In 1907, five years before Arizona's statehood, Walter Gist Tolleson and
his wife, Alethea, chose the dry Arizona Territory for their sick son.
In 1910, they purchased and later subdivided 160 acres just 10 miles
from a young settlement known as Phoenix. And in 1912, the town of
Tolleson was born. By the 1940s and 1950s, the community had become the
Vegetable Center of the World. The area that was once an agricultural
mecca is now divided by suburban sprawl, but Tolleson's original spirit
remains. It is bustling with growing schools and industry, as well as
world-class sports, shopping, and entertainment facilities, all
surrounding a 6-square-mile community with small-town pride. That
inexhaustible spirit continues to make Tolleson one of the greatest
places in the country to live.