LLC SPRING 2018
Home Buying in Globe-Miami By Patti Daley
Cooler temps, a slower pace and greater community character make Globe-Miami a desirable place to live. And the secret is getting out. Total real estate sales for the region topped $20 million in 2016, with local homebuyers leading the surge, followed by investors, retirees, and rotational professionals. “About 40 to 50 percent of home sales are going to first-time homebuyers,” says Eric DuFriend, an associate broker with Oak Realty in Globe. “[They’re] often taking advantage of the USDA loans for rural housing,”
No Cabin Pressure Page 3
The Great Elevation, Continued on page 34
Working in Turquoise Photo by Elizabeth Eaton
Arizona's Deadliest Fight By Heidi Osselaer
Page 28
Hope Clinic Brings A Healthy Vibe to Downtown
John Power
Deputies tasked with preventing a lynching kept watch over the large crowd filing into the courthouse hoping for a seat at the most talked-about trial in years. It was a warm May morning in 1918, and the courtroom was jammed with spectators eager to see brothers Tom and John Power and hired hand Tom Sisson, who were charged with the murder of Graham County Sheriff Frank McBride. A judge decided a fair trial was impossible in Graham County, where the killings took place, because so many violent threats had been made against the defendants, so he moved the proceedings to Clifton. Now a jury comprised mainly of miners from Clifton, Metcalf, and Morenci was to decide their fate. With hindsight it is easy to see the copper camp jurors were no less biased than residents of Graham County. The press had feasted for months on the story of the February 10th gun battle between the Power family and lawmen. The Power brothers were wanted for draft evasion—slackers, as they were called during World War I. Sheriff McBride and Deputy U.S. Marshal Frank Haynes of Globe had led a four-man posse to arrest them where they lived deep in the Galiuro Mountains of Aravaipa Canyon. Arizona's Deadliest Fight, Continued on page 32
Gryphon Ranch Page 7
Holly Rooney stands amid the construction underway for the new, expanded Hope Clinic moving into downtown Globe.
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Story and photos by Linda Gross
erhaps the largest remodel to take place in Globe’s Downtown District in the last twenty years promises to infuse the area with a healthy vibe. The Hope Clinic, owned by Chad Campbell, P.A., and Holly Rooney, M.D., will triple the space of their current medical practice and add a healthy eatery and retail space downstairs and an expansive yoga/multipurpose room and offices upstairs. Rooney says she and Campbell had been looking for a new space for nearly five years and considered buying land to build from scratch. But they didn’t find a place that met all their criteria until a large two-story brick building came up for sale in 2017. Hope Clinic, Continued on page 33
Visitors Guide Special Pull-Out Section Page 17