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Subscriber requested and now its here!!! #deweysworld A Real Time drive through the Ahwatukee Foothills Village in Phoenix Arizona. This community is known as the "Largest Culdesac in America" and was one of the fastest growing areas in Arizona in the 1980's. Its a Real-time drive through one of the more interesting neighborhoods in Arizona, and has old and new areas... This place is a destination for those looking for the retro feel of Phoenix Arizona but a suburban sense of calm. Check out more of my Phoenix area travel videos- #worldofdewey #phoenix #driving Camelback Road 4K- Driving in Phoenix Scottsdale Arcadia Arizona Ambient Drive • Camelback Road 4K- Driving in Phoenix... Driving Phoenix- Ahwatukee Foothills 4K Ambient Sounds Jan 2022 • Driving in Phoenix | 4K Ahwatukee and... Follow me on Instagram - @deweysworld Twitter - @worldofdewey Pinterest - @Deweysworld CAMERAS and OTHER GEAR: Main camera: iPhone 8 Action camera: GoPro Hero 8 Black Additional action camera: GoPro Hero More on Ahwatukee from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahwatuk... At least two major thoroughfares in today's Ahwatukee are named after people who claimed lands in the area, in the decades following the signing of the Homestead Act in 1862.[6] Warner Road was named after Samuel Warner of Kansas, while Elliot Road was named after Reginald Elliott of California.[6] Both claimed lands in an area now known as Tempe.[6] A third man, Arthur Hunter, claimed land within an area now known as Ahwatukee. The street known today as 48th Street was, for a time, named Hunter Drive, after Arthur Hunter.[6] Hunter is rumored to have, in the 1940s, disassembled and buried in the Ahwatukee desert a Studebaker auto purportedly owned by Al Capone.[6] Ahwatukee ranch[edit] One of the first houses in the area was built by Dr. William Van Bergen Ames, who co-founded Northwestern University's now-closed Dental School.[7] The house was built on a piece of land measuring over 2,000 acres (810 ha),[8] which was purchased for $4 an acre.[6] At the time, the Chandler Arizonan newspaper called the house, built in the foothills of the South Mountain, "unmatched in scope and size".[7] The house was noted to be a 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) winter residence, designed by prominent Phoenix architect Lester Mahoney, with construction starting in 1921.[7] Following Ames' wife's death, the Ames' property in Ahwatukee was willed to St. Luke's Hospital.[9] The property was bought by Helen Brinton in 1935,[8][9] who gave the house (and eventually the area) the name it is known by today (as explained below). Brinton died in 1960,[6] and the house was demolished in 1979.[10] Development[edit] Development of Ahwatukee began in 1970, when Presley Development Company, led by Randall Presley, bought 2,080 acres (840 ha) of land.[10] The land included Ahwatukee Ranch, then owned by a land syndicate led by an Arizona State University English professor, as well as land owned by a local moving and storage firm.[12] Presley originally planned for the area to be a retirement community, but later devised a mix of retirement living, family living, and light commercial zoning for the area.[12] Presley Development was noted to have a role in Ahwatukee eventually becoming a part of Phoenix, instead of neighboring Chandler or Tempe, through a handshake deal between Maricopa County Supervisor Bob Stark, who was also an attorney with Presley Development, and Mayor of Phoenix John D. Driggs.[13] However, Chandler and Tempe officials were noted to have refused offers of annexing Ahwatukee.[10][13] Phoenix annexed the area in stages, from 1980 to 1987.[10] It has been suggested that Phoenix's annexation of Ahwatukee had, to a degree, affected Tempe's future development.[14] Plans for Ahwatukee were approved by Maricopa County in November 1971, and 17 model homes were opened in an area near 50th Street and Elliot Road in 1973.[10][15] In the same year as the model homes’ opening, the Arizona State Legislature set aside $5 million to build a prison near the proving grounds. Plans for the prison, however, were later scrapped.[10][11] The area's first elementary school, Kyrene de los Lomas, opened in 1976, while Mountain Pointe High School opened as the area's first high school in 1991.[10]