Clifton, Arizona, is the gateway to the Coronado Trail, a National Scenic Byway that provides access to hundreds of miles of hiking trails in the lightly traveled Apache Sitgreaves National Forest. With most of the Coronado Trail soaring between 6000 and 9000 feet in elevation, the hiking trails and campgrounds in this area are typically 15 to 20 degrees cooler than the valleys below, and an ideal destination for outdoor recreation even in the depths of the summer.
MoreUnlike the straightforward, gentle passage of retired Route 66 ... U.S. 666, its descendant, is tortuous, wild, and as strange as its name. In little more than 100 miles, the surrounding altitude ranges from twenty-nine hundred feet to more than eleven thousand feet. With some four hundred twisting curves in one sixty-mile stretch, the road has sent more than its share of travelers crashing off cliffs. If, as Nat King Cole sang, drivers get their kicks on Route 66, they take their risks on 666.
With its fate tied to the mining industry, Clifton's history has been marked by dramatic cycles of boom and bust. So many fortunes won and lost gave the town its unique character and its dynamic multiethnic work force. And while the nearby communities of Old Morenci and Metcalf were erased by the expansion of the Morenci copper mine, Clifton was preserved, leaving a remarkable testimony to its heyday as a Victorian-era mining boomtown.
Begin with a visit to one of the state's best small historical museums, take a walking tour of historic Chase Creek Street, spend a night at a national historic landmark and learn about the Clifton area's many opportunities for outdoor adventure and thrilling road trips.
MoreOf all the reasons to come to Clifton, perhaps the most compelling is the presence of Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep. They are backyard wildlife in this former mining town. Don't be surprised to encounter them grazing at the city park, peering down at you from the cliff behind Chase Creek Street, or crossing Route 191. The sheep are believed to have migrated from the Mogollon Rim to the Clifton area in the 1960s, following the San Francisco River. Today there are so many sheep in the area that Arizona Game and Fish has been capturing and relocating some of them to establish new herds in historic habitat in eastern and central Arizona.
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