REDFIELD CANYON CLIFF HOUSE
Not all cliff houses were built by the Anazasi (The
Ancient Ones). There is a cliff house in Redfield
Canyon in the Galiuro Mountains that was built by a cowboy
named Chick Logan. Chick worked as a cowboy gathering wild horses in Redfield Canyon in the 1930s. During a trip to Reno Nevada,
he met and married Harriet, a divorcee with two children. The new family
returned to Arizona
and started to build a house into a cliff in Redfield Canyon In 1936. It
took three years to complete the house. The Logan Family only lived in
the house for a short time but it made a lasting impression on one of Harriet’s
sons. Frank Logan wrote a short novel, “A Cave House Ranch”, based on the
family’s experience in Redfield
Canyon.
Also during the 1930s, a young lady by the name of Hope Iselin came to Arizona. Although she
was only in her 20s, she started buying up land around Redfield Canyon
and also bought the house from the Logan Family. She initially bought the
place to raise horses and let them run wild. She was from a socially
prominent Rhode Island
family who were wealthy financiers and who also owned thoroughbred
horses. Her familiarity with horses might explain her love affair with
the West.
Hope married a cowboy named Honeycutt Jones and they had a son, Archer, before
they were divorced. For a while, Hope raised the boy in the remote cliff
house. She lived in the house for over a decade but eventually divided her time
between Redfield Canyon and a small horse ranch on the east side of
Tucson. The ranch that Hope operated in Redfield Canyon
was called the C-Spear Ranch. The Bureau of Land Management eventually
made her stop running her horses on BLM rangeland and the ranch became
exclusively a cattle operation. A cowboy who worked for Hope lived
in the cliff house with his family for two years (timeframe is not
known).
Hope’s son Archer married and moved to Rhode
Island. He retired in 1988 and returned to Arizona. He died of a
heart attack while hiking in the Santa
Rita Mountains.
EPILOGUE: As of 2001, the C-Spear Ranch still operated in Redfield Canyon, managed by cowboy Johnny Lavin. Hope Jones turned 94 in 2001 and was living in
an apartment in Tucson.
She also still owned the small horse ranch close to Tucson and periodically visited it. The
cliff house has been vandalized over the years but it still remains a hauntingly
beautiful surprise for anyone with the fortitude to search it out.
Summarized from “The House of Hope” an article that appeared
in the January 2001 issue of Arizona Highways.
Additional Material: GVHC Library File 87