Cash Price is $7,000.
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Location: Sanders Arizona 86512
Parcel#: 206-05-081
Lot size: 5Acres
GPS: 34.912239 -109.453299
Property Taxes approx.:$15.06yr
Legal Description: CEDAR HILLS UNIT 3 Lot: 81 Section: 35 Township: 18N Range: 27E
Utilities Available: Water:Haul Water or Well
Electricity: Contact Navopache Electric (NEC) - show contact info
Sewer/Septic:You would need to drill a well or haul water
Zoning:Agricultural General
Property Use: R.Vs Allowed
Wood framed Homes or Mobile homes are allowed. Yes, there is an age restriction they can’t be older than 15 years old. It is regulated through the State so the dealers in our area know the rules that must be followed by the State. Septic is first to build or put any living quarter.
Camping Allowed,Yes, camping is allowed, if you camp longer than 30 days you need to have a septic system.
Sanders, Arizona – Railroad Town
Less than ten miles southwest of Houck, Arizona, is the small unincorporated community of Sanders, located at the junction of U.S. Route 191 and Interstate 40, within the Navajo Nation. This settlement started as yet another station on the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad. The reason it was called Sanders is still in dispute. Some say it was named after C. W. Sanders, a railroad office engineer. Others believe it was named for Art Saunders, who had a trading post nearby. However, because there was already a railroad station named Sanders, the community was renamed Cheto. It gained its first post office in 1896, but it would only last for a few years. The need for a post office was inconsistent. In 1932, when it reopened, the name changed to Sanders.
Like many other places across Arizona, trading posts predated the establishment of the community. One of the first stores here was established by G.W. Sampson in 1883. This is the very same one that Art Saunders would later operate. One of the most long-lasting stores was the Cedar Point Trading Post situated on Route 66. It was established in 1928 and was operated by several proprietors until 1980. Though the earliest trading posts are gone today, you can still stop at Burnham’s Trading Post. Though operating today in a building that is about 30 years old, the Burnham family has owned the trading post continuously since the 1890s. It is located along U.S. 191, exit #339.
Also at this exit is the old Sanders Bridge on an abandoned section of Claymine Road (former U.S. 66). Built in 1923, this Pratt pony truss bridge over Puerco River is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Though closed to vehicle traffic today, pedestrians may still use the bridge.
Today, Sanders is called home to about 630 people.
This land/house is being sold in as is condition. Seller makes no representations, warranties of any kind whatsoever, expressed or implied regarding the nature, value, source, authenticity, fitness, merchant-ability or any other aspect or characteristic of this property. Seller makes no warranty of the home or buildings if there is any . Seller makes no representation as to future prospects for increases in value of this property. All prospects buyers are urged to do their own due diligence to their own satisfaction prior to purchase of this property. All information contained in this listing page has come from reliable sources and is accurate to the best of our knowledge. this listing. As seller, we guarantee that there are no liens on the property and that we will provide the buyer with a Deed upon payment in full.