Usery Mountain Archery Range Details
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Rated: 5.80 / 10
15 votes
8848 visits
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Usery Mountain Archery Range
Location
Description: |
The Archery Range at Usery Mountain Regional Park is Arizona's premier outdoor archery range in and the only "Five Star" rated archery range in Arizona. Amenities include 4 miles of walking trails, restroom facilities, picnic areas, and a shaded shooting area.
The archery range consists of nearly 100 Targets on 6 separate courses. Courses include:
17 Field Practice Targets/ FITA Range <br>
10 Hunter Practice Targets <br>
14 Field Target Course <br>
14 Hunter Target Course <br>
28 Burlap Animal Target Course <br>
14 3-D Animal Target Course <br><br>
Usery Mountain Archery Range Hosts over 30 Archery Tournaments yearly. These tournaments are conducted throughout the year by national, state, and local archery clubs. The Archery fee is $5.00 per archer. Hours of Operation are 6 a.m. to Sunset. Annual Passes are available for entrance into Usery Mountain Regional Park, and all Maricopa County mountain parks for $75.00 per year. The Annual Pass does include use of the Archery Range. |
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Records
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The traditional account of settlement of the Salt River Valley credits a former Confederate Officer and gold seeker, Jack Swilling, with the beginning of the modern irrigation in central Arizona. Swilling came into the Valley in 1867 and noted the presence of ancient canal systems of the early Native Americans who had irrigated the same lands.
If Swilling traveled between John Y.T. Smith's hay camp a few miles east of downtown Phoenix and Fort McDowell, as he presumably did in the summer of 1867, he came within site of Usery Mountain Park, and even closer to the ruins of an old canal system and an ancient Native American village situated between the park and the Salt River.
The first Swilling canal brought water to fields east of the present Arizona State Hospital near Phoenix and inspired the beginning of other canal building.
Usery Mountain Regional Park became a park in 1967. Pass Mountain, also known as "Scarface" to the local folks, is the geological focal point of the park. The mountain itself was named for King Usery (sometimes spelled Ussery). "King" was his first name, rather than a title. He was a cattleman who was running stock in the area in the late 1870's and early 1880's. He had a tough struggle to survive and, apparently losing ground, moved up into the Tonto Basin country where his activities, unorthodox, provided him a kind of unwanted security..... behind bars.
On December 24, 1891, the Globe-Florence stage was held up by two highwaymen and two bars of silver bullion, valued at $2,000, were stolen. The driver identified the highwaymen as King Usery and Bill Blevins. Posses took the field, soon learning that Usery had been riding a black horse stolen from the Webb Ranch on Tonto Creek. At the George Middleton Ranch, the sheriff and his deputies were told that Usery had been seen burying something in swampy ground near the Salt River. One of the bars was quickly recovered. Surrounded at his ranch, Usery surrendered but a search revealed he had hidden two pistols inside his pants legs, suspending them from his belt with rawhide thongs. For this crime, Usery was sentenced to a term of seven years in the Territorial Prison in Yuma. Despite a successful plea for a new trial, the conviction stood. After two years, he was pardoned.
Usery wandered from the legal path a second time and was convicted of horse stealing. He received a light sentence in Gila County and upon his release, he disappeared.
Usery Mountain Park is on the border of a mountain region. Nearby ranges are: the Superstition on the east, the Goldfeilds on the north and northeast, the Usery Mountains immediately northwest, and the McDowell Mountains across the Salt River to the northwest. A broad basin lies west and south of the area.
Usery Pass is also known for being a major sheep trail leading from the high country north of Mt. Baldy south to the Salt River Valley. Flocks of sheep, led by Mexican and Basque shepherds with their dogs, present a picturesque sight in the spring and fall as they move into or out of the Coconino plateau region.
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| Licence: |
$5.00 per individual to use the archery range |
| Cost
/ Fee : |
Archers pay $5.00 per individual to use the archery range |
| Hours
/ Season: |
6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sun - Thurs and 10 p.m. Fri & Sat |
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Usery Mountain Archery Range
General
Rules: |
The entry fee for day use is $5.00 per vehicle. Archers pay $5.00 per individual to use the archery range instead of a per vehicle fee. Hours of operation are 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sun - Thurs and 10 p.m. Fri & Sat. Telephone: (480) 984-0032. Fax: (480) 357-1542.
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Camping: |
Reservations are not taken for individual camp sites; they are done on a first-come, first-served basis. There are 73 individual sites total. Some sites are pull-through sites. Each site has electricity, water hookup, a barbecue, fire pit, and a picnic table. The cost is $18.00 per night. The maximum stay for individual camp sites is two weeks. The restrooms in this area also have showers.
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Restrooms: |
restroom facilities, picnic areas |
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Usery Mountain Archery Range |
Directions: |
Usery Mountain Regional Park is 12 miles northeast of Central Mesa.
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To get there, take US 60 east to Sossaman and Sossaman north to Southern Avenue. Southern Avenue east to Ellsworth. Ellsworth north to the park. From US 60 the park is 7 1/2 miles on the right.
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You may also go east on McDowell or McKellips to Ellsworth/Usery Pass Road and go north.
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Access
Road Description: |
Paved roads to the area |
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Distance
from Tucson |
2.5 hours |
Distance
from Phoenix |
30 mins north of town |
Distance
from Flagstaff |
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| Posted
By : |
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| Created
on : |
Sun Apr 9 2006 |
| Last
Updated: |
Sun Apr 9 2006 9: 19 am |
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Comments on Usery Mountain Archery Range
Usery Mountain Archery Range
Rating: 5 out
of 10 |
Sun Jun 7 2009
7: 11 pm |
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Cost is now $6.00 to get in.
Wondering what a yearly cost would be?
Good range. Needs a little upgrading.
Maybe a Boy Scout would work on some of the areas as a part of his Eagle Scout award???
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