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Caverns Inn, Grand Canyon Caverns, Arizona

Grand Canyon Caverns Inn

Grand Canyon Caverns Inn, December, 2004, Kathy Weiser.

 

Twenty two miles west of Seligman is Grand Canyon Caverns, a popular tourist destination, virtually since the beginning of Route 66.

 

These caverns, formed in prehistoric times by an inland sea, were discovered quite by accident in 1927. When Walter Peck, a young woodcutter for the Santa Fe Railroad, was on his way to play poker with a couple of friends at the nearby Yampai railroad siding house, he stumbled and nearly fell into a large, funnel-shaped hole. Widened by recent heavy rains, Peck had never noticed the opening before and vowed to return the next day to do a little exploring.

 

Sure that he had found a gold mine, Walter purchased the property, but, after taking several rocks from the cave to an assayer, he was disappointed to find that there was no gold in that thar hole. Determined not to lose his hard earned money, he soon decided to make it a tourist attraction and

and people began to come.

 

Today, the tourist stop also includes a motel, restaurant, and gift shop for the Route 66 traveler stopping to see this ancient cavern.

 

 

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