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  • John Hance

  • The Life, Lies, and Legend of Grand Canyon's Greatest Storyteller
  • By: Shane Murphy
  • Narrated by: Dean Wagner
  • Length: 8 hrs and 12 mins
  • 3.4 out of 5 stars (5 ratings)

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John Hance

By: Shane Murphy
Narrated by: Dean Wagner
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Publisher's summary

A legend in his own lifetime, John Hance (1837–1919) was synonymous with early Grand Canyon tourism. Between the late 1880s and early 1900s, to say “John Hance” was to say “Grand Canyon.” Hance was well known to travelers and visiting dignitaries alike, men such as William “Buffalo Bill” Cody and Theodore Roosevelt, the president who affectionately referred to him as “the greatest liar on Earth.” It was said that Hance tried to jump the canyon on his horse Darby only to turn back when he was halfway over and realized he would never make it across.

The truth behind Hance’s life is remarkable even without embellishment. In this book, Shane Murphy chronicles Hance’s childhood in Tennessee and Missouri, his service in the Confederacy during the Civil War, his time in Union prisons as a POW, and his later adventures with the Hickok brothers crossing the plains. Settling in Arizona’s fruitful Verde Valley, Hance farmed and filled military contracts before taking up residence as Grand Canyon’s first permanent Euro-American settler, trail builder, guide, and renowned storyteller.

Hance left no correspondence, personal memoirs, or other writings. Only informal portraits from magazines and newspaper accounts remain. Murphy investigated assessors’ rolls, rare mercantile ledgers, and mining claims to create a full and compelling narrative of a man who was once an icon of the American West and should be remembered as the founding father of Grand Canyon tourism.

©2020 University of Utah Press (P)2020 University of Utah Press
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Interesting. This is a straight history based on the friends and family of John Hance.

John Hance was famous as a liar / Tall Tale Teller. And, apparently, left few written records. Therefore this author created a history of “life after the Civil War” in Tennessee, Missouri, Kansas, New Mexico and Arizona. It is surprising who Hance was “probably” friends of and related to who, apparently, are better documented. Apparently it is not possible to reconstruct what John Hance’s stories like, except one or two, often repeated stories. But he was a “typical” AZ pioneer. Because I’m listening to the book, I wish the narrator would pronounce the names of the towns and rivers correctly. Rolle is “Rolla”, Gila is not “Gill-a”, and it was only said once. But Dine, (Dineh) was far from correct. Prescott was a mixed lot, in terms of pronunciation. That is; it was pronounced several different ways. Sometimes correctly, rhyming with Biscuit. However, the narration was very easy to listen to. No accent. He just should have better studied some place names.

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