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Grand Canyon

Posted by Kid's Talk Radio Posted on: 03/13/09

Grand Canyon



Kids Talk Radio went to the bottom of the Grand Canyon to get a news story.

We took an entire day to walk straight down to the bottom.  This is not an easy task.  We rested for one day and then walk all the way to the top.  My legs want to fall off my body.  This was one of the most difficult thing I ever did in my life.   All of this was to get one Kids Talk Radio story.


Phantom Ranch is a resort village within Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. It is located at  36°06′18″N 112°05′40″W /  on the north side of the Colorado River near its confluence with Bright Angel Creek and Phantom Creek. Phantom Ranch is on the US National Register of Historic Places.

The site where the ranch is now located was used by Native Americans; pit houses and a ceremonial kiva dating from about 1050 AD have been found there. The earliest recorded visit by Europeans took place in 1869, when John Wesley Powell and his company camped at its beach. Prospectors began using the area in the 1890s, using mules to haul their ore. At the turn of the century, the founders of the Grand Canyon Transportation Company began a project to exploit its tourism potential; they hired a crew to improve the trail from Phantom Ranch to the Canyon's North Rim. President Theodore Roosevelt travelled down the canyon to the camp during a hunting expedition in 1913; in honor of this visit, the site became known as Roosevelt Camp.

Roosevelt's enthusiam for the Grand Canyon helped lead to its incorporation into the National Park System in 1919. The Fred Harvey Company was granted the concession for the camp in 1922; the company hired the American architect Mary Colter to design permanent lodging. Mary Colter suggested that its name be changed to Phantom Ranch.[1] Construction presented a major challenge: all the building materials except rock had to be hauled down by mules. Meeting the challenges at this and other national parks led to the architectural style known as National Park Service Rustic, which features native stone, rough-hewn wood, large-scale design elements, and intensive use of hand labor.

During the Great Depression in the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps made a number of improvements to the ranch and its access trails. The 1920s and 1930s saw its popularity grow, and it was visited by many wealthy and notable guests. The Fred Harvey company made it a point to hire young, attractive, well-educated, and adventurous women to staff the resort.

As the Grand Canyon's popularity grew, so did Phantom Ranch's; during the weekend of Easter in 1964, about 1,000 people appeared with the intention of spending the night there. The National Park Service then instituted a permit system for overnight stays at the ranch.

Bob Barboza took photos for Kids Talk Radio and Teen TV.  He ate in the bunk house and went on an adventure of a life time.    Would I do it again everyone asked?   I don’t want to answer this question.  It took me one week to get my legs back.


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