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Greene Family Photographs

 Collection
Identifier: CP SPC 331

Scope and Content Note

This collection consists primarily of photographs showing the Cliff Dwellers Lodge, the Wahweap Lodge, Glen Canyon Dam, outdoor scenes, Marble Canyon, Lake Powell, various of the Greene family's tourist enterprises, and members of the Greene family. In most cases photographers are unidentified, but the majority of the pictures were most likely taken by family and friends. Also included are portraits and studio shots of Senator Barry Goldwater, Roy Rogers, Lucille Ball, Dean Martin, Art Buchwald, and Paul Fannin. Many of these images are signed.

Boxes 1-8 house photographs ranging from wallet size to 8"x10". Boxes 9-10 contain mounted slides. Box 12 houses un-mounted slides, and box 13 contains Art Greene Sr.'s photograph album documenting his service in World War I.

Dates

  • Creation: 1901-2001

Language of Materials

Material in English

Access Restrictions

To view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability.

Copyright

The Arizona Board of Regents retains copyright to this collection for and on behalf of the Arizona State University Library. Requests to publish, display, or redistribute information from this collection must be submitted via our online application.

Biographical Note

Arthur Art Hayward Greene, Sr. (1895-1978) was born to Allan Butler and Annie Elizabeth (Morgan) Greene in Telluride, Colorado. When he was 18 years old and living in Aztec, New Mexico, he was fascinated by the potential of river float trips. He began running such trips down the San Juan River and soon built a successful business transporting entrepreneurs with mining interests.

Greene married Ethel Cady Johnson (1897-1957) on August 11, 1917 and the couple had five children: Ruth Lorene (Greene) Baker (1918-1994), Grace Katherine (Greene) Williams Schoppman (1920-1987), Arthur Hayward Bill (1921-1998), Annie Irene (Greene) Johnson (1923-1974), and Opal Lee (1927-1931). In 1943 Greene moved his family to Granado, Arizona, where he worked for the Hubble Trading Post. Later that year he moved his family to Marble Canyon to operate Marble Canyon Lodge. While there, Greene began running Colorado River trips from Lees Ferry to Rainbow Bridge. With his son, Bill Jr., and sons-in-law, Earl Johnson and Vern Baker, Greene pioneered the use of power boats on commercial river trips.

In 1944 Greene learned about the coming of Glen Canyon Dam. He adapted his business by building an 8 foot by 24 foot flat bottom boat and adding a 45 HP Pratt Whitney Radial motor attached to an airplane prop for propulsion. The local Navajo people named the boat Tse-nan-ni-ago-atim, meaning Trail to the Rock that Goes Over. As Bill Greene and his brothers-in-law returned from military service, they directed their time and energy to river running and other family businesses. In 1949, the family purchased the Cliff Dwellers Lodge and continued river trips to Rainbow Bridge. Art and Bill Greene also transported Bureau of Reclamation personnel up the river numerous times and helped them to determine the site for Glen Canyon Dam.

The Greene family formed Canyon Tours, Inc. and purchased leases on six sections of Arizona State land from Curly Tsoe in 1953. The first Wahweap Lodge was completed on this land in 1956. In 1957, the Bureau of Reclamation informed the Greenes that they would have to move from their new business site due to the construction of Glen Canyon Dam. With the help of Senators Barry Goldwater and Carl Hayden, the Greene family was able to maintain their enterprise. The National Park Service later told the Greenes that they would have to move because their business was located in a National Recreation Area, but the family (again with help from Senator Goldwater) managed to retain both their land and their concession rights to the Wahweap area.

In 1959, the completion of the Glen Canyon Bridge brought a highway to Page, Lake Powell, and Wahweap. In 1966, water backed up to form Wahweap Bay and marked Wahweap as a premier tourist attraction.

Full extent

13 Box(es)

Full extent

7 Linear Feet

Abstract

This collection consists primarily of photographs showing the Cliff Dwellers Lodge, the Wahweap Lodge, Glen Canyon Dam, outdoor scenes, Marble Canyon, Lake Powell, various of the Greene family's tourist enterprises, and members of the Greene family. Also included are portraits and studio shots of Senator Barry Goldwater, Roy Rogers, Lucille Ball, Dean Martin, Art Buchwald, and Paul Fannin.

Arrangement

This collection consists of thirteen boxes.

Provenance

These materials were removed from the Greene Family Papers (MSS-201), which were received from Judi Greene White as documented in ACC# 1996-01771, ACC# 1997-01798, ACC# 1998-01937, ACC# 1998-01940, ACC# 2002-02565, and ACC# 2004-03766.

Related Materials

For additional materials regarding the Greene family, see MSS-201: Greene Family Collection, 1863-2001.

Separated Materials

19 reel-to-reel movies, 5 VHS videotapes, and 1 DVD were removed from the collection and given to the department's Associate for Media Development for evaluation at the time of processing.

Title
Greene Family Photographs
Author
Processed by Dee Dowers (Volunteer), 2006.
Date
2011
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding guide encoded in English.

Repository details

Part of the Greater Arizona Collection Repository

Contact

Arizona State University
P.O. Box 871006
Tempe AZ 85287-1006 United States
(480) 965-4932