Sell Your Marana Home Home Page Marana Land Any Questions on Marana  Real Estate?

Marana Arizona Homes
and Loans and Mortgages

FREEred.gif (2050 bytes) Why waste your time filling out several loan applications? We will personally search over 150 lenders to find a loan that will meet your criteria. We will make a list of lenders for you to consider, if you will specify your needs, on this simple one page form.

 

 Please fill out the form below.

How soon do you wish to move?    Immediately    Within three months    Within the year

Have you pre-qualified for a mortgage?  Yes    No

Would you like assistance with a mortgage?  Yes    No

I am currently working with an  agent:  

Not working with an agent yet
To buy a home
To sell my home
To both buy and sell
 


I need to sell my current home first:
  

Yes    No

What price Home?                How many bedrooms?         

How many baths?                                 Specialty rooms?            

Garage?                                                Pool?                               

Special Features / Type/ Location    

Style

Style

Other

Soft Contemporary Golf Course Home Vacant Land
Ranch Gated Community Investment
Condo Mountain Views Retirement
Two Story Water front Remote Hideaways
Townhouse Historic Horse Properties
South Western Cabin Unique Properties
Adobe Commercial See Comments Below

Enter your comments in the space provided below:

Tell us how to get in touch with you:

 
  Name
  Street
  Apt
  City
  State   Zip
E-Mail
  Phone
 

      

 


 Submitting this form grants permission for our associates to contact you by email, phone, or fax.

Marana , Arizona Real Estate Links
Marana Real Estate Listings in Arizona

Marana Commercial Properties
Marana Homes Refinancing, Loans, and Mortgages
Marana Land

Fill the form out above to receive all the information you need for Marana Arizona 
Marana Buying Assistance
Marana Area Map
Marana Mortgage Information  
 

Marana Homes and Real Estate for Sale in Arizona
 

Marana Arizona

Long before the coming of the Spanish Conquistadors and missionaries in the 17th Century, the Marana/Avra Valley area was inhabited by the Hohokam Indians, who developed extensive canal systems to use the waters of the Santa Cruz River for irrigated agriculture. By the coming of the first Spaniards to the area in the 1690s, the Hohokam had long since disappeared, and their irrigation works had become ruins.

Up until 1776, when the Spanish established a presidio at Tucson, the Marana/Avra Valley area lay under the domination of the Tohono O’Odham Indians, who themselves were subject to the domination of the marauding Apaches from the nearby highlands of southern and eastern Arizona. With the independence of Mexico from Spanish colonial rule in 1821, official jurisdiction over the area passed to the new Republic of Mexico and remained so as a part of the State of Sonora until the middle of the 19th Century.

The Gadsden Purchase

The American flag came to the Marana area for the first time in 1846, carried by the troops of the Mormon battalion who passed through the region on their way to San Diego, California. Despite the trek of the Mormon soldiers to secure the Mexican Territory of what is now New Mexico, Arizona, and California for the United States, when the Mexican war ended all of Arizona south of the Gila River remained in the hands of Mexico. During the Gadsden Purchase of 1854, however, 29,640 square miles of southern Arizona and New Mexico south of the Gila were purchased from Mexico for a total of $10 million, about 53¢ an acre.

The Gold Rush of California in 1848 spread eastward into Arizona. Also, many Mexican ranchers established large cattle ranches in the area, displacing most of the remaining indigenous Papago Indians. With the Marana area under the jurisdiction of the United States, prospectors seeking mineral riches intensified their efforts in the region. Gold was not discovered in abundance, but by 1865, high grade copper ore was being shipped from mines in the Silver Bell Mountains to Yuma and then by ship to Baltimore for smelting.

Arizona's Civil War Battle

During the Civil War, soldiers of the Confederacy occupied Tucson and extended their control through Marana and as far west as what is now Casa Grande. In early 1862, Union Troops were sent eastward from Yuma to take back Southern Arizona for the North. The Bluecoats engaged a patrol of Confederate Calvary near Picacho Peak; the site of Arizona’s only Civil War battle and the western-most battle of the entire war. The victorious Union troops then rode through the Marana area to retake Tucson and replanted the American flag in eastern Pima County in May of 1862.

Rail transportation came in 1881 and signaled a major change in the area. It gave Marana its first identification as a specific place by appearing on Southern Pacific Railroad maps in 1890. Marana is a Spanish word meaning a jungle, a tangle or a thicket and was chosen as an appropriate name by the railroad workers as they hacked their way through the dense brush.

World War I brought new prosperity to what was left of the once thriving Silverbell Mine. The population climbed back to over a thousand and the town had both a school and a hospital. However, ranching and the railroad continued to form the backbone of the immediate Marana community.

Effects of the World Wars

The aftermath of World War I brought another change to Marana. In 1920, a land promotion involving irrigated agriculture was started by Michigan immigrant Edwin R. Post. His project involved drilling wells in the desert, the installation of a pumping plant, and the construction of an extensive irrigation system to bring ground water to the fertile desert land. Many families then migrated to the area to grow cotton. The community grew by several hundred during the heyday of the irrigated farming expansion from 1920 to 1924.

During World War II, the impact of the rising importance of air power came quickly to Marana. In 1942 the Federal Government bought about three and a half square miles of the old Aguirre Ranch southwest of Red Rock and began construction of an air base. Emergency landing fields were also built throughout the area. To serve the nearby military facility, the highway from Tucson to Casa Grande was improved and soon became the major road through the Marana area. This, along with electricity, moved Marana into the 20th Century.


The migrant labor camps that dotted the Marana/Avra Valley area up until the late 1950s were replaced by a new structure born of the cold war and the space age. Beginning in 1959, Titan missile sites were located in the area as part of a complex of ballistic missile installations built around Tucson. Five sites were located in the Marana vicinity and as a result many of the rural roads in the Avra Valley area were paved. This had a significant impact in making many parts of Marana more accessible.

Marana Starts to Grow

In 1961, the Arizona Highway Department and the Federal Government removed most of the Marana business district to widen Interstate 10. The high school, several of the shops, and the businesses relocated but were not centralized and ended up scattered throughout the area. Consequently there is no "Main Street" in north Marana and the business district in southern Marana has become the main shopping region.

In March of 1977 the Town of Marana was incorporated with about 10 square miles. In August of that year the 1,500 townspeople elected their first town council. In early 1979 the Town began growing through an aggressive annexation policy and is now nearly 116 square miles with an estimated population of 18,000.
 


Marana is quickly becoming the place to live, work, play and learn in southern Arizona. It has grown from its early roots as a center for farming and ranching to a modern town with nearly 115 square miles of preserved desert, residential developments, commercial districts and recreational opportunities.

Marana has a wide variety of neighborhoods for all its residents including newer home developments in Continental Ranch, the original portion of Marana that is still largely rural and agricultural, sumptuous golf course homes at Dove Mountain, and two age-restricted communities at Sunflower and Heritage Highlands.



It is expected that the estimated population of 16,000 will double in the next 10 years and the diverse housing opportunities assure that we have just the right neighborhoods for our prospective residents. Marana is establishing itself as a self-contained community where our residents can live and work.

Marana boasts many employment opportunities, including many that have been created with the expansion of the town through a history of well-planned annexations. The southern portion adjacent to Tucson is the main commercial business district with many large, "brand name" businesses and several small, locally owned businesses.



The industrial park on Interstate 10 features several corporate businesses and the region’s CBS affiliate. There are also many possibilities at the recently annexed Marana Northwest Regional Airport with improvements planned to make this a commercial center that will expand employment in our community even more. There are many outdoor activities to enjoy in and around town. There are several outstanding public and private golf courses in Marana and many world-famous attractions nearby, including the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, Saguaro National Park, and Old Tucson Studios.

Education is always important to Marana residents. Approximately 12,000 students are served by 11 public elementary schools, two junior high schools and two high schools. Student achievement scores are consistently above county, state and national norms.

Marana is a community that has a small-town feel with all the advantages of a larger city. Our local officials work hard to make Marana the best place in the state to live, work, play and learn. Take a look and see everything Marana has to offer!

Marana has transformed from its roots in agriculture to a diverse community with shopping, residential and industrial centers. With nearly 115 square miles and only 16,000 residents, there is a lot of room for Marana to grow!

Some people move to Marana for its close proximity to Tucson and the amenities a big city has to offer; however, others choose to locate here because of the small-town lifestyle and the many treasures found within Marana.


Marana’s elevation is listed as 2,055 feet but it has a varied landscape with areas nestled in mountain ranges, along riverbanks, and in the desert.

Whether you choose city life or the quiet rural lifestyle, Marana has the location you are seeking.

TRANSPORTATION:

Interstate 10 runs through the heart of Marana, making all areas of town easily accessible.

Marana also has its own airport with one 4,200-foot lighted and paved runway and one 3,000-foot unlighted paved runway. UNICOM radio, beacons, hangars, tie downs and maintenance are available at the Marana Northwest Regional Airport.


UTILITIES:

Electricity:

Cable: Comcast

Trico Electric Cooperative (520) 744-1900
(520) 744-2944


Electricity: Natural Gas: Southwest Gas
Tucson Electric Power (520) 889-1888
(520) 623-7711 (800) 428-7324
(800) 328-8853


Telephone: Qwest Sewer: Pima County
(800) 244-1111
(520) 740-6500

WATER:

WASTE REMOVAL:

Marana Municipal Water

Saguaro Environmental

(520) 616-4908
(520) 745-8820

Cortaro Water Users Association Waste Management
(520) 682-3233
(520) 744-2600

Tucson Water
(520) 791-3242


Avra Water Coop.
(520) 682-7331

COMMUNICATIONS:

Newspapers:

Daily

The Arizona Daily Star (morning)

Tucson Citizen (afternoon)

Weekly

Northwest Explorer

Monthly

Monument News
Radio

Marana is served by both AM and FM stations located in the Tucson area. KSAZ AM 580 is located in Marana.

Television

Local stations are broadcast from the Tucson area. Comcast Cable and KOLD TV-Channel 13 (CBS affiliate) are located
in Marana.

 


 

        

"Top Real Estate Agents in Marana, Arizona"


 

Search Homes for Sale through Real Estate Listings

 




 


 

Price Range of Marana Homes for Sale