T.C. Schnebly's brother, Ellsworth, had previously moved to the Oak Creek region of Arizona for health reasons upon the recommendation of his medical doctor. Ellsworth wrote to the Schneblys encouraging them to move to Arizona which had plenty of land with deep grass, crystal clear air and lots of game and fish. Convinced by Ellsworth, the Schneblys told Sedona's parents about their plans of moving to the West (Arizona). Sedona's parents did not approve of their plans and this eventually caused a rift in the families relations. T.C. arrived in Oak Creek, which was called the red rock country, before the rest of the family. Together with other pioneer families, he blasted out irrigation routes and moved the water through ditches, flumes and pipelines. He purchased 80 acres from Frank Owenby, who had homesteaded the land, with an orchard in the area known as Camp Garden, along Oak Creek. He began to haul his produce to the City of
Flagstaff where he sold them and then he would return to his farm in Oak Creek with goods from that city. T.C. sent for his wife Sedona and their two children. She boarded a train with her children and belongings that was headed to the mining town of
Jerome. T.C. was waiting in Jerome for his family to arrive and when they did he put his family and family possessions on a wagon and headed towards Oak Creek. They all arrived to their new home on October 12, 1901. They built a two-story house and established a small store where they sold their goods to the local residents. The Schneblys hired road crews to build what is now known as Schnebly Hill Road. This road provided a much better way to take their crops to Flagstaff. ==Naming of Sedona==