Topics (click on a topic to jump to that section)Jim Bridger | Chief Black Hawk | Fairfield Stage Coach Inn | First Oregon Trail | Great Fur Cache | Kit Carson | Peter Skene Ogden | Tony Grove | Walker War | Weber Canyon Trail |
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Jim BridgerMarker Topic: In honor of Jim Bridger, 1804-1881 Chief Black HawkMarker Topic: Black Hawk - Ute Indian Chief
The war commenced in April 1865 at Manti, Sanpete County. Three years later when the Indians were finally brought to term, 51 settlers had been killed and 25 settlements abandoned in five counties. The seriousness of the Indian depredations was such that during the three-year war over 2700 men of the Territorial Militia were called into service. Expenses incurred during the war were in excess of 1.5 million dollars. Although scattered Indian raids continued into the summer of 1868m the Black Hawk War was regarded as officially closed in 1867. Fairfield Stage Coach InnMarker Topic: Fairfield Stage Coach Inn First Oregon TrailMarker Topic: First Oregon Trail
While early maps give the probable location of the first Oregon Trail north of here, well marked wagon ruts and stories of Indians and settlers indicate that the first wagon migration to “Oregon” followed the southwesterly shores of Bear Lake, leaving this valley through a canyon to the Northwest, then to the upper reaches of the Bear River. Additional color is given this belief because this was the site of an important trappers’ rendezvous as early as 1827 and well marked trails were followed for many years in and out of this valley. Great Fur CacheMarker Topic: Great Fur Cache Kit CarsonMarker Topic: Christopher "Kit" Carson
Kit Carson carved a cross (still visible) in the rocks on the highest point on the island which the party named “Disappointment,” but now bears the name of Fremont Island. In 1845, a Fremont party guided by Carson explored central Utah and Great Salt Lake. Their greatest feat was crossing the Great Salt Lake desert en route to California, the trail followed in 1846 by the Donner Party. Carson became an Indian Agent and Army Officer. He died at Fort Lyon, Colorado, May 23, 1868. Peter Skene OgdenMarker Topic: Peter Skene Ogden, Trapper, Trader, Explorer In May of 1825, a party of American trappers confronted Ogden at nearby Mountain Green, informing him (falsely) that he was on American soil, and ordered him to leave. Ogden staunchly defended his rights in this yet nonceded territory, but was forced to withdraw when 23 of his men deserted with approximately 800 beaver pelts. Unusual among trappers, Ogden was literate and left an excellent journal of his struggles in Utah where Ogden City, Ogden Canyon and Ogden Valley now honor his name. Tony Grove Ranger StationMarker Topic: Tony Grove Ranger Station
To commemorate the centennial of the Powell exploration, Desolation Canyon was dedicated a National Historical Landmark. This canyon was selected as the landmark because it is the least changed from Powell’s time. There is no physical evidence that Powell’s party was ever here. No structures, no writing on the rocks. Expedition notes and journals remark favorably on the natural beauty and traces of past civilizations found here. Walker WarMarker Topic: Walker War
The following day Alexander Keele, a guard at Payson, was shot by Indians and the war was on. The policy of the white defenders was one of vigilant watch and limited offensive warfare. However, before Governor Brigham Young led a peace mission into Walkara’s camp in May 1854 that ended the conflict, 20 whites had been killed, including the U.S. Government surveyor Captain John W. Gunnison, who was massacred with 7 of his men hear the present site of Hinckley, Utah. Weber Canyon Explorer's TrailMarker Topic: Weber Canyon Explorer's Trail In 1846 California emigrants took the first wagons down the Canyon, encountering great hardship and suffering severe losses. They included the Hudspeth, Bryant-Russell, and Young and Harlan parties. In this vicinity, the Donner-Reed party of 1846, which later met a tragic fate on the east slope of the Sierras in California, turned southwest and blazed a trail through the mountains to the Salt Lake Valley. This trail was followed by the Mormon Pioneers (1847), the California “Gold Rush” Emigrants (1849-50), the Mormon Handcart Pioneers (1856), Overland Stage (1856), and the Pony Express (1860-61). |
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