Overview
After the tragic “Long Walk” to Bosque Redondo, New Mexico, the Navajo Nation was officially recognized by the U.S. government in 1868 and trading posts were established throughout the reservation. One near Ganado, Arizona was purchased by John Lorenzo Hubbell in 1876. He and his sons established a network of 30 trading posts with a wholesale warehouse in Winslow. Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site is still an active store (run by a nonprofit organization) with an adjacent National Park Service (NPS) visitor center.

Highlights
Historic trading post, Hubbell Home, museum, farm animals
Must-Do Activity
This is a unique NPS site with livestock (sheep, horses, turkeys) and a hands-on play area for children, as well as the original dusty store which allows visitors to travel back into the late-1800s. There are frequent Navajo rug weaving demonstrations and tours inside the Hubbell Home are available for a fee. The area has seen many changes over the years, including an 1883 smallpox epidemic that killed thousands of locals, the building of Fred Harvey Company hotels, a 1915 grant of a 160-acre homestead to Hubbell, and the discovery of oil then uranium on the reservation.
Best Trail
None
Instagram-worthy Photo
Livestock maintained on site include horses, chickens, turkeys, and sheep, significant for the wool that was such an important trade item when weaved into world-famous Navajo rugs.

Peak Season
Summer
Hours
Note: the Navajo Nation and this NPS site practice Daylight Savings Time while the rest of Arizona (including Grand Canyon National Park) does not
https://www.nps.gov/hutr/planyourvisit/hours.htm
Fees
None, except for the house tour
Road Conditions
The access road is a well-maintained gravel road that can accommodate large RVs.
Camping
None on site, but there is a large NPS-managed campground 40 miles north at Canyon de Chelly National Monument.
Related Sites
Chaco Culture National Historical Park (New Mexico)
Homestead National Monument of America (Nebraska)
Navajo National Monument (Arizona)
Kids playing in the visitor center Inside the trading post
Explore More – In the 1920s American Indians were finally permitted citizenship, but Arizona tribes were still not allowed to vote until when?