About Maricopa
County
Since the popularization of air conditioning in the 1930s,
the Phoenix metropolitan area has been considered by many
to be one of the best places to live in America.
The city routinely makes top ten lists across the country,
including; Top Ten Most Populous Cities; Top Ten Business
Hot Spots; Top Ten Metro Areas for Employment; Top Ten Best
American Festivals (Chandler Ostrich Festival); Top Ten Largest
State Universities (Arizona State University); and Top Ten
Most Misspelled Cities in the Country. Phoenix and Scottsdale
have more golf courses listed in the “USA Top 100”
than anywhere else.
Most recently, Hershey Foods Corporation names Phoenix the
Number 10 “Sweet Spot” in America. This compilation
was determined based on acts of volunteerism, heroism, family
orientation, community spirit, romantic settings, and “a
lifestyle that enables residents to embrace all that is good
and sweet in life.”
Undoubtedly, this is what caused the Hohokam people to settle
here around 300 AD. Either that or they heard about all the
great shopping. They build a complex irrigation system with
135 miles of canals, making the land suitable for farming.
They left the area around 1400, most likely due to a drought.
This gave them their name – Ho-Ho-Kam, or “the
people who have gone.”
Rising from the proverbial ashes of this civilization like
the ancient Egyptian legend, Phoenix began to see a resurgence
of occupation in the late 19th century. Jack Swilling began
to settle the land in 1867, starting an irrigation company.
A small colony soon developed, which would eventually yield
the sixth largest city in the United States.
Diversity of culture, plentiful shopping, a wealth of professional
sports and entertainment, and much more combine to make the
Phoenix metropolitan an ideal place to live.
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