Arizona has changed a lot through the decades. From territory to state; from the epitome of the Wild West to a bustling urban center. Check out these photos below to see how different areas have evolved over the years.

  1. Let’s start with a look at the Grand Canyon’s south entrance. This was taken in 1951.

Grand Canyon National Parks/Flickr

  1. Here’s the same entrance (from a different angle) in 2015.

Grand Canyon National Parks/Flickr

  1. There’s also this photo from 1962 documenting when Petrified Forest changed its sign to designate it a national park.

Park Ranger/Flickr

  1. Here is the same sign 45 years later in 2007.

Matthew/Flickr

  1. Some displaced cotton pickers from Texas make improvements to their makeshift home in Chandler, circa 1940. The photographer’s notes mention the family lost their Texas house and farm three years earlier.

US National Records and Archives/Wikimedia Commons

  1. These days, most farms in Chandler have been converted into sprawling residential neighborhoods.

Brandon Hunt/Flickr

  1. Here is a look at Hoover Dam after construction finished in 1935.

Bureau of Reclamation/Wikimedia Commons

  1. And here is what the dam looks like today.

Matt Dwen/Flickr

  1. Back in 1870, this is what the Salt River north of Tempe looked like. That’s Hayden Butte (or “A” Mountain) in the background.

US Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons

  1. This is what the same area looks like 145 years later.

Don Barrett/Flickr

  1. This image comes from a postcard of the Valley Ho in Scottsdale, not long after its opening in 1956.

1950sUnlimited/Flickr

  1. The hotel went through several owners and neglect before it was restored to the midcentury architectural glory that we see today.

Dru Bloomfield/Flickr

  1. This image of Mission San Xavier del Bac was taken between 1898 and 1900. It features small homes of local Tohono O’odham families south of the mission but not much else in way of structures.

Ashley Van Haeften/Flickr

  1. A similar view of the mission in 2015 shows that a parking lot now sits where the homes were and lots of development in the background.

Alyson Hurt/Flickr

  1. A stagecoach sits outside the Grandview Hotel at the Grand Canyon.

Ashley Van Haeften/Flickr

  1. Today, all that remains is a parking lot, a trailhead, and a sign noting the former location of the hotel.

Marcin Wichary/Flickr

  1. It wasn’t that long ago that seeing old grandmas and Navajo families purchasing goods at the trading post was a common sight. This picture is from 1971 and shows women purchasing and selling items for their families.

US Department of Agriculture/Flickr

  1. Today, most trading posts have either closed or been rebranded as tourist locations. Hubbell, located in Ganado on the Navajo Nation, is one example of a place that caters more towards tourists than residents these days.

carlfbagge/Flickr

  1. Finally, here’s a look at the Arizona-Mexico border in Nogales. Can you tell where the border is?

Marion Doss/Flickr This photo is dated from the 1890s.

  1. Same location but the border is more defined. Arizona is on the right side of the photo while Mexico is to the left.

bunky’s pickle This photo isn’t dated but the cars suggest it may be around the 1930s.

  1. Taken in 2007, this photo shows how that wall has grown and the difference between the two sides of the same city.

Sgt. 1st Class Gordon Hyde/Wikimedia Commons

What other places in Arizona would you like to see then and now photos of? Tell us in the comments below!

Grand Canyon National Parks/Flickr

Park Ranger/Flickr

Matthew/Flickr

US National Records and Archives/Wikimedia Commons

Brandon Hunt/Flickr

Bureau of Reclamation/Wikimedia Commons

Matt Dwen/Flickr

US Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons

Don Barrett/Flickr

1950sUnlimited/Flickr

Dru Bloomfield/Flickr

Ashley Van Haeften/Flickr

Alyson Hurt/Flickr

Marcin Wichary/Flickr

US Department of Agriculture/Flickr

carlfbagge/Flickr

Marion Doss/Flickr

This photo is dated from the 1890s.

bunky’s pickle

This photo isn’t dated but the cars suggest it may be around the 1930s.

Sgt. 1st Class Gordon Hyde/Wikimedia Commons

OnlyInYourState may earn compensation through affiliate links in this article.