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Our Old west themed ROOMS


The Hacienda
Deluxe Room, Sleeps 4
$235 per night
You enter the Hacienda Suite and step back to a time when plantation, mine, and factory owners enjoyed such a living space. They appreciated the warmth of the hearth after a long day managing their estate. The owner of a hacienda was termed an hacendado. In popular culture, haciendas are often portrayed in telenovelas, such as A Escrava Isaura. In this two-room suite, you can step back to such times and accommodations.


The HUNTER
Double Room, Sleeps 4
$195 per night
"Go West, young man!"
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This simple phrase was a mantra of the time and drove the American Frontier westward. Trappers and hunters moved ahead of settlers and hunted not only wildlife but for gold and silver in the Arizona landscape.
After a stretch of time in the wilderness, an accommodation such as this was a welcome retreat.
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The CHINA CAMP
Single Room, Sleeps 4
$165 per night
The drive for expansion of the West created the need to get there faster. Railroads were dreamed of and it wasn't long before those investing in them realized that Chinese immigrants and Chinese Americans were the best laborers for this daunting task. As the men worked, they lived in camps set up along the developing rail line.Our China Camp room evokes this theme with its Oriental flair. Our choice of "China Camp," though, came from a colorful character of the same name.


The TRAPPER
Single Room, Sleeps 2
$135 per night
A mountain man is a male trapper and explorer who lives in the wilderness. One of the most famous of the Mountain Men was William Sherley "Old Bill" Williams (January 3, 1787 - March 1849). He served as an interpreter for the government, and led several expeditions in the West. Fluent in several languages, he lived with the Osage, where he married the daughter of a chief, and with the Ute.
Needs of the trapper were simple and solid and this themed experience reflects those attributes.


The MOVIE ROOM
Single Room, Sleeps 2
$135 per night
What Western experience would not include the nostalgia of the classic movie Westerns of John Wayne and Clint Eastwood, Gene Autrey and Buster Crabbe? This room is "papered" with flashes to this romantic past and offers a sample of these famous Westerns to watch on TV at your leisure.
In between movies, you can experience a flash back to this past by strolling into the Longhorn Saloon or just by conversin' with the folks at the Wild West Junction who live and breathe the values of the Old West!


The Bordello
Single Room, Sleeps 2
$135 per night
First came the miners to work in the mine. Next came the ladies who lived on the line. – Old Western Mining Adage
Though all manner of brothels, cat-houses, and cribs thrived throughout the American West, those "parlor houses” that were elegantly furnished and having the most beautiful and desirable women, were obviously the most profitable.
The mural on the wall of this bordello-themed room is from a painting of the same name by Lee Durbin.


The GAM<BLER
Single Room, Sleeps 2
$90 per night
The town of Williams was first settled by sheepherders in 1874. Railroad workers followed in 1880 with the construction of the transcontinental railroad, later called the Santa Fe line.
With the line complete in 1882, Williams grew as hub of ranching and lumber. Other profitable industries included saloons, brothels, opium dens and gambling parlors. All catered to a growing population of cowboys, Chinese labor, lumberjacks and copper miners. A general atmosphere of lawlessness helped secure considerable notoriety for Williams and its role in the Wild West
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