notable resident, popularized the song "By The Time I Get To Phoenix".

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Standin' on the Corner Park and mural in Winslow, Arizona

"Arizona" was the title of a popular song recorded by Mark Lindsay. Arizona is mentioned by the hit song "Take It Easy", written by Jackson Browne and Glenn Frey and performed by the Eagles. Arizona is also mentioned in the Beatles' song "Get Back", credited to John Lennon and Paul McCartney; McCartney sings: "JoJo left his home in Tucson, Arizona, for some California grass." "Carefree Highway", released in 1974 by Gordon Lightfoot, takes its name from Arizona State Route 74 north of Phoenix.

Arizona's budding music scene is helped by emerging bands, as well as some well-known artists. The Gin Blossoms, Chronic Future, Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers, Jimmy Eat World, Caroline's Spine, and others began their careers in Arizona. Also, a number of punk and rock bands got their start in Arizona, including JFA, The Feederz, Sun City Girls, The Meat Puppets, The Maine, The Summer Set, and more recently Authority Zero and Digital Summer.

Arizona also has many singers and other musicians. Singer, songwriter and guitarist Michelle Branch is from Sedona. Chester Bennington, the former lead vocalist of Linkin Park, and mash-up artist DJ Z-Trip are both from Phoenix. One of Arizona's better known musicians is shock rocker Alice Cooper, who helped define the genre. Maynard James Keenan, the lead singer of the bands Tool, A Perfect Circle, and Puscifer, calls the town of Cornville home.

Other notable singers include country singers Dierks Bentley and Marty Robbins, folk singer Katie Lee, Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks, CeCe Peniston, Rex Allen, 2007 American Idol winner Jordin Sparks, and Linda Ronstadt.

Arizona is also known for its heavy metal scene, which is centered in and around Phoenix. In the early to mid-1990s, it included bands such as Job for a Cowboy, Knights of the Abyss, Greeley Estates, Eyes Set To Kill, blessthefall, The Word Alive, The Dead Rabbitts, and Abigail Williams. The band Soulfly calls Phoenix home and Megadeth lived in Phoenix for about a decade. Beginning in and around 2009, Phoenix began to host a burgeoning desert rock and sludge metal underground, (ala' Kyuss in 1990s California) led by bands like Wolves of Winter, Asimov, and Dead Canyon.

American composer Elliott Carter composed his first String Quartet (1950–51) while on sabbatical (from New York) in Arizona. The quartet won a Pulitzer Prize and other awards and is now a staple of the string quartet repertoire.[citation needed]

Sports

Club Sport League Championships
Arizona Cardinals American football National Football League 2 (1925, 1947)
Arizona Diamondbacks Baseball Major League Baseball 1 (2001)
Phoenix Suns Basketball National Basketball Association 0
Phoenix Mercury Basketball Women's National Basketball Association 3 (2007, 2009, 2014)
Phoenix Rising FC Soccer USL Championship 1 (2023)
Tucson Roadrunners Ice hockey American Hockey League 0
Arizona Rattlers Indoor football Indoor Football League 6 (1994, 1997, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017)
image
State Farm Stadium in Glendale

Four Super Bowls have been held in Arizona, including Super Bowl LVII which was held at State Farm Stadium on February 12, 2023.

Due to its numerous golf courses, Arizona is home to several stops on the PGA Tour, most notably the Phoenix Open, held at the TPC of Scottsdale, and the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Marana.

Auto racing is another sport known in the state. Phoenix Raceway in Avondale is home to NASCAR race weekends twice a year. Firebird International Raceway near Chandler is home to drag racing and other motorsport events.

College sports

College sports are also prevalent in Arizona. The Arizona State Sun Devils and the Arizona Wildcats belong to the Pac-12 Conference while the Northern Arizona Lumberjacks compete in the Big Sky Conference and the Grand Canyon Antelopes compete in the Western Athletic Conference. The rivalry between Arizona State Sun Devils and the Arizona Wildcats predates Arizona's statehood, and is the oldest rivalry in the NCAA. The Territorial Cup, first awarded in 1889 and certified as the oldest trophy in college football, is awarded to the winner of the annual football game between the two schools.

Arizona also hosts several college football bowl games. The Fiesta Bowl, originally held at Sun Devil Stadium, is now held at State Farm Stadium in Glendale. The Fiesta Bowl is part of the new College Football Playoff (CFP). University of Phoenix Stadium was also home to the 2007 and 2011 BCS National Championship Games.

image
A spring training game between the Cubs and White Sox at HoHoKam Park

State Farm Stadium hosted the Final Four of the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in 2017 and is scheduled to host it again in 2024.

Baseball

Arizona is a popular location for Major League Baseball spring training, as it is the site of the Cactus League. Spring training was first started in Arizona in 1947, when Brewers owner Veeck sold them in 1945 but went on to purchase the Cleveland Indians in 1946. He decided to train the Cleveland Indians in Tucson and convinced the New York Giants to give Phoenix a try. Thus, the Cactus League was born.

On March 9, 1995, Arizona was awarded a franchise to begin to play for the 1998 season. A $130 million franchise fee was paid to Major League Baseball and on January 16, 1997, the Diamondbacks were officially voted into the National League.

Since their debut, the Diamondbacks have won five National League West titles, two National League Championship pennants, and the 2001 World Series.

Notable people

See also

  • Outline of Arizona
  • Index of Arizona-related articles
  • USS Arizona, 4 ships

Notes

  1. Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
  2. /ˌærɪˈznə/ ARR-iz-OH-nə; Navajo: Hoozdo Hahoodzo [hoː˥z̥to˩ ha˩hoː˩tso˩];O'odham: Alĭ ṣonak [ˈaɭi̥ ˈʂɔnak]
  3. second to Nevada with 9% in 2010
  4. Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry.
  5. In 2000, this designation was broken into two groups: Independent, Non-Charismatic Churches (34,130 adherents) and Independent, Charismatic Churches (29,755 adherents)

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Further reading

  • Bayless, Betsy, 1998, Arizona Blue Book, 1997–1998. Phoenix: Office of the Arizona Secretary of State.
  • McIntyre, Allan J., 2008, The Tohono O'odham and Pimeria Alta. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. (ISBN 978-0738556338).
  • Miller, Tom (editor), 1986, Arizona: The Land and the People. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. (ISBN 978-0816510047).
  • Officer, James E., 1987, Hispanic Arizona, 1536–1856. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. (ISBN 978-0816509812).
  • Plascencia, Luis F.B. and Gloria H. Cuádraz (eds.), 2018, Mexican Workers and the Making of Arizona. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Thomas, David M. (editor), 2003, Arizona Legislative Manual. In Arizona Phoenix: Arizona Legislative Council. Google Print. Retrieved January 16, 2006.
  • Trimble, Marshall, 1998, Arizona, A Cavalcade of History. Tucson: Treasure Chest Publications. (ISBN 978-0918080431).
  • Woosley, Anne I., 2008, Early Tucson. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. (ISBN 978-0738556468).
  • Official website image
  • Arizona State Guide, from the Library of Congress
  • "Arizona Regional Accounts Data". Archived from the original on August 19, 2002. Retrieved February 19, 2003.
  • Arizona Demographic Data from FedStats
  • Arizona USDA State Fact Sheet
  • Arizona Indicators
  • Energy Data & Statistics for Arizona
  • Arizona State Databases
  • Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records
  • Arizona at Ballotpedia
  • image Geographic data related to Arizona at OpenStreetMap
  • Official Arizona Office of Tourism
  • Arizona Game & Fish Department
  • Arizona State Parks
  • National Park Service Travel Itinerary
Preceded by
New Mexico
List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union
Admitted on February 14, 1912 (48th)
Succeeded by

Arizona is a state in the Southwestern region of the United States sharing the Four Corners region of the western United States with Colorado New Mexico and Utah Its other neighboring states are Nevada to the northwest and California to the west It also shares an international border with the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California to the south and southwest It is the 6th largest and the 14th most populous of the 50 states Its capital and largest city is Phoenix which is the most populous state capital in the United States ArizonaStateFlagSealNicknames The Grand Canyon State The Copper State The Valentine StateMotto Ditat Deus God enriches Anthem The Arizona March Song and Arizona Location of Arizona within the United StatesCountryUnited StatesBefore statehoodArizona TerritoryAdmitted to the UnionFebruary 14 1912 112 years ago 1912 02 14 48th Capital and largest city PhoenixLargest county or equivalentMaricopaLargest metro and urban areasPhoenixGovernment GovernorKatie Hobbs D Secretary of StateAdrian Fontes D LegislatureArizona State Legislature Upper houseSenate Lower houseHouse of RepresentativesJudiciaryArizona Supreme CourtU S senatorsMark Kelly D Ruben Gallego D U S House delegation6 Republicans 3 Democrats list Area Total113 998 sq mi 295 254 km2 Rank6thDimensions Length400 mi 645 km Width310 mi 500 km Elevation4 100 ft 1 250 m Highest elevation Humphreys Peak 12 637 ft 3 852 m Lowest elevation Colorado River at the Mexico border 72 ft 22 m Population 2024 Total7 582 384 Rank14th Density63 sq mi 24 km2 Rank32nd Median household income 77 300 20 23 Income rank28thDemonymArizonanLanguage Official languageEnglish Spoken languageAs of 2010 English 74 1 Spanish 19 5 Navajo 1 9 Other 4 5 Time zonesMost of stateUTC 07 00 Mountain Navajo NationUTC 07 00 Mountain Summer DST UTC 06 00 MDT USPS abbreviationAZISO 3166 codeUS AZTraditional abbreviationAriz Latitude31 20 N to 37 NLongitude109 03 W to 114 49 WWebsiteaz wbr govState symbols of ArizonaList of state symbolsFlag of ArizonaSeal of ArizonaSloganThe Grand Canyon StateLiving insigniaAmphibianArizona tree frogBirdCactus wrenButterflyTwo tailed swallowtailFishApache troutFlowerSaguaro cactus blossomMammalRingtailReptileArizona ridge nosed rattlesnakeTreePalo verdeInanimate insigniaColor s Blue old goldDinosaurSonorasaurusFirearmColt Single Action Army revolverFossilPetrified woodGemstoneTurquoiseMineralCopperRockPetrified woodShipUSS ArizonaState route markerState quarterReleased in 2008Lists of United States state symbols Arizona is the 48th state and last of the contiguous states to be admitted to the Union achieving statehood on February 14 1912 Historically part of the territory of Alta California and Nuevo Mexico in New Spain it became part of independent Mexico in 1821 After being defeated in the Mexican American War Mexico ceded much of this territory to the United States in 1848 where the area became part of the territory of New Mexico The southernmost portion of the state was acquired in 1853 through the Gadsden Purchase Southern Arizona is known for its desert climate with extremely hot summers and mild winters Northern Arizona features forests of pine Douglas fir and spruce trees the Colorado Plateau mountain ranges such as the San Francisco Mountains as well as large deep canyons with much more moderate summer temperatures and significant winter snowfalls There are ski resorts in the areas of Flagstaff Sunrise and Tucson In addition to the internationally known Grand Canyon National Park which is one of the world s seven natural wonders there are several national forests national parks and national monuments Arizona is home to a diverse population About one quarter of the state is made up of Indian reservations that serve as the home of 27 federally recognized Native American tribes including the Navajo Nation the largest in the state and the country with more than 300 000 citizens Since the 1980s the proportion of Hispanics has grown significantly owing to migration from Mexico and Central America A substantial portion of the population are followers of the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Arizona s population and economy have grown dramatically since the 1950s because of inward migration and the state is now a major hub of the Sun Belt Cities such as Phoenix and Tucson have developed large sprawling suburban areas Many large companies such as PetSmart and Circle K have headquarters in the state and Arizona is home to major universities including the University of Arizona Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University The state is known for a history of conservative politicians such as Barry Goldwater and John McCain though it has become a swing state in recent years EtymologyThe state s name appears to originate from an earlier Spanish name Arizonac derived from the O odham name alĭ ṣonak meaning small spring Initially this term was applied by Spanish colonists only to an area near the silver mining camp of Planchas de Plata Sonora To the European settlers the O odham pronunciation sounded like Arissona The area is still known as alĭ ṣonak in the O odham language Another possible origin is the Basque phrase haritz ona the good oak as there were numerous Basque sheepherders in the area A native born Mexican of Basque ancestry established the rancheria small rural settlement of Arizona between 1734 and 1736 in the current Mexican state of Sonora It became notable after a significant discovery of silver there around 1737 The misconception that the state s name purportedly originated from the Spanish term Arida Zona Arid Zone is considered a case of folk etymology HistoryFor thousands of years before the modern era Arizona was home to many ancient Native American civilizations Hohokam Mogollon and Ancestral Puebloan cultures were among those that flourished throughout the state Many of their pueblos cliffside dwellings rock paintings and other prehistoric treasures have survived and attract thousands of tourists each year citation needed La conquista del Colorado by Augusto Ferrer Dalmau depicts Francisco Vazquez de Coronado s 1540 1542 expedition Garcia Lopez de Cardenas can be seen overlooking the Grand Canyon In 1539 Marcos de Niza a Spanish Franciscan became the first European to contact Native Americans He explored parts of the present state and made contact with native inhabitants probably the Sobaipuri The expedition of Spanish explorer Coronado entered the area in 1540 1542 during its search for Cibola Few Spanish settlers migrated to Arizona One of the first settlers in Arizona was Jose Romo de Vivar Father Kino was the next European in the region A member of the Society of Jesus Jesuits he led the development of a chain of missions in the region He converted many of the Indians to Christianity in the Pimeria Alta now southern Arizona and northern Sonora in the 1690s and early 18th century Spain founded presidios fortified towns at Tubac in 1752 and Tucson in 1775 When Mexico achieved its independence from the Kingdom of Spain and its Spanish Empire in 1821 what is now Arizona became part of its Territory of Nueva California New California also known as Alta California Upper California Descendants of ethnic Spanish and mestizo settlers from the colonial years still lived in the area at the time of the arrival of later European American migrants from the United States citation needed Mexico in 1824 Alta California is the northwesternmost state During the Mexican American War 1847 1848 the U S Army occupied the national capital of Mexico City and pursued its claim to much of northern Mexico including what later became Arizona Territory in 1863 and later the State of Arizona in 1912 The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1848 specified that in addition to language and cultural rights of the existing inhabitants of former Mexican citizens being considered as inviolable the sum of 15 million in compensation equivalent to 528 230 769 23 in 2023 be paid to the Republic of Mexico In 1853 the U S acquired the land south below the Gila River from Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase along the southern border area as encompassing the best future southern route for a transcontinental railway What is now the state of Arizona was administered by the United States government as part of the Territory of New Mexico from 1850 until the southern part of that region seceded from the Union to form the Territory of Arizona This newly established territory was formally organized by the federal government of the Confederate States on Saturday January 18 1862 when President Jefferson Davis approved and signed An Act to Organize the Territory of Arizona marking the first official use of the name Territory of Arizona The Southern territory supplied the Confederate government with men horses and equipment Formed in 1862 Arizona scout companies served with the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War Arizona has the westernmost military engagement on record during the Civil War with the Battle of Picacho Pass 1862 Geronimo far right and his Apache warriors fought against both Mexican and American settlers The Federal government declared a new U S Arizona Territory consisting of the western half of earlier New Mexico Territory in Washington D C on February 24 1863 These new boundaries would later form the basis of the state The first territorial capital Prescott was founded in 1864 following a gold rush to central Arizona The capital was later moved to Tucson back to Prescott and then to its final location in Phoenix in a series of controversial moves as different regions of the territory gained and lost political influence with the growth and development of the territory Although names including Gadsonia Pimeria Montezuma and Arizuma had been considered for the territory when 16th President Abraham Lincoln signed the final bill it read Arizona and that name was adopted Montezuma was not derived from the Aztec emperor but was the sacred name of a divine hero to the Pima people of the Gila River Valley It was probably considered and rejected for its sentimental value before Congress settled on the name Arizona citation needed Brigham Young leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in Salt Lake City in Utah sent Mormons to Arizona in the mid to late 19th century They founded Mesa Snowflake Heber Safford and other towns They also settled in the Phoenix Valley or Valley of the Sun Tempe Prescott and other areas The Mormons settled what became northern Arizona and northern New Mexico At the time these areas were in a part of the former New Mexico Territory During the nineteenth century a series of gold and silver rushes occurred in the territory the best known being the 1870s stampede to the silver bonanzas of Tombstone Arizona in southeast Arizona also known for its legendary outlaws and lawmen By the late 1880s copper production eclipsed the precious metals with the rise of copper camps like Bisbee Arizona and Jerome Arizona The boom and bust economy of mining also left hundreds of ghost towns across the territory but copper mining continued to prosper with the territory producing more copper than any other state by 1907 which earned Arizona the nickname the Copper State at the time of statehood During the first years of statehood the industry experienced growing pains and labor disputes with the Bisbee Deportation of 1917 the result of a copper miners strike Children of Depression era migrant workers Pinal County 193720th century to present During the Mexican Revolution from 1910 to 1920 several battles were fought in the Mexican towns just across the border from Arizona settlements Throughout the revolution many Arizonans enlisted in one of the several armies fighting in Mexico Only two significant engagements took place on U S soil between U S and Mexican forces Pancho Villa s 1916 Columbus Raid in New Mexico and the Battle of Ambos Nogales in 1918 in Arizona After Mexican federal troops fired on U S soldiers the American garrison launched an assault into Nogales Mexico The Mexicans eventually surrendered after both sides sustained heavy casualties A few months earlier just west of Nogales an Indian War battle had occurred considered the last engagement in the American Indian Wars which lasted from 1775 to 1918 U S soldiers stationed on the border confronted Yaqui Indians who were using Arizona as a base to raid the nearby Mexican settlements as part of their wars against Mexico citation needed Arizona became a U S state on February 14 1912 coinciding with Valentine s Day Arizona was the 48th state admitted to the U S and the last of the contiguous states to be admitted citation needed Eleanor Roosevelt at the Gila River relocation center April 23 1943 Cotton farming and copper mining two of Arizona s most important statewide industries suffered heavily during the Great Depression But during the 1920s and even the 1930s tourism began to develop as the important Arizonan industry it is today Dude ranches such as the K L Bar and Remuda in Wickenburg along with the Flying V and Tanque Verde in Tucson gave tourists the chance to take part in the flavor and activities of the Old West Several upscale hotels and resorts opened during this period some of which are still top tourist draws They include the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in central Phoenix opened 1929 and the Wigwam Resort on the west side of the Phoenix area opened 1936 Arizona was the site of German prisoner of war camps during World War II and Japanese American internment camps Because of wartime fears of a Japanese invasion of the U S West Coast which in fact materialized in the Aleutian Islands Campaign in June 1942 from 1942 to 1945 persons of Japanese descent were forced to reside in internment camps built in the interior of the country Many lost their homes and businesses The camps were abolished after World War II The Phoenix area POW camp site for Germans was purchased after the war by the Maytag family of major home appliance fame It was developed as the site of the Phoenix Zoo A Japanese American internment camp was on Mount Lemmon just outside the state s southeastern city of Tucson Another POW camp was near the Gila River in eastern Yuma County Arizona was also home to the Phoenix Indian School one of several federal Indian boarding schools designed to assimilate Native American children into mainstream European American culture Children were often enrolled in these schools against the wishes of their parents and families Attempts to suppress native identities included forcing the children to cut their hair to take and use English names to speak only English and to practice Christianity rather than their native religions Numerous Native Americans from Arizona fought for the United States during World War II Their experiences resulted in a rising activism in the postwar years to achieve better treatment and civil rights after their return to the state After Maricopa County did not allow them to register to vote in 1948 veteran Frank Harrison and Harry Austin of the Mojave Apache Tribe at Fort McDowell Indian Reservation brought a legal suit Harrison and Austin v Laveen to challenge this exclusion The Arizona Supreme Court ruled in their favor Arizona s population grew tremendously with residential and business development after World War II aided by the widespread use of air conditioning which made the intensely hot summers more comfortable According to the Arizona Blue Book published by the Arizona Secretary of State s office each year the state population in 1910 was 294 353 By 1970 it was 1 752 122 The percentage growth each decade averaged about 20 in the earlier decades and about 60 each decade thereafter citation needed In the 1960s retirement communities were developed These age restricted subdivisions catered exclusively to the needs of senior citizens and attracted many retirees who wanted to escape the harsh winters of the Midwest and the Northeast Sun City established by developer Del Webb and opened in 1960 was one of the first such communities Green Valley south of Tucson was another such community designed as a retirement subdivision for Arizona s teachers Many senior citizens from across the United States and Canada come to Arizona each winter and stay only during the winter months they are referred to as snowbirds citation needed In March 2000 Arizona was the site of the first legally binding election ever held over the internet to nominate a candidate for public office In the 2000 Arizona Democratic Primary under worldwide attention Al Gore defeated Bill Bradley Voter turnout in this state primary increased more than 500 over the 1996 primary In the 21st century Arizona has frequently garnered national attention for its efforts to quell illegal immigration into the state In 2004 voters passed Proposition 200 requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote The Supreme Court of the United States struck this restriction down in 2013 In 2010 Arizona enacted SB 1070 which required all immigrants to carry immigration papers at all times but the Supreme Court also invalidated parts of this law in Arizona v United States in 2012 On January 8 2011 a gunman shot congresswoman Gabby Giffords and 18 others at a gathering in Tucson Giffords was critically wounded The incident sparked national attention regarding incendiary political rhetoric Three ships named USS Arizona have been christened in honor of the state although only USS Arizona BB 39 was so named after statehood was achieved GeographyKoppen climate types of ArizonaThe Grand Canyon Arizona is in the Southwestern United States as one of the Four Corners states Arizona is the sixth largest state by area ranked after New Mexico and before Nevada Of the state s 113 998 square miles 295 000 km2 approximately 15 is privately owned The remaining area is public forest and parkland state trust land and Native American reservations There are 24 National Park Service maintained sites in Arizona including the three national parks of Grand Canyon National Park Saguaro National Park and the Petrified Forest National Park Arizona is well known for its desert Basin and Range region in the state s southern portions which is rich in a landscape of xerophyte plants such as the cactus This region s topography was shaped by prehistoric volcanism followed by the cooling off and related subsidence Its climate has exceptionally hot summers and mild winters The state is less well known for its pine covered north central portion of the high country of the Colorado Plateau see Arizona Mountains forests Like other states of the Southwest United States Arizona is marked by high mountains the Colorado plateau and mesas Despite the state s aridity 27 of Arizona is forest a percentage comparable to modern day Romania or Greece The world s largest stand of ponderosa pine trees is in Arizona The Mogollon Rim ˌmoʊ geˈyoʊn a 1 998 foot 609 m escarpment cuts across the state s central section and marks the southwestern edge of the Colorado Plateau In 2002 this was an area of the Rodeo Chediski Fire the worst fire in state history until 2011 Located in northern Arizona the Grand Canyon is a colorful deep steep sided gorge carved by the Colorado River The canyon is one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World and is largely contained in the Grand Canyon National Park one of the first national parks in the United States President Theodore Roosevelt was a major proponent of designating the Grand Canyon area as a National Park often visiting to hunt mountain lion and enjoy the scenery The canyon was created by the Colorado River cutting a channel over millions of years and is about 277 miles 446 km long ranges in width from 4 to 18 miles 6 to 29 km and attains a depth of more than 1 mile 1 6 km Nearly two billion years of the Earth s history have been exposed as the Colorado River and its tributaries cut through layer after layer of sediment as the Colorado Plateau uplifted Arizona is home to one of the most well preserved meteorite impact sites in the world Created around 50 000 years ago the Barringer Meteorite Crater better known simply as Meteor Crater is a gigantic hole in the middle of the high plains of the Colorado Plateau about 25 miles 40 km west of Winslow A rim of smashed and jumbled boulders some of them the size of small houses rises 150 feet 46 m above the level of the surrounding plain The crater itself is nearly a mile 1 6 kilometers wide and 570 feet 170 m deep Arizona is one of two U S states along with Hawaii that does not observe Daylight Saving Time though the large Navajo Nation in the state s northeastern region does Sycamore Canyon San Francisco Peaks Mogollon Rim Chiricahua Mountains Sonoran Desert Meteor CraterAdjacent states Utah north Colorado northeast Nevada northwest Sonora Mexico south Baja California Mexico southwest New Mexico east California west ClimateKoppen climate map of Arizona Due to its large area and variations in elevation the state has a wide variety of localized climate conditions In the lower elevations the climate is primarily desert with mild winters and extremely hot summers Typically from late fall to early spring the weather is mild averaging a minimum of 60 F 16 C November through February are the coldest months with temperatures typically ranging from 40 to 75 F 4 to 24 C with occasional frosts About midway through February the temperatures start to rise with warm days and cool breezy nights The summer months of June through September bring a dry heat from 90 to 120 F 32 to 49 C with occasional high temperatures exceeding 125 F 52 C having been observed in the desert area Arizona s all time record high is 128 F 53 C recorded at Lake Havasu City on June 29 1994 and July 5 2007 the all time record low of 40 F 40 C was recorded at Hawley Lake on January 7 1971 Due to the primarily dry climate large diurnal temperature variations occur in less developed areas of the desert above 2 500 ft 760 m The swings can be as large as 83 F 46 C in the summer months In the state s urban centers the effects of local warming result in much higher measured night time lows than in the recent past Arizona has an average annual rainfall of 12 7 in 323 mm which comes during two rainy seasons with cold fronts coming from the Pacific Ocean during the winter and a monsoon in the summer The monsoon season occurs toward the end of summer In July or August the dewpoint rises dramatically for a brief period During this time the air contains large amounts of water vapor Dewpoints as high as 81 F 27 C have been recorded during the Phoenix monsoon season This hot moisture brings lightning thunderstorms wind and torrential if usually brief downpours These downpours often cause flash floods which can turn deadly In an attempt to deter drivers from crossing flooding streams the Arizona Legislature enacted the Stupid Motorist Law It is rare for tornadoes or hurricanes to occur in Arizona Arizona s northern third is a plateau at significantly higher altitudes than the lower desert and has an appreciably cooler climate with cold winters and mild summers though the climate remains semiarid to arid Extremely low temperatures are not unknown cold air systems from the northern states and Canada occasionally push into the state bringing temperatures below 0 F 18 C to the state s northern parts Indicative of the variation in climate Arizona is the state which has both the metropolitan area with the most days over 100 F 38 C Phoenix and the metropolitan area in the lower 48 states with the most days with a low temperature below freezing Flagstaff Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected cities in Arizona Location July F July C December F December C Max Min Max Min Max Min Max MinPhoenix 106 83 41 28 66 45 19 7Tucson 100 74 38 23 65 39 18 4Yuma 107 82 42 28 68 46 20 8Flagstaff 81 51 27 11 42 17 6 8Prescott 89 60 32 16 51 23 11 5Kingman 98 66 37 19 56 32 13 0 Arizona is considered as relatively vulnerable to climate change which can make six of Arizona s 15 counties uninhabitable for humans by the years 2040 2060 This was the cautionary warning made by a December 2020 study released by ProPublica and Rhodium Group Cities and towns This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message View of suburban development in Scottsdale 2006 Phoenix in Maricopa County is Arizona s capital and largest city Other prominent cities in the Phoenix metro area include Mesa Arizona s third largest city Chandler Arizona s fourth largest city Glendale Peoria Buckeye Sun City Sun City West Fountain Hills Surprise Gilbert El Mirage Avondale Tempe Tolleson and Scottsdale with a total metropolitan population of just over 4 7 million The average high temperature in July 106 F 41 C is one of the highest of any metropolitan area in the United States offset by an average January high temperature of 67 F 19 C the basis of its winter appeal Tucson with a metro population of just over one million is the state s second largest city Located in Pima County approximately 110 miles 180 km southeast of Phoenix it was incorporated in 1877 making it the oldest incorporated city in Arizona It is home to the University of Arizona Major incorporated suburbs of Tucson include Oro Valley and Marana northwest of the city Sahuarita south of the city and South Tucson in an enclave south of downtown It has an average July temperature of 100 F 38 C and winter temperatures averaging 65 F 18 C Saguaro National Park just west of the city in the Tucson Mountains is the site of the world s largest collection of Saguaro cacti The Prescott metropolitan area includes the cities of Prescott Cottonwood Camp Verde and many other towns in the 8 123 square miles 21 000 km2 of Yavapai County area With 212 635 residents this cluster of towns is the state s third largest metropolitan area The city of Prescott population 41 528 lies approximately 100 miles 160 km northwest of the Phoenix metropolitan area Situated in pine tree forests at an elevation of about 5 500 feet 1 700 m Prescott enjoys a much cooler climate than Phoenix with average summer highs around 88 F 31 C and winter temperatures averaging 50 F 10 C Yuma is the center of the fourth largest metropolitan area in Arizona Located in Yuma County it is near the borders of California and Mexico It is one of the hottest cities in the United States with an average July high of 107 F 42 C For comparison the same month s average in Death Valley is 115 F 46 C The city features sunny days about 90 of the year The Yuma Metropolitan Statistical Area has a population of 160 000 Yuma attracts many winter visitors from all over the United States Flagstaff in Coconino County is the largest city in northern Arizona and is at an elevation of nearly 7 000 feet 2 100 m With its large Ponderosa pine forests snowy winter weather and picturesque mountains it is a stark contrast to the desert regions typically associated with Arizona It is sited at the base of the San Francisco Peaks the highest mountain range in the state of Arizona which contains Humphreys Peak the highest point in Arizona at 12 633 feet 3 851 m Flagstaff has a strong tourism sector due to its proximity to numerous tourist attractions including Grand Canyon National Park Sedona and Oak Creek Canyon Historic U S Route 66 is the main east west street in the town The Flagstaff metropolitan area is home to 134 421 residents and the main campus of Northern Arizona University Lake Havasu City in Mohave County known as Arizona s playground was developed on the Colorado River and is named after Lake Havasu Lake Havasu City has a population of about 57 000 people It is famous for huge spring break parties sunsets and the London Bridge relocated from London England Lake Havasu City was founded by real estate developer Robert P McCulloch in 1963 It has two colleges Mohave Community College and ASU Colleges in Lake Havasu City Largest cities or towns in Arizona Source Rank Name County Pop Rank Name County Pop Phoenix Tucson 1 Phoenix Maricopa 1 624 569 11 Goodyear Maricopa 101 733 Mesa Chandler2 Tucson Pima 543 242 12 Buckeye Maricopa 101 3153 Mesa Maricopa 509 475 13 Yuma Yuma 97 0934 Chandler Maricopa 279 458 14 Avondale Maricopa 90 5645 Gilbert Maricopa 273 136 15 Flagstaff Coconino 76 9896 Glendale Maricopa 249 630 16 Queen Creek Maricopa Pinal 66 3467 Scottsdale Maricopa 242 753 17 Maricopa Pinal 62 7208 Peoria Maricopa 194 917 18 Lake Havasu City Mohave 58 2849 Tempe Maricopa 184 118 19 Casa Grande Pinal 57 69910 Surprise Maricopa 149 191 20 Marana Pima 54 895DemographicsA population density map of Arizona Map of counties in Arizona by racial plurality per the 2020 U S census Legend Non Hispanic White 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Native American 40 50 70 80 Hispanic or Latino 60 70 80 90 Extent of the Spanish language in the state of Arizona Historical population CensusPop Note 18606 482 18709 65849 0 188040 440318 7 189088 243118 2 1900122 93139 3 1910204 35466 2 1920334 16263 5 1930435 57330 3 1940499 26114 6 1950749 58750 1 19601 302 16173 7 19701 770 90036 0 19802 718 21553 5 19903 665 22834 8 20005 130 63240 0 20106 392 01724 6 20207 151 50211 9 2024 est 7 582 3846 0 Sources 1910 2020 Note that early censuses may not include Native Americans in Arizona 2024 The United States Census Bureau records Arizona s population as 7 151 502 in the 2020 census a 12 increase since the 2010 United States census Arizona remained sparsely settled for most of the 19th century The 1860 census reported the population of Arizona County to be 6 482 of whom 4 040 were listed as Indians 21 as free colored and 2 421 as white Arizona s continued population growth has put an enormous stress on the state s water supply As of 2011 update 61 of Arizona s children under age one belonged to racial groups of color The population of metropolitan Phoenix increased by 45 from 1991 through 2001 helping to make Arizona the second fastest growing state in the U S in the 1990s the fastest was Nevada According to the 2010 United States census Arizona had a population of 6 392 017 In 2010 illegal immigrants constituted an estimated 8 of the population This was the second highest percentage of any state in the U S Metropolitan Phoenix 4 7 million and Tucson 1 0 million are home to about five sixths of Arizona s people as of the 2010 census Metro Phoenix alone accounts for two thirds of the state s population According to HUD s 2022 Annual Homeless Assessment Report there were an estimated 13 553 homeless people living in Arizona As of 2018 the top countries of origin for Arizona s immigrant population were Mexico Canada India the Philippines and China Race and ethnicity Ethnic composition as of the 2020 census Race and ethnicity Alone TotalWhite non Hispanic 53 4 53 4 56 8 56 8 Hispanic or Latino 30 7 30 7 African American non Hispanic 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 Native American non Hispanic 3 7 3 7 4 9 4 9 Asian 3 5 3 5 4 5 4 5 Pacific Islander 0 2 0 2 0 4 0 4 Other 0 4 0 4 1 2 1 2 Historical racial demographics Racial composition 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020White non Hispanic 73 3 74 5 71 7 63 8 57 8 53 4 Native NH 5 4 5 4 5 2 4 6 4 3 7 Black NH 3 2 7 2 9 2 9 4 1 4 4 Asian NH 0 5 0 8 1 4 1 7 2 8 3 6 Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander 0 1 0 2 0 2 Other race NH 0 5 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 4 Two or more races NH 1 5 3 4 3 7 Hispanic or Latino 17 3 16 2 18 8 25 3 29 6 30 7 Arizona s largest ancestry groups as of 2022 update were Mexican 27 7 German 12 English 9 8 Irish 8 5 African 6 4 Navajo 2 2 Languages Top 10 non English languages spoken in Arizona Language Percentage of population as of 2010 Spanish 21 Navajo 2 German lt 1 Chinese including Mandarin lt 1 Tagalog lt 1 Vietnamese lt 1 Other North American indigenous languages especially indigenous languages of Arizona lt 1 French lt 1 Arabic lt 1 Apache lt 1 Korean lt 1 A Navajo man on horseback in Monument Valley As of 2010 update 73 4 215 749 of Arizona residents age five and older spoke only English at home while 21 1 202 638 spoke Spanish 2 85 602 Navajo lt 1 22 592 German lt 1 22 426 Chinese which includes Mandarin lt 1 19 015 Tagalog lt 1 17 603 Vietnamese lt 1 15 707 Other North American Indigenous Languages especially indigenous languages of Arizona and French was spoken as a main language by lt 1 15 062 of the population over the age of five In total 27 1 567 548 of Arizona s population age five and older spoke a mother language other than English Arizona is home to the largest number of speakers of Native American languages in the 48 contiguous states as more than 85 000 individuals reported speaking Navajo and 10 403 people reported Apache as a language spoken at home in 2005 Arizona s Apache County has the highest concentration of speakers of Native American Indian languages in the United States Religion The Spanish mission of San Xavier del Bac founded in 1700 The template Pie chart is being considered for merging Religious self identification per Public Religion Research Institute s 2022 American Values Survey Protestantism 32 Catholicism 24 Mormonism 6 Jehovah s Witness 1 Unaffiliated 31 Judaism 2 New Age 1 Other 3 The 2010 U S Religion Census Religious Congregations amp Membership Study by ARDA reported that the three largest denominational groups in Arizona were the Catholic Church the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and non denominational Evangelical Protestants The Catholic Church had the highest number of adherents in Arizona at 930 001 followed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints with 392 918 members reported and then non denominational Evangelical Protestant churches reporting 281 105 adherents The religious body with the largest number of congregations is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints with 811 congregations followed by the Southern Baptist Convention with 323 congregations This census accounted for about 2 4 million of Arizona s 6 4 million residents in 2010 According to the study the fifteen largest denominations by number of adherents in 2010 and 2000 were U S Religion Census Religious Congregations amp Membership Studies Religion 2010 population 2000 populationUnclaimed 4 012 089Catholic Church 930 001 974 884The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 392 918 251 974Non denominational Christianity 281 105 63 885Southern Baptist Convention 126 830 138 516Assemblies of God 123 713 82 802United Methodist Church 54 977 53 232Christian Churches and Churches of Christ 48 386 33 162Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 42 944 69 393Lutheran Church Missouri Synod 26 322 24 977Presbyterian Church U S A 26 078 33 554Episcopal Church United States 24 853 31 104Seventh day Adventist Church 20 924 11 513Church of the Nazarene 16 991 18 143Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ 14 350 0Churches of Christ 14 151 14 471 Hinduism became the largest non Christian religion when combining all denominations in 2010 with more than 32 000 adherents followed by Judaism with more than 20 000 and Buddhism with more than 19 000 By the publication of the Public Religion Research Institute s 2020 study 68 of the population identified as Christian At the Pew Research Center s 2014 study 67 of Arizona was Christian Among the irreligious population from 2014 to 2020 per both studies they have decreased from 27 of the population to 24 of self identified irreligious or agnostic Arizonans Additionally a third separate study by the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020 determined Christianity as the dominant religion in the state with Catholics numbering 1 522 410 adherents and non denominational Christians increasing to 402 842 Arizonan Christians Native American tribes At the onset of European colonization what is now Arizona was inhabited by many Native American tribes they included mainly the Navajo the Apache the Akimel O odham the Cocopah the Halchidhoma the Havasupai Yavapai and Hualapai the Hopi the Jocome and Jano the Maricopa the Mohave the southern Paiute the Tohono O odham the Yaqui the Yuma and the Zuni Pueblo Some of them still live in the state today The largest Native American tribes in Arizona according to the 2010 census are listed in the table below Tribal groupings with over 500 members in Arizona in 2010 census Tribal grouping American Indian and Alaska Native alone AIAN in combination with one or more other races Total AIAN alone or in any combinationTotal AIAN population 296529 56857 353386Navajo 133669 6594 140263Apache 25761 2388 28149Akimel O odham 20233 1886 22119Tohono Oʼodham 17314 1687 19001Yaqui 14602 2760 17362Hopi 10789 823 11612Cherokee 3345 7833 11178Mexican American Indian 4115 1681 5796Quechan 4867 623 5490Choctaw 1669 1847 3516Sioux 2162 1316 3478Pueblo 1818 452 2270Ojibwe 1043 887 1930Colorado River Indian Tribes 1763 156 1919Blackfeet 420 1116 1536Iroquois 650 625 1275Yavapai Apache Nation 1024 179 1203Muscogee 489 533 1022Chickasaw 409 439 848Ak Chin Indian Community 650 194 844Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation 721 59 780Paiute 549 118 667Potawatomi 345 229 574Tribe not specified 44673 19341 64014EconomyArizona s Meteor Crater is a tourist attraction Arizona s total gross state product in 2023 was 508 billion The composition of the state s economy is moderately diverse although health care transportation and the government remain the largest sectors Arizona s per capita income was 61 652 in 2023 ranking 33rd in the U S The state s 2023 median household income was 74 568 ranking 19th in the country and just below the U S national mean Early in its history Arizona s economy relied on the five C s copper see Copper mining in Arizona cotton cattle citrus and climate tourism Copper is still extensively mined from many expansive open pit and underground mines accounting for two thirds of the nation s output Employment Total employment 2016 2 379 409 Total employer establishments 2016 139 134 The state government is Arizona s largest employer while Banner Health is the state s largest private employer with more than 39 000 employees 2016 As of August 2020 update the state s unemployment rate was 5 9 The largest employment sectors in Arizona are August 2020 Nonfarm Employment Sector EmployeesTrade transportation and utilities 553 300Education and health services 459 400Government 430 400Professional and business services 419 200Leisure and hospitality 269 400Financial activities 231 900Manufacturing 170 900Construction 169 900Other services 95 600Information 46 100Mining and logging 13 300Largest employers According to The Arizona Republic the largest private employers in the state as of 2019 update were Rank Company Employees Industry1 Banner Health 44 718 Healthcare2 Walmart Stores Inc 34 071 Discount retailer3 Kroger Co 20 530 Grocery stores4 Wells Fargo amp Co 16 161 Financial services5 Albertsons Inc 14 500 Grocery stores retail drugstores6 McDonald s Corp 13 000 Food service7 CVS Health 12 100 Healthcare8 Raytheon Co 12 000 Defense9 HonorHealth 11 919 Healthcare10 Dignity Health 10 562 Healthcare11 Intel Corp 10 400 Semiconductor manufacturing12 Home Depot Inc 10 200 Retail home improvement13 tie JP Morgan Chase amp Co 10 000 Financial servicesAmerican Airlines 10 000 Airline15 Tenet Healthcare 9 483 Healthcare16 Bank of America Corp 9 200 Financial services17 Freeport McMoRan Copper amp Gold Inc 8 759 Mining18 Bashas Supermarkets 8 519 Grocery stores19 Amazon com 8 500 Online shopping20 Target Corp 8 400 Discount retailer21 Honeywell International Inc 7 792 Aerospace manufacturing22 Circle K Corp 7 478 Convenience stores23 Mayo Foundation 7 436 Healthcare24 State Farm 7 200 Insurance25 UnitedHealthcare 7 194 HealthcareAgriculture Romaine Yuma Multiple crops are grown in Arizona including lettuce spinach cantaloupe broccoli cauliflower cabbage and watermelon Federal crop insurance is available for grape Vitis vinifera and other Vitis spp here Together with California s crop it falls under special provisions of the relevant crop insurance statutes and diseases are covered excluding Phylloxera Daktulosphaira vitifoliae or failure to correctly apply insect control or apply disease control The whitefly Bemisia tabaci B was introduced through the poinsettia trade in the 1980s displacing the previous A biotype In 2004 the Q biotype from the Mediterranean was first found here also on poinsettia The Colorado Potato Beetle Leptinotarsa decemlineata is either native or an early introduction here Unusually the population here commonly feeds on Silverleaf Nightshade Solanum elaeagnifolium which is usually a less attractive host for this beetle The CPB is an occasional pest of tomato TransportationEntering Arizona on I 10 from New MexicoHighways Interstate highways I 8 I 10 Future I 11 I 15 I 17 I 19 I 40 U S routes US 60 US 64 Historic US 66 US 70 Historic US 80 US 89 US 89A US 91 US 93 US 95 US 160 US 163 US 180 US 191 Main Interstate routes include I 17 and I 19 traveling north south I 8 I 10 and I 40 traveling east west and a short stretch of I 15 traveling northeast southwest through the extreme northwestern corner of the state In addition the various urban areas are served by complex networks of state routes and highways such as the Loop 101 which is part of Phoenix s vast freeway system Public transportation Amtrak and intercity bus The Phoenix and Tucson metropolitan areas are served by public bus transit systems Yuma and Flagstaff also have public bus systems Greyhound Lines serves Phoenix Tucson Flagstaff Yuma and several smaller communities statewide A light rail system called Valley Metro Rail was completed in December 2008 it connects Central Phoenix with the nearby cities of Mesa and Tempe In Tucson the Sun Link streetcar system travels through the downtown area connecting the main University of Arizona campus with Mercado San Agustin on the western edge of downtown Tucson Sun Link loosely based on the Portland Streetcar launched in July 2014 Amtrak Southwest Chief route serves the northern part of the state stopping at Winslow Flagstaff Williams and Kingman The Texas Eagle and Sunset Limited routes serve South Central Arizona stopping at Tucson Maricopa Yuma and Benson Phoenix lost Amtrak service in 1996 with the rerouting of the Sunset Limited and now an Amtrak bus runs between Phoenix and the station in Maricopa As of 2021 Amtrak has proposed to restore rail service between Phoenix and Tucson Law and governmentThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Capitol complex The original Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix The capital of Arizona is Phoenix The original Capitol building with its distinctive copper dome was dedicated in 1901 construction was completed for 136 000 in 1900 when the area was a territory Phoenix became the official state capital with Arizona s admission to the union in 1912 The House of Representatives and Senate buildings were dedicated in 1960 and an Executive Office Building was dedicated in 1974 the ninth floor of this building is where the Office of the Governor is located The original Capitol building was converted into a museum The Capitol complex is fronted and highlighted by the richly landscaped Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza named after Wesley Bolin a governor who died in office in the 1970s The site also includes many monuments and memorials including the anchor and signal mast from the USS Arizona one of the U S Navy ships sunk in Pearl Harbor and a granite version of the Ten Commandments State legislative branch The Arizona Legislature is bicameral and consists of a thirty member Senate and a 60 member House of Representatives Each of the thirty legislative districts has one senator and two representatives Legislators are elected for two year terms Each Legislature covers a two year period The first session following the general election is known as the first regular session and the session convening in the second year is known as the second regular session Each regular session begins on the second Monday in January and adjourns sine die terminates for the year no later than Saturday of the week in which the 100th day from the beginning of the regular session falls The President of the Senate and Speaker of the House by rule may extend the session up to seven additional days Thereafter the session can be extended only by a majority vote of members present of each house The majority party is the Republican Party which has held power in both houses since 1993 The Democratic Party picked up several legislative seats in recent elections bringing both chambers one seat away from being equally divided as of 2021 Arizona state senators and representatives are elected for two year terms and are limited to four consecutive terms in a chamber though there is no limit on the total number of terms When a lawmaker is term limited from office it is common for him or her to run for election in the other chamber State executive branch State of Arizona elected officialsGovernor Katie Hobbs D Secretary of State Adrian Fontes D Attorney General Kris Mayes D State Treasurer Kimberly Yee R Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne R State Mine Inspector Paul Marsh R Corporation Commissioner Nick Myers R James O Connor R Lea Marquez Peterson R Anna Tovar D Kevin Thompson R Speaker of the House Ben Toma R President of the Senate Warren Petersen R Arizona s executive branch is headed by a governor who is elected to a four year term The governor may serve any number of terms though no more than two in a row Arizona is one of the few states that has no governor s mansion During their term the governors reside within their private residence with executive offices housed in the executive tower at the state capitol The governor of Arizona is Katie Hobbs D Governor Jan Brewer assumed office in 2009 after Janet Napolitano had her nomination by Barack Obama for Secretary of Homeland Security confirmed by the Senate Arizona has had four female governors and a fifth currently serving more than any other state Other elected executive officials include the Secretary of State State Treasurer State Attorney General Superintendent of Public Instruction State Mine Inspector and a five member Corporation Commission All elected officials hold a term of four years and are limited to two consecutive terms except the office of the State Mine Inspector which is limited to four terms Arizona is one of five states that do not have a lieutenant governor The elected secretary of state is first in line to succeed the governor in the event of death disability resignation or removal from office If appointed the Secretary of State is not eligible and the next governor is selected from the next eligible official in the line of succession including the attorney general state treasurer and superintendent of public instruction Since 1977 four secretaries of state and one attorney general have succeeded to the state s governorship On November 8 2022 Arizona voters approved a state constitutional amendment Proposition 131 that created the position and office of the lieutenant governor beginning with the 2026 elections The position will be elected on a joint ticket with the governor The lieutenant governor ascends to the governorship if the incumbent governor dies resigns or is removed via impeachment conviction from office The proposition through a law pre passed by the state legislature also tasks the governor with assigning a job to her or his running mate such as chief of staff the director of the state Department of Administration or any position to which the governor can appoint someone by law State judicial branch The Arizona Supreme Court is the highest court in Arizona consisting of a chief justice a vice chief justice and five associate justices Justices are appointed by the governor from a list recommended by a bipartisan commission and must be sustained in office by election after the first two years following their appointment Subsequent sustaining elections occur every six years The supreme court has appellate jurisdiction in death penalty cases but nearly all other appellate cases go through the Arizona Court of Appeals first The court has original jurisdiction in a few other circumstances as outlined in the state constitution The court meets in the Arizona Supreme Court Building at the capitol complex at the southern end of Wesley Bolin Plaza The Arizona Court of Appeals subdivided into two divisions is the intermediate court in the state Division One is based in Phoenix consists of nineteen judges and has jurisdiction in the Western and Northern regions of the state along with the greater Phoenix area Division Two is based in Tucson consists of nine judges and has jurisdiction over the Southern regions of the state including the Tucson area Judges are selected in a method similar to the one used for state supreme court justices Each county of Arizona has a superior court the size and organization of which are varied and generally depend on the size of the particular county Counties Art Deco doors of the Cochise County Courthouse in Bisbee Arizona is divided into 15 counties ranging in size from 1 238 square miles 3 210 km2 to 18 661 square miles 48 330 km2 Arizona countiesCounty name County seat Founded 2020 population Percent of total Area sq mi Percent of totalApache St Johns February 24 1879 66 021 0 9 11 218 9 8 Cochise Bisbee February 1 1881 125 447 1 8 6 219 5 5 Coconino Flagstaff February 18 1891 145 101 2 0 18 661 16 4 Gila Globe February 8 1881 53 272 0 7 4 796 4 2 Graham Safford March 10 1881 38 533 0 5 4 641 4 1 Greenlee Clifton March 10 1909 9 563 0 1 1 848 1 6 La Paz Parker January 1 1983 16 557 0 2 4 513 4 0 Maricopa Phoenix February 14 1871 4 420 568 61 8 9 224 8 1 Mohave Kingman November 9 1864 213 267 3 0 13 470 11 8 Navajo Holbrook March 21 1895 106 717 1 5 9 959 8 7 Pima Tucson November 9 1864 1 043 433 14 6 9 189 8 1 Pinal Florence February 1 1875 425 264 6 0 5 374 4 7 Santa Cruz Nogales March 15 1899 47 669 0 7 1 238 1 1 Yavapai Prescott November 9 1864 236 209 3 3 8 128 7 1 Yuma Yuma November 9 1864 203 881 2 9 5 519 4 8 Totals 15 7 151 502 113 997Federal representation Arizona s two United States senators are and Mark Kelly D and Ruben Gallego D Arizona s United States representatives are David Schweikert R 1 Eli Crane R 2 Yassamin Ansari D 3 Greg Stanton D 4 Andy Biggs R 5 Juan Ciscomani R 6 Raul Grijalva D 7 Abraham Hamadeh R 8 and Paul Gosar R 9 Arizona gained a ninth seat in the House of Representatives due to redistricting based on the 2010 United States census Political culture Voter registration as of October 2024Party Number of voters PercentageRepublican 1 562 091 35 76 Other 1 471 309 33 69 Democratic 1 266 536 28 99 No Labels 32 338 0 74 Libertarian 31 132 0 71 Minor parties 4 187 0 09 Total 4 367 593 100 00 Party registration by Arizona county January 2023 Democrat 30 Democrat 40 Democrat 50 Republican 30 Republican 40 Republican 50 Unaffiliated 30 From statehood through the late 1940s Arizona was primarily dominated by the Democratic Party During this time the Democratic candidate for the presidency carried the state each election the only exceptions being the elections of 1920 1924 and 1928 all three were national Republican landslides In 1924 Congress had passed a law granting citizenship and suffrage to all Native Americans some of whom had previously been excluded as members of tribes on reservations Legal interpretations of Arizona s constitution prohibited Native Americans living on reservations from voting classifying them as being under guardianship This interpretation was overturned as being incorrect and unconstitutional in 1948 by the Arizona Supreme Court following a lawsuit by World War II Indian veterans and Harry Austin both of the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation The landmark case is Harrison and Austin v Laveen After the men were refused the opportunity to register in Maricopa County they filed lawsuit against the registrar The National Congress of American Indians the Department of Justice the Department of the Interior and the American Civil Liberties Union all filed amicus curiae friends of the court briefs in the case The State Supreme Court established the rights of Native Americans to vote in the state at the time they comprised about 11 of the population That year a similar provision was overturned in New Mexico when challenged by another Indian veteran in court These were the only two states that had continued to prohibit Native Americans from voting Arizona voted Republican in every presidential election from 1952 to 1992 with Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan winning the state by particularly large margins During this forty year span it was the only state not to be carried by a Democrat at least once Democrat Lyndon Johnson in 1964 lost the state by fewer than 5 000 votes to Arizona Senator and native Barry Goldwater This was the most closely contested state in what was otherwise a landslide victory for Johnson that year Democrat Bill Clinton ended this streak in 1996 when he won Arizona by a little over two percentage points Clinton had previously come within less than two percent of winning Arizona s electoral votes in 1992 From 2000 until 2016 the majority of the state continued to support Republican presidential candidates by solid margins In the 2020 United States presidential election Joe Biden again broke the streak by becoming the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Arizona since 1996 Since the mid 20th century the Republican Party has also dominated Arizona politics in general The fast growing Phoenix and Tucson suburbs became reliably Republican areas from the 1950s onward During this time many Pinto Democrats or conservative Democrats from rural areas became increasingly willing to support Republicans at the state and national level While the state normally supports Republicans at the federal level Democrats are often competitive in statewide elections Two of the last six governors have been Democrats On March 4 2008 Senator John McCain effectively clinched the Republican nomination for 2008 becoming the first major party presidential nominee from the state since Barry Goldwater in 1964 Arizona politics is dominated by a longstanding rivalry between its two largest counties Maricopa and Pima home to Phoenix and Tucson respectively The two counties have almost 75 percent of the state s population and cast almost 80 percent of the state s vote They also elect a substantial majority of the state legislature Maricopa County is home to almost 60 percent of the state s population and most of the state s elected officials live there Before Joe Biden won Maricopa County in 2020 it had voted Republican in every presidential election since 1952 This includes the 1964 run of native son Barry Goldwater he would not have carried his home state without his 20 000 vote margin in Maricopa County Similarly McCain won Arizona by eight percentage points in 2008 aided by his 130 000 vote margin in Maricopa County In contrast Pima County home to Tucson and most of southern Arizona have historically voted more Democratic While Tucson s suburbs lean Republican they hold to a somewhat more moderate brand of Republicanism than is common in the Phoenix area Arizona teacher s strike and rally on April 26 2018 Arizona rejected a same sex marriage ban in a referendum as part of the 2006 elections Arizona was the first state in the nation to do so Same sex marriage was not recognized in Arizona but this amendment would have denied any legal or financial benefits to unmarried homosexual or heterosexual couples In 2008 Arizona voters passed Proposition 102 an amendment to the state constitution to define marriage as a union of one man and one woman It passed by a more narrow majority than similar votes in a number of other states In 2024 Arizona voters passed a constitutional amendment recognising abortion access within the Arizona state constitution becoming the southernmost continental state to codify abortion rights In 2010 Arizona adopted SB 1070 called the toughest immigration law in the United States A fierce debate erupted between supporters and detractors of SB 1070 The United States Supreme Court struck down portions of the Arizona law which required all immigrants to carry immigration papers at all times in Arizona v United States The West Virginia teachers strike in 2018 inspired teachers in other states including Arizona to take similar action Arizona retains the death penalty There is currently a gubernatorial hold on executions Authorized methods of execution include the gas chamber Same sex marriage and civil unions In 2006 Arizona became the first state in the United States to reject a proposition Prop 107 that would have banned same sex marriage and civil unions However in 2008 Arizona voters approved of Prop 102 a constitutional amendment that prohibited same sex marriage but not other unions Prior to same sex marriage being legal the City of Bisbee became the first jurisdiction in Arizona to approve of civil unions The state s Attorney General at the time Tom Horne threatened to sue but rescinded the threat once Bisbee amended the ordinance Bisbee approved of civil unions in 2013 The municipalities of Clarkdale Cottonwood Jerome Sedona and Tucson also passed civil unions A November 2011 Public Policy Polling survey found 44 of Arizona voters supported the legalization of same sex marriage while 45 opposed it and 12 were not sure A separate question on the same survey found 72 of respondents supported legal recognition of same sex couples with 40 supporting same sex marriage 32 supporting civil unions 27 opposing all legal recognition and 1 not sure Arizona Proposition 102 known by its supporters as the Marriage Protection Amendment appeared as a legislatively referred constitutional amendment on the November 4 2008 ballot in Arizona where it was approved 56 43 It amended the Arizona Constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman On October 17 2014 Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne announced his office would no longer object to same sex marriage in response to a U S District Court Ruling on Arizona Proposition 102 On that day each county s Clerk of the Superior Court began to issue same sex marriage licenses and Arizona became the 31st state to legalize same sex marriage The 2023 American Values Atlas by Public Religion Research Institute found that an overwhelming majority of residents support same sex marriage EducationElementary and secondary education Public schools in Arizona are separated into about 220 local school districts which operate independently but are governed in most cases by elected county school superintendents these are in turn overseen by the Arizona State Board of Education and the Arizona Department of Education A state Superintendent of Public Instruction elected in partisan elections every even numbered year when there is not a presidential election for a four year term In 2005 a School District Redistricting Commission was established with the goal of combining and consolidating many of these districts Higher education The University of Arizona the Mall in TucsonArizona State University a biodesign building in TempeNorthern Arizona University The Skydome in Flagstaff Arizona is served by three public universities The University of Arizona Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University These schools are governed by the Arizona Board of Regents Private higher education in Arizona is dominated by a large number of for profit and chain multi site universities Embry Riddle Aeronautical University Prescott and Prescott College are Arizona s only non profit four year private colleges Arizona has a wide network of two year vocational schools and community colleges These colleges were governed historically by a separate statewide board of directors but in 2002 the state legislature transferred almost all oversight authority to individual community college districts The Maricopa County Community College District includes 11 community colleges throughout Maricopa County and is one of the largest in the nation Public universities in Arizona Arizona State University Sun Devils Tempe Phoenix Mesa Glendale Lake Havasu Northern Arizona University Lumberjacks Flagstaff Yuma Prescott University of Arizona Wildcats Tucson Sierra Vista MD college in downtown Phoenix and UA Agricultural Center in Yuma MaricopaPrivate colleges and universities in Arizona American Indian College Carrington College Arizona Christian University Art Center College of Design Art Institute of Tucson Art Institute of Phoenix A T Still University Brookline College Brown Mackie College Embry Riddle Aeronautical University Grand Canyon University Midwestern University Northcentral University Ottawa University Park University University of Phoenix Penn Foster College Prescott College Thunderbird School of Global Management University of Advancing Technology Western International University Conservatory of Recording Arts and Sciences Community colleges Arizona Western College Central Arizona College Cochise College Coconino Community College Dine College Eastern Arizona College Maricopa Community College District Chandler Gilbert Community College Estrella Mountain Community College GateWay Community College Glendale Community College Mesa Community College Paradise Valley Community College Phoenix College Rio Salado College Scottsdale Community College South Mountain Community College Mohave Community College Northland Pioneer College Pima Community College Yavapai CollegeArt and cultureThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Visual arts and museums Phoenix Art Museum on the historic Central Avenue Corridor in Phoenix is the Southwest s largest collection of visual art from across the world The museum displays international exhibitions alongside the museum s collection of more than 18 000 works of American Asian European Latin American Western American modern and contemporary art and fashion design With a community education mandate since 1951 Phoenix Art Museum holds a year round program of festivals live performances independent art films and educational programs The museum also has PhxArtKids an interactive space for children photography exhibitions through the museum s partnership with the Center for Creative Photography the landscaped Sculpture Garden and dining at Arcadia Farms Arizona is a recognized center of Native American art with a number of galleries showcasing historical and contemporary works The Heard Museum also in Phoenix is a major repository of Native American art Some of the signature exhibits include a full Navajo hogan the Mareen Allen Nichols Collection containing 260 pieces of contemporary jewelry the Barry Goldwater Collection of 437 historic Hopi kachina dolls and an exhibit on the 19th century boarding school experiences of Native Americans The Heard Museum has about 250 000 visitors a year Sedona Jerome and Tubac are known as budding artist colonies and small arts scenes exist in the larger cities and near the state universities Film View of Monument Valley from John Ford s Point Several major Hollywood films such as Billy Jack U Turn Waiting to Exhale Just One of the Guys Can t Buy Me Love Bill amp Ted s Excellent Adventure The Scorpion King The Banger Sisters Used Cars and Raising Arizona have been made there as have many Westerns The 1993 science fiction movie Fire in the Sky based on a reported alien abduction in the town of Snowflake was set in Snowflake It was filmed in the Oregon towns of Oakland Roseburg and Sutherlin The 1974 film Alice Doesn t Live Here Anymore for which Ellen Burstyn won the Academy Award for Best Actress and also starring Kris Kristofferson was set in Tucson The climax of the 1977 Clint Eastwood film The Gauntlet takes place in downtown Phoenix The final segments of the 1984 film Starman take place at Meteor Crater outside Winslow The Jeff Foxworthy comedy documentary movie Blue Collar Comedy Tour was filmed almost entirely at the Dodge Theatre Some of Alfred Hitchcock s classic film Psycho was shot in Phoenix the ostensible home town of the main character Some of the television shows filmed or set in Arizona include The New Dick Van Dyke Show Medium Alice The First 48 Insomniac with Dave Attell Cops and America s Most Wanted The TV sitcom Alice which was based on the movie was set in Phoenix Twilight had passages set in Phoenix at the beginning and the end of the film Music Arizona is prominently featured in the lyrics of many Country and Western songs such as Jamie O Neal s hit ballad There Is No Arizona George Strait s Oceanfront Property uses ocean front property in Arizona as a metaphor for a sucker proposition The line see you down in Arizona Bay is used in a Tool song in reference to the possibility expressed as a hope by comedian Bill Hicks that Southern California will one day fall into the ocean Glen Campbell a notable resident popularized the song By The Time I Get To Phoenix Standin on the Corner Park and mural in Winslow Arizona Arizona was the title of a popular song recorded by Mark Lindsay Arizona is mentioned by the hit song Take It Easy written by Jackson Browne and Glenn Frey and performed by the Eagles Arizona is also mentioned in the Beatles song Get Back credited to John Lennon and Paul McCartney McCartney sings JoJo left his home in Tucson Arizona for some California grass Carefree Highway released in 1974 by Gordon Lightfoot takes its name from Arizona State Route 74 north of Phoenix Arizona s budding music scene is helped by emerging bands as well as some well known artists The Gin Blossoms Chronic Future Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers Jimmy Eat World Caroline s Spine and others began their careers in Arizona Also a number of punk and rock bands got their start in Arizona including JFA The Feederz Sun City Girls The Meat Puppets The Maine The Summer Set and more recently Authority Zero and Digital Summer Arizona also has many singers and other musicians Singer songwriter and guitarist Michelle Branch is from Sedona Chester Bennington the former lead vocalist of Linkin Park and mash up artist DJ Z Trip are both from Phoenix One of Arizona s better known musicians is shock rocker Alice Cooper who helped define the genre Maynard James Keenan the lead singer of the bands Tool A Perfect Circle and Puscifer calls the town of Cornville home Other notable singers include country singers Dierks Bentley and Marty Robbins folk singer Katie Lee Fleetwood Mac s Stevie Nicks CeCe Peniston Rex Allen 2007 American Idol winner Jordin Sparks and Linda Ronstadt Arizona is also known for its heavy metal scene which is centered in and around Phoenix In the early to mid 1990s it included bands such as Job for a Cowboy Knights of the Abyss Greeley Estates Eyes Set To Kill blessthefall The Word Alive The Dead Rabbitts and Abigail Williams The band Soulfly calls Phoenix home and Megadeth lived in Phoenix for about a decade Beginning in and around 2009 Phoenix began to host a burgeoning desert rock and sludge metal underground ala Kyuss in 1990s California led by bands like Wolves of Winter Asimov and Dead Canyon American composer Elliott Carter composed his first String Quartet 1950 51 while on sabbatical from New York in Arizona The quartet won a Pulitzer Prize and other awards and is now a staple of the string quartet repertoire citation needed Sports Club Sport League ChampionshipsArizona Cardinals American football National Football League 2 1925 1947 Arizona Diamondbacks Baseball Major League Baseball 1 2001 Phoenix Suns Basketball National Basketball Association 0Phoenix Mercury Basketball Women s National Basketball Association 3 2007 2009 2014 Phoenix Rising FC Soccer USL Championship 1 2023 Tucson Roadrunners Ice hockey American Hockey League 0Arizona Rattlers Indoor football Indoor Football League 6 1994 1997 2012 2013 2014 2017 State Farm Stadium in Glendale Four Super Bowls have been held in Arizona including Super Bowl LVII which was held at State Farm Stadium on February 12 2023 Due to its numerous golf courses Arizona is home to several stops on the PGA Tour most notably the Phoenix Open held at the TPC of Scottsdale and the WGC Accenture Match Play Championship at the Ritz Carlton Golf Club in Marana Auto racing is another sport known in the state Phoenix Raceway in Avondale is home to NASCAR race weekends twice a year Firebird International Raceway near Chandler is home to drag racing and other motorsport events College sports College sports are also prevalent in Arizona The Arizona State Sun Devils and the Arizona Wildcats belong to the Pac 12 Conference while the Northern Arizona Lumberjacks compete in the Big Sky Conference and the Grand Canyon Antelopes compete in the Western Athletic Conference The rivalry between Arizona State Sun Devils and the Arizona Wildcats predates Arizona s statehood and is the oldest rivalry in the NCAA The Territorial Cup first awarded in 1889 and certified as the oldest trophy in college football is awarded to the winner of the annual football game between the two schools Arizona also hosts several college football bowl games The Fiesta Bowl originally held at Sun Devil Stadium is now held at State Farm Stadium in Glendale The Fiesta Bowl is part of the new College Football Playoff CFP University of Phoenix Stadium was also home to the 2007 and 2011 BCS National Championship Games A spring training game between the Cubs and White Sox at HoHoKam Park State Farm Stadium hosted the Final Four of the NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament in 2017 and is scheduled to host it again in 2024 Baseball Arizona is a popular location for Major League Baseball spring training as it is the site of the Cactus League Spring training was first started in Arizona in 1947 when Brewers owner Veeck sold them in 1945 but went on to purchase the Cleveland Indians in 1946 He decided to train the Cleveland Indians in Tucson and convinced the New York Giants to give Phoenix a try Thus the Cactus League was born On March 9 1995 Arizona was awarded a franchise to begin to play for the 1998 season A 130 million franchise fee was paid to Major League Baseball and on January 16 1997 the Diamondbacks were officially voted into the National League Since their debut the Diamondbacks have won five National League West titles two National League Championship pennants and the 2001 World Series Notable peopleSee alsoArizona portalOutline of Arizona Index of Arizona related articles USS Arizona 4 shipsNotesElevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 ˌ aer ɪ ˈ z oʊ n e ARR iz OH ne Navajo Hoozdo Hahoodzo hoː z to ha hoː tso O odham Alĭ ṣonak ˈaɭi ˈʂɔnak second to Nevada with 9 in 2010 Persons of Hispanic or Latino origin are not distinguished between total and partial ancestry In 2000 this designation was broken into two groups Independent Non Charismatic Churches 34 130 adherents and Independent Charismatic Churches 29 755 adherents References Grand canyon state statesymbolusa April 30 2014 Archived from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved December 2 2021 Copper state kgj November 25 2019 Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Retrieved December 2 2021 Valentine state novemberproject February 15 2017 Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Retrieved December 2 2021 State Area Measurements and Internal Point Coordinates Frisco NGS Data Sheet National Geodetic Survey National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration United States Department of Commerce Retrieved October 20 2011 Elevations and Distances in the United States United States Geological Survey 2001 Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved December 28 2011 United States Census Quick Facts Arizona Retrieved January 5 2025 Household Income in States and Metropolitan Areas 2023 PDF Retrieved January 12 2025 Arizona Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam webster com April 25 2007 Archived from the original on January 12 2012 Retrieved December 28 2011 Arizona in Navajo Glosbe Archived from the original on February 20 2021 Retrieved November 6 2020 Saxton Dean Saxton Lucille Enos Susie 1983 Dictionary Tohono O odham Pima to English English to Tohono O odham Pima Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 9780816519422 All about Arizona Sheppard Software Archived from the original on November 20 2017 Retrieved September 21 2010 Federally Recognized Tribes in Arizona Arizona State Museum Archived from the original on September 26 2021 Retrieved September 26 2021 The 50 biggest companies in Arizona AZBigMedia Archived from the original on December 8 2020 Retrieved January 24 2021 Bright William 2004 Native American Place Names of the United States Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press p 47 ISBN 9780806135984 Kitt E O Pearce T M 1952 Arizona Place Name Records Western Folklore 11 4 284 287 doi 10 2307 1496233 ISSN 0043 373X JSTOR 1496233 Harper Douglas Arizona Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Retrieved December 28 2011 McClintock James 1916 Arizona Prehistoric Aboriginal Pioneer Modern The Nation s Youngest Commonwealth within a Land of Ancient Culture Chicago The S J Clarke Publishing Co Archived from the original on February 1 2015 Retrieved November 9 2019 Thompson Clay February 25 2007 No arid zone not the basis of state s name The Arizona Republic Archived from the original on December 29 2014 Retrieved March 14 2023 Thompson Clay February 25 2007 A sorry state of affairs when views change The Arizona Republic Archived from the original on June 4 2012 Retrieved March 3 2007 Turner Jim How Arizona Did NOT Get Its Name Arizona Historical Society Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved March 3 2007 Garate Donald 2005 Arizonac a twentieth century myth Journal of Arizona History 46 2 161 184 JSTOR 41696897 The Meaning of Arizona Arizona Almanac Arizona State Library Archives amp Public Records Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved March 20 2019 Borrens Lobby Francisco Vazquez de Coronado expedition to arizona 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the original on September 22 2022 Retrieved September 22 2022 rhorton 2022 NASCAR Championship Weekend Phoenix Raceway Archived from the original on September 22 2022 Retrieved September 22 2022 Knauer Tom November 22 2006 What is the Territorial Cup The Wildcat Online Archived from the original on October 8 2008 Retrieved April 2 2007 Official 2007 NCAA Division I Football Records Book PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association 2007 Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 Arizona earns hosting duties for 2024 NCAA Tournament Final Four Arizona Sports July 16 2018 Archived from the original on September 22 2022 Retrieved September 22 2022 Buckhorn Baths A unique Mesa landmark www azcentral com Archived from the original on February 20 2021 Retrieved December 7 2019 Jeff Munn Sportscasters Talent Agency of America Archived from the original on September 22 2022 Retrieved September 22 2022 Arizona Diamondbacks are National League Champions advance to the World Series for the second time in franchise history MLB com Retrieved June 14 2024 Further readingBayless Betsy 1998 Arizona Blue Book 1997 1998 Phoenix Office of the Arizona Secretary of State McIntyre Allan J 2008 The Tohono O odham and Pimeria Alta Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0738556338 Miller Tom editor 1986 Arizona The Land and the People Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0816510047 Officer James E 1987 Hispanic Arizona 1536 1856 Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0816509812 Plascencia Luis F B and Gloria H Cuadraz eds 2018 Mexican Workers and the Making of Arizona Tucson University of Arizona Press Thomas David M editor 2003 Arizona Legislative Manual In Arizona Phoenix Arizona Legislative Council Google Print Retrieved January 16 2006 Trimble Marshall 1998 Arizona A Cavalcade of History Tucson Treasure Chest Publications ISBN 978 0918080431 Woosley Anne I 2008 Early Tucson Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0738556468 External linksArizona at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from WiktionaryMedia from CommonsNews from WikinewsQuotations from WikiquoteTexts from WikisourceTextbooks from WikibooksResources from WikiversityTravel information from Wikivoyage Official website Arizona State Guide from the Library of Congress Arizona Regional Accounts Data Archived from the original on August 19 2002 Retrieved February 19 2003 Arizona Demographic Data from FedStats Arizona USDA State Fact Sheet Arizona Indicators Energy Data amp Statistics for Arizona Arizona State Databases Arizona State Library Archives and Public Records Arizona at Ballotpedia Geographic data related to Arizona at OpenStreetMap Official Arizona Office of Tourism Arizona Game amp Fish Department Arizona State Parks National Park Service Travel ItineraryPreceded byNew Mexico List of U S states by date of admission to the Union Admitted on February 14 1912 48th Succeeded byAlaska

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