Poston Butte – Florence, Arizona

A Pyramid in the Desert
Just outside Florence, Arizona, in Pinal County, sits a historic volcanic mound rising high enough above the surrounding flats to feel out of place. On top of it stands a 14-foot masonry pyramid, the kind of thing you don’t expect to find in the middle of the Sonoran Desert, and the kind of thing that demands an explanation.
The pyramid is a tomb, built by the state of Arizona to honor Charles Debrille Poston, widely known as the “Father of Arizona.” Born in 1825 in Kentucky, Poston made his way to California during the gold rush and eventually became one of the first Americans to stake claims in southern Arizona and New Mexico. He founded the Sonora Exploring and Mining Company in 1856, which grew into one of the most successful mining operations in the territory. After convincing President Lincoln to separate Arizona into its own territory, Poston became the state’s first congressional representative.
His later years took a stranger turn. Following an electoral defeat, Poston traveled the world on diplomatic missions and developed a deep fascination with Zoroastrianism. He came to believe that Poston Butte, then called Primrose Hill, was the site of an ancient Apache sun temple, and he attempted to build a Zoroastrian fire temple at the summit. The project never came to fruition. Poston died in 1902 and was initially buried in a pauper’s grave. Years later, the state of Arizona had his remains reinterred at the top of the butte inside the pyramid that now bears his name.
Today the butte is managed by the city of Florence as a public park. The half-mile trail winds up the side of the mound via switchbacks and delivers a 360-degree view of the surrounding desert that makes the climb more than worth it.
Know Before You Go
- Region: Southwest United States
- Location: Florence, Arizona
- Trailhead Address: 13993 W Hunt Hwy, Florence, AZ 85132
- Coordinates: 33°03′19″N 111°24′32″W
- Cost: Free, no entry fee, no parking fee
- Hours: Sunrise to Sunset daily
- Trail: Half-mile from trailhead to summit; well-maintained, natural surface, not paved
- Attraction Type: Roadside Oddity / Historic Site
Take plenty of water. The desert exposure is real, and there is no shade on the upper half of the trail.
My Visit
I hiked Poston Butte many times when I lived nearby. It was a reliable way to get miles in without going far, and the regulars knew it well. Early mornings and late afternoons would bring out people looping the trail several times to stack up their steps before the heat settled in.
What always kept me coming back wasn’t the workout. It was the summit. Standing up there with the desert laid out in every direction, the pyramid at your back, the silence of a place that feels genuinely remote even though a town sits right below, it resets something. There’s a strange weight to knowing that a man who spent his final years trying to build a sun temple on this very hill is now entombed inside a pyramid at the top of it. Arizona has no shortage of characters, but Poston is a particular kind of strange and wonderful.
If you’re passing through the Phoenix or Tucson corridor and have an hour to spare, take the exit. It’s an easy hike, a weird piece of history, and one of those places that sticks with you longer than you’d expect.
For more on the history of Poston Butte, Atlas Obscura and the Historical Marker Database are both worth a look.
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