- PARTNERS
- OUR PARTNERS
Our Current Partners
We couldn't do it alone, thank you to all of our Partners!
Prescott Regulators & their Shady Ladies, Inc.
"We make the cowboys, the gamblers, the lawmen and outlaws, and wild women of the west come alive!"
See the lawdogs, outlaws, drovers, grouchy old prospectors, cantankerous Cavalry scouts, gamblers, saloon girls, hurty-gurty girls, town folk, cowboys, cowgirls, pistol packin mamas, the rowdiest, meanest hombres & wildest women this side of the Pecos.
See the rip-roarin, gut bustin, high falootin, gun totin, shoot-em up, heroes & heroines of the Old West.
Watch us bring the history of the Territory back as it was, taste the dust, smell the gun-powder, hear the roar of the 45s and feel like you was standing right there.We are an award-winning, dedicated group of living history performers that have come together to share our love of history and Arizona and preserve the culture of the Old West & Arizona Territory. We are a non-profit organization raising funds for those less fortunate folks, critters & little ones. VISIT THEIR WEBSITE
The Prescott Victorian Society, Inc.
The Prescott Victorian Society, well known throughout Arizona and beyond, is a non-profit organization of men and women who share a common interest in the history and fashions of the Victorian Era, the years 1837 through 1910.
This interest extends to the care and concern in preserving and educating the public regarding the history of the “Old West” town of Prescott.
VISIT THEIR WEBSITE
Sharlot Hall Museum
Sharlot Hall Museum is named after its founder, Sharlot Mabridth Hall (1870-1943), who became well known as a poet, activist, politician, and Arizona’s first territorial historian. Sharlot Hall was one of the West’s most remarkable women. As early as 1907, Ms. Hall saw the need to save Arizona's history and planned to develop a museum. She began to collect both Native American and pioneer material. In 1927, she began restoring the first Territorial Governor’s residence and offices and moved her extensive collection of artifacts and documents opening it as a museum in 1928. Today, the Museum features seven historic buildings, compelling exhibits and beautiful gardens, which serve as the setting for numerous public festivals. The Library and Archives, open to the public, hold a vast collection of rare books, original documents, historical photographs, maps and oral history. The Blue Rose Theater offers an entire season of historically based plays, and Living History programs bring the past alive through hands-on demonstrations.
VISIT THEIR WEBSITE
The Elks Opera Guild
The Elks Opera House Guild, Dedicated to the Preservation, Promotion and Support of The Elks Opera House
VISIT THEIR WEBSITE
The Rough Riders
The Arizona Rough Rider Historical Association is a group of individuals that want to bring the period of the Spanish American War in 1898 to life. Through the Living History demonstrations, participation in parades, programs at schools and other activities, we strive to portray what it might have been like in the 1890s and during the brief war period. We have collected uniforms, arms and accouterments to show the public what the folks of that period look like and what they used. Our ladies auxiliary also contributes with their representation of the fairer sex and portrayals from the women's point of view. We hope to increase the public awareness of Prescott's contributions to this famous conflict and to help them understand this important time in history.
VISIT THEIR WEBSITE
The Prescott Buscaderos
The Prescott Buscaderos are a group of volunteer Cowboys and their ladies helping to keep the old west alive In Downtown Prescott.
The 9th Calvary
This historical organization is dedicated to keeping alive the legacy, preserving and teaching the history, tradition, and contributions of the original 9th Regiment U.S. Cavalry established by Congress in August of 1866 for the defense and development of the western frontier of the United States.
The group educates the public through appearances at many venues throughout Arizona, and encourages the study of their history from the end of the American Civil War to the turn of the century. The first of six all-Negro regiments inducted into the United States Army as regular soldiers, the 9th and 10th cavalry regiments and the 24th and 25th infantry regiments are known as “Buffalo Soldiers”. They bring to light the important role played by these regular army Negro regiments in protecting and providing security for the white settlers on the United States western frontier during the Indian wars and through their service in the Spanish-American War.
Bill William's Mountain Men
A group of men from Williams Arizona formed a non-profit riding club in the latter part of 1953. This corporation would be called the Bill Williams Mountain Men, dedicated to the preservation of the traditions and ways of our nation's greatest and most daring explorers and pioneers, the Mountain Men and more particularly the exploits of Bill Williams, a Mountain Man who explored the West during the period in the early development of the United States and who the town of Williams Arizona was named after.
Designated as the official Ambassadors of Arizona by Governor Babbitt, the Bill Williams Mountain Men have participated in five Presidential Inaugural ceremonies in Washington DC. The Bill Williams Mountain men are also listed as a local legacy in the Library of Congress.































































