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MOEUR PARK W.P.A.
STRUCTURES

MILL AVENUE + CURRY ROAD [NEC, SEC]
HP #9
HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE
WPA-Era Structures in Moeur Park, North and South
BACKGROUND
This nomination was submitted by the Historic Preservation
Office at the request of the Historic Preservation Commission for historic
designation of the WPA-Era Structures in Moeur Park North and South and listing
in the Tempe Historic Property Register. A public hearing was held September 2,
1999, and Tempe HPC voted 6/0 to recommend approval of the designation and
listing. A public hearing was held on October 12, 1999, and the Planning &
Zoning Commission voted 7/0 to recommend approval of the designation and
listing. Finally, two public hearings at Tempe City Council and on November 4,
1999, Council unanimously approved designation and listing of the WPA-Era
Structures in Moeur Park North and South in the Tempe Historic Property
Register.
Moeur Park North and South is located at the NE and SE
corners of Mill Avenue and Curry Road. Moeur Park ramadas and associated
structures are identified in the 1997 Tempe Multiple Resource Area Update (#255)
as individually eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic
Places. Built in U.S. Park Services style, these roadway, rest, and landscape
elements are typical of the New Deal Works Projects Administration Era (WPA).
Field stone and concrete materials were used by the WPA to construct features
throughout the park. These include; raised planters, stairs, planter borders,
stone benches, stone tables, an automobile bridge, retaining walls, and
irrigation boxes.
Moeur Park is significant for its association with Works
Projects Administration construction projects. The park began as an automobile
rest stop for motorists, established by the Arizona Highway Department for
travelers on State Highway 93 (US 60 and 89). Construction began in 1930 and
the project bears the WPA stamp “W.P.A. Project 652, 1936” at the stone and
concrete bridge over the Salt River Project drainage easement in the northern
portion of the park.
In 1949, a bronze plaque in memory of Mrs. Honor Anderson
Moeur, wife of Governor Benjamin Baker Moeur (Tempe’s first governor), was
placed in the park in recognition of her work toward roadside beautification and
this park in particular.
SUMMARY
The WPA-Era Structures in Moeur Park, North and South meet
the eligibility criteria specitfied in Section 14A-4 of the Tempe City Code
(Historic Preservation Ordinance), under Criteria 1, 2a, and 2b. The structures
meet the criteria for listing in the Arizona or National Register of Historic
Places (Criterion 1). The structures are at least fifty years old, reflective
of the city’s cultural and social past; and are associated with persons
significant in local and state history (Governor and Mrs. B. B. Moeur)
satisfying Criterion 2a. Under Criterion 2b, Moeur Park North and South
represents and established and familiar visible feature of an area of the city,
due to its prominent location at the heavily travelled intersection of Mill
Avenue and Curry Road.
Only those areas of Moeur Park, North and South where the
actual WPA-Era Structures or features occur have been designated historic and
listed in the Tempe Historic Property Register by this action.
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