Photos: Jacome Family
- Updated
Take a look at the past of one of Tucson's pioneering family.
Jacome Family
- A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
This is some wrapping paper that is on display in the window at Black Cat Vintage, 41 N. Tucson Blvd. Four generations of the Jacome family visited the shop which had a giant photo in a window display of the 1951 opening day of the former Jacome's Department Store as part of Modernism Week in Tucson.
Jacome Family
- TUCSON CITIZEN
- Updated
Artist Edith Hamlin Dixon Dale created two large art pieces to hang on the outside of the Jacome's Department Store, and the images became the trademark for the store on North Stone Avenue. Tina Jácome donated the pieces to the city, and they now hang at the Tucson Convention Center, one at the west entrance and the other outside the Leo Rich Theatre. Photo By Reginald Russel
Jacome Family
- Greg Bryan
- Updated
This is a photo of the 13 Jácome brothers and sisters taken in 1951, the year the last store opened in downtown Tucson. Standing l-r are, Arturo, Juan, Ramon, Josefina Bloom, Sarah Parker, Rosaura Aros, Ricardo, Frank, and Henry. Sitting l-r are Carlos, Anita Dalton, Augustine, and Alejandro. Photo copied at Tina Jácome's home on Wednesday, Mar. 15, 2006.
More like this...
Jacome Family
- TUCSON CITIZEN
This is the Tucson Citizen photograph of the September 11, 1951 opening of the Jacome's Department Store in downtown Tucson. An enlarged copy of this photo is on display in the window of Black Cat Vintage at 41 N. Tucson Blvd. Reginald Russel Photography
Jacome Family
- A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star
This is some wrapping paper that is on display in the window at Black Cat Vintage, 41 N. Tucson Blvd. Four generations of the Jacome family visited the shop which had a giant photo in a window display of the 1951 opening day of the former Jacome's Department Store as part of Modernism Week in Tucson.
Jacome Family
- TUCSON CITIZEN
Artist Edith Hamlin Dixon Dale created two large art pieces to hang on the outside of the Jacome's Department Store, and the images became the trademark for the store on North Stone Avenue. Tina Jácome donated the pieces to the city, and they now hang at the Tucson Convention Center, one at the west entrance and the other outside the Leo Rich Theatre. Photo By Reginald Russel
Jacome Family
- Greg Bryan
This is a photo of the 13 Jácome brothers and sisters taken in 1951, the year the last store opened in downtown Tucson. Standing l-r are, Arturo, Juan, Ramon, Josefina Bloom, Sarah Parker, Rosaura Aros, Ricardo, Frank, and Henry. Sitting l-r are Carlos, Anita Dalton, Augustine, and Alejandro. Photo copied at Tina Jácome's home on Wednesday, Mar. 15, 2006.
More like this...
Most Popular
-
Arizona’s landscapes become star of new TV show filming here
-
Japanese company invests in mine near Mount Lemmon -
Tucson DACA recipient detained after agents 'aggressively' enter home, family says
-
U of A student groups ask audience to boo commencement speaker
-
El Rio revives long-closed Tucson hospital

