List of historic properties in Sedona, Arizona

This is a list, which includes a photographic gallery, of some of the remaining historic buildings, houses, structures and monuments in Sedona, Arizona (a city that straddles the county line between Coconino and Yavapai counties in the northern Verde Valley region of Arizona).

It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) on December 23, 1991; reference: #91001857.

The first Europeans arrived in the region in 1583, when a group of Spanish explorers led by Antonio de Espejo came in search of gold and silver.

[6] John James Thompson from Utah was one of the first Anglo-Europeans to settle the region of Oak Creek Canyon.

The marker is located on Arizona Route 89A at milepost 378 south of Old Indian Road.

[7][8][9] Theodore Carlton Schnebly met and married Sedona Arabella Miller in Gorin, Missouri.

Theodore and Sedona Schnebly moved to Oak Creek in 1899 and eventually owned eighty acres of land, a small general store and a hotel which they operated out of their home.

Sedona cooked for everyone and performed the numerous chores of a farm woman, tending the garden, helping to herd and brand the cattle.

Since they lost all of their properties, Theodore and Sedona began to work in the Walter and Ruth Jordan farm.

[10][11] Walter Everett Jordan was born in 1897 on the Upper Verde property, near Clarkdale, Arizona.

[12] Jordan was introduced to Ruth Marie Woolf, a classmate of his sister Stella, who attended the Tempe Normal School (now Arizona State University).

The Jordan family built a one-room cabin in their farmstead, which would eventually have various rooms added.

She was active in conserving her farmstead as the Jordan Historical Park and Sedona Heritage Museum.

According to Jim McPherson, Arizona Preservation Foundation Board President:"It is crucial that residents, private interests, and government officials act now to save these elements of our cultural heritage before it is too late.

There is a historical marker on the outdoor mall called The Shops at Hyatt Piñon indicating the exact location where the building once stood before it was demolished.

Sinagua village ruins in the Tuzigoot National Monument
Sedona Schnebly (the city's namesake) and her son Ellsworth (Tad) Miller Schnebly in a christening gown in 1898
Bell Rock
Chapel of the Holy Cross
The Hart Store established in 1926
Statue of Sedona Schnebly in the Sedona Public Library
The blue arch
Welcome to the Jordan Historical Park
Cooks Cedar Glade Cemetery marker