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Miracle Mile Historic District

Buildings and structures in Pima County, ArizonaGeography of Tucson, ArizonaHistoric district contributing properties in ArizonaHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in ArizonaNational Register of Historic Places in Pima County, Arizona
National Register of Historic Places in Tucson, ArizonaU.S. Route 80U.S. Route 89
Tucson Inn, 1956
Tucson Inn, 1956

The Miracle Mile Historic District, located on North Stone Avenue, Drachman Street, Oracle Road and Miracle Mile in Tucson, Arizona, United States, was listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places in 2017.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Miracle Mile Historic District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Miracle Mile Historic District
North Oracle Road, Tucson

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Wikipedia: Miracle Mile Historic DistrictContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 32.245 ° E -110.97805555556 °
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Address

Miracle Mile Historic District

North Oracle Road
85705 Tucson
Arizona, United States
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Tucson Inn, 1956
Tucson Inn, 1956
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Nearby Places

Stone Avenue Underpass
Stone Avenue Underpass

The Stone Avenue Underpass, known to native Tucsonans as "Lake Elmira", is a historic underpass on Stone Avenue in Tucson, Arizona.The underpass was completed in January 1936. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. It is located between 6th street and E. Toole Avenue/W. Franklin Street, and carries two lanes in each direction of Stone Ave under the Union Pacific railroad tracks that run through downtown Tucson. Due to the poor drainage, it fills fast during heavy downpours of rain because of that was nicknamed Lake Elmira. It was named after 13 year old Elmira Doakes, by Arizona Daily Star reporter Howard Owetly in the summer of 1937. In the 1980s, two young history buffs had a zinc plaque made and placed it on one of pillars without permission from the City Of Tucson or The Arizona Historical Society. It reads in English and Spanish:“Lake Elmira. According to a 1937 newspaper account, thirteen year old Elmira Doakes (daughter of Joseph Doakes of Tucson) was the first person to successfully swim across the body of water which formed in the Stone Avenue Underpass (during summer rains). Her route from the Toole Avenue Landing to the Northern Shore has not to our knowledge been followed since. There is apparently no truth to the rumor that the Federal aid was denied in 1940 for building docking facilities and a chlorinating system in this once popular recreational area. (Although the Doakes current whereabouts is not known, it is believed that she moved to California after the Underpass received more efficient drains in the mid-sixties.