Arizona is known for its five “Cs,” citrus being one of those “cs.” Well, the city was founded in an area with large citrus groves that thrived in our sunny climate. The name was changed to Scottsdale in 1894, after founder Winfield Scott.
Courtesy of 3TV/CBS 5:
Left: Retired U.S. Army chaplain Winfield S. Scott. Right: Scott and his wife Helen in 1900 with their mule “Old Maud” in Scottsdale.(Arizona Memory Project)
However, it was another man, Albert Utley, who first submitted a plan for the town about six years after Scott arrived.
In 1894, Utley made the new town official with the Maricopa County Recorder’s Office. Utley’s plan was to sub-divide the 40 acres on the northwest corner of the property into a townsite he planned to name “Orangedale,” right next door to Scott’s property. Scott’s homestead had been established for a few years by then and was often used as a reference marker for folks who made their way to the area.
It may have been a mistaken reference made by the local newspaper about the newly emerging community that led to the name’s change. It’s not clear why, but not much time had passed after the first filing that Utley decided to change his community’s name from “Orangedale” to “Scottsdale.”
Through time, it was Scott who was credited with promoting the area and always encouraging new growth. He was elected to the Territorial House of Representatives in 1898. He was also appointed as chancellor of the Tempe Normal School of Arizona, known today as Arizona State University.
As the new century began, Scottsdale grew slowly but steadily as a small market town in the early 1900s, supporting the agricultural community.
Left: The first schoolhouse in Scottsdale, the Little Red Schoolhouse, 1896 Right: The 1910 class in front of the Little Red Schoolhouse in Scottsdale (on the right).(Scottsdale Historical Museum)
Ingleside Inn, built as the private Ingleside Club in 1909 by W.J. and Ralph Murphy, was the Scottsdale area’s first luxury resort.(Arizona Memory Project)
Jokake Inn opened as a tearoom in 1926 and expanded to accommodate overnight guests in 1928.(Scottsdale Public Library)