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Sherman Loy Cowboy Cookout

Starting date:

Always call # confirm
Event# 928-282-7038

Event Details

The Sedona Heritage Museum will host an old-fashioned cowboy cookout dinner on Saturday, October 6 at the Museum.
Professional award-winning Dutch oven cook, Grant Smith, grandson of Oak Creek Canyon pioneers Linc and Addie Smith and son of Ira and Elsie Smith, will be serving beef and all the fixin’s, like biscuits, potatoes, beans, dessert and cowboy coffee. The entire meal will be cooked over open fires in old-time cast iron Dutch ovens. Grant learned this style of cooking from family and friends while on the Sedona roundups he grew up at.
Special entertainment and a commemorative gift will be included in the evenings festivities. This event is named in honor of Sedona Historical Society pioneer member and Historian, Sherman Loy. It is also a celebration of Arizona’s Centennial year.
Tickets are limited and available now for this special event. $25/person at the Museum. For more information, call 928-282-7038.
The Sedona Historical Society operates the Sedona Heritage Museum in Jordan Historical Park at 735 Jordan Road in Uptown Sedona, AZ.

Sherman Loy Cowboy Cookout

Address : Sedona Heritage Museum, 735 Jordan Rd. Jerome State Historic Park AZ
Phone : 928-282-7038   (Always call and confirm events.)

Email Address : sedonamuseum@esedona.net

Web:
Admission Fee : $25/person

Culinary Events

Jerome State Historic Park Famous Homes

Jerome State Historic Park - The Douglas Mansion
Jerome State Historic Park - The Douglas MansionThe Douglas Mansion, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, has been an eye-catching landmark in Jerome since 1916, when James S. Douglas built it on the hill just above his Little Daisy Mine.

Douglas designed the house as a hotel for mining officials and investors as well as for his own family. It featured a wine cellar, billiard room, marble shower, steam heat, and, much ahead of its time, a central vacuum system. Douglas was most proud of the fact that the house was constructed of adobe bricks that were made on the site.

He also built the Little Daisy Hotel near the mine as a dormitory for the miners. The concrete structure still stands.

This former home is now a museum operated by the Arizona State Parks and is devoted to history of the Jerome area and the Douglas family. The museum features exhibits of photographs, artifacts, and minerals in addition to a video presentation and a 3-D model of the town with its underground mines. One room, the Douglas library, is restored as a period room. There are more displays outside along with a picnic area offering a beautiful panoramic view of the Verde Valley.