Hayden was born on April 4, 1825, in the village of Haydens in
Windsor,
Hartford County,
Connecticut, the son of Joseph and Mary Hanks Hayden.[2] He was a descendant of English settlers who arrived in 1630 and settled in the
Connecticut River valley.[3] Hayden's father died when he was six, leaving himself and his sister Anna to help his mother run the family farm. He completed his education at 16 and worked as a clerk for several years before leaving home in 1843.[2] His departure was motivated in part by a lung ailment.[4]
From Connecticut, Hayden went to New York City, where he studied law, before beginning a series of teaching jobs in Kentucky, Indiana, and Missouri. While in Kentucky, Hayden was influenced by
Henry Clay's vision of opening the West to settlement by the development of roads and canals.[4] By 1847, he was working as a
teamster hauling freight on the
Santa Fe Trail.[2]
Following ratification of the
Gadsden Purchase, Hayden established a store in
Tubac which served the nearby mines. By 1860, he had moved to
Tucson and according to census records had assets worth
US$20,000.[4][5] In addition to working as a merchant, Hayden also worked as a freighter and civic leader.[6] With the creation of
Arizona Territory, he added mail contractor to his list of duties.[7] Finally, he was appointed a
probate judge by
Governor Goodwin and he achieved the title "judge".[4]
Hayden remained in Tucson until 1873 when he moved to the
Salt River valley.[6] Local legend claims that while he was on a business trip from Tucson to Prescott, flood waters on the Salt River delayed him near the present location of
Tempe, Arizona, for several days. Using this time to explore the site, Hayden saw the potential to develop a new town at the site.[4] In December 1870, Hayden published a notice claiming two
sections along the south side of the Salt River "for milling, farming, and other purposes".[6] He used the land to build a
cable ferry,
grist mill,
general store, and other related businesses.[8]
On October 4, 1876, at the age of 51, Hayden married
Arkansas-born schoolteacher
Sallie Calvert Davis in
Nevada City, California. The couple would have four children,
Carl Trumbull, Sallie Davis, Anna Spenser, and Mary "Mapes" Calvert. Anna died when two-and-a-half years old while the three other children reached maturity.[9]
Politically, Hayden made an unsuccessful run to be
Arizona Territory's Congressional Delegate in 1874. This was followed in 1884 when
Grover Cleveland considered him for
Governor of Arizona Territory.[8] In 1885, Hayden succeeded in having a former employee, John S. Armstrong, elected to the
13th Arizona Territorial Legislature. Believing the territory's need lie primarily in educating new teachers, Hayden used his connection with Armstrong to lobby for the Territorial Normal School.[10] Hayden even favored the normal school over the fiscally more lucrative
insane asylum, arguing "
Stockton, California, was known to most people only as the place where insane people are confined" and that Tempe should not risk gaining a similar reputation. The normal school established in Tempe is now
Arizona State University.[11]
The Charles T. Hayden House was built in 1871 and is located at 1 W. Rio Salado Parkway. It is the oldest building in Tempe. It was the residence of Charles Trumbull Hayden and his family. The Hayden family moved out of the house in 1889. It has since been renovated as a restaurant. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on October 10, 1984 reference #84000173.
The Hayden Flour Mill, was originally built by Charles T. Hayden in 1874, thus the name of "Mill Avenue" in Tempe.
Notes
August, Jack L. (1999). Vision in the Desert: Carl Hayden and Hydropolitics in the American Southwest. Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press.
ISBN0-87565-310-3.
Rice, Ross R. (1994). Carl Hayden: Builder of the American West. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.
ISBN0-8191-9399-2.