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Tag Archives: Ephraim

Ephraim Pioneer Cemetery

10 Tuesday Jun 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

DUP, Ephraim, historic, Sanpete County, utah

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This page is for the D.U.P. Historic Marker about the Ephraim Pioneer Cemetery, for the page about the cemetery itself visit this page.

In 1854, Ephraim‘s first settlers erected a one and one half acre fort for housing and protection against Indian attacks. A cemetery was not included in their plans. The first pioneer to die was Mr. Manwaring. Permission had been granted to use Allred Settlement’s (Spring City’s) cemetery, and the funeral party was en route to that site when a warning came of a threatened Indian attack. Instructions were given to dig a grave, bury the body, and return to Fort Ephraim. This burial took place about two miles north of Ephraim and is the present site of Ephraim Pioneer Cemetery. It was used almost exclusively until May 1905. Mr. Manwaring’s grave site is unknown as are other burials recorded in journals but not on grave markers.

Numerous markers bear names of young children, as various diseases and malnutrition took a terrible toll in those early years. Ornate oolite, granite, and simple wooden markers dot the cemetery, most engraved with loving words, poetry, and decorative emblems. A striking granite marker designates the burial site of seven pioneers who were massacred by Indians in 1865. Seven Ephraimites, who drowned in Funks’ Lake in 1878, are buried nearby.

For many years, the cemetery had an unkempt appearance until 1990 when the present transformation occurred under the direction of the Ephraim Pioneer Cemetery Committee.

Check out all of the historic markers placed by the Daughters of Utah Pioneers at JacobBarlow.com/dup

Fort Ephraim Peace Treaty

06 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

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Black Hawk War, DUP, Ephraim, historic, Historic Markers, Peace Treaties, Sanpete County, utah

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The Indian War years of 1865-72 brought bitter hardships to Sanpete and other central Utah areas. Different bands of Indians stealthily attacked settlers from their mountain hideouts, then fled to safety. Twenty-seven settlements were evacuated; two entire counties and portions of seven others were temporarily abandoned; seventy pioneers were slain and many wounded; hundreds of cattle and horses stolen. On Aug. 1, 1866, U.S. Indian Supt., Col. H.F. Head and Stake Pres. Orson Hyde obtained promise of peace from Chief Black Hawk. By Aug. 18, 1868, they had accomplished the hazardous feat of assembling a peace parley in Fort Ephraim on Hans Hansen’s lawn by a red cedar tree. Black Hawk calmed the defiant braves, a pipe of peace was passed, the treaty was signed and later ratified by U.S. Pres. Andrew Johnson. Black Hawk continued to help arrange peace parleys until other hostile chiefs had signed.

Related Posts:

  • Black Hawk War
  • Black Hawk War (1865-1872)
  • Fort Ephraim
  • Other DUP Markers

Located in Pioneer Park in Ephraim, Utah

DUP Marker # 423

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Ephraim Settlement

05 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

DUP, Ephraim, historic, Historic Markers, Sanpete County, utah

  • Image

In 1852 Isaac Behunin and family came to Pine Creek. By 1854 seventy-seven families had arrived. Branch L.D.S. Church organized, Rueben W. Allred was presiding elder. Reddick N. Allred captain of militia. Ft. Ephraim incorporated as a city 1868, George Taylor Sr., Mayor. Agnes Armstrong, schoolteacher. Pupils used soft yellow rock for pencils. After Indian raids ended, each man was alloted 20 acres of land outside fort. Home, built near this spot, had the above engraved rock over the door.

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  • Ephraim, Utah
  • Other D.U.P. Historic Markers

The Old Fort

30 Friday May 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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DUP, Ephraim, Forts, historic, Historic Markers, Sanpete County, utah

Near this spot February 7, 1854, twenty-five men organized in military order, began the construction of a small fort for protection from the Indians. The walls, made of rock were seven feet high, almost two feet thick, and formed the outer wall of the homes of thirty-nine families. The fort enclosed one and one-half acres of land with a gate at the west side, a Post Office in the south, and Tithing Office in the northwest corner. It was completed in March 1854.

Related Posts:

  • Ephraim, Utah
  • Other DUP Historic Markers

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Indian Massacre

28 Wednesday May 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

DUP, Ephraim, historic, Sanpete County, utah

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No 144
Erected Oct., 1949
Indian Massacre

Near this spot on Tuesday, October 17, 1865, Black Hawk, a Ute chief, led his warriors out of Cottonwood Canyon foraging for cattle. They stole the entire Ephraim herd. Settlers who were working in the fields were massacred and lie buried in one grave: Martin P. Kurhe, Hansine J. Kurhe, Elizabeth Petersen, Benjamin J. Black and William T. Hite. William Thorpe was killed near Guard Knoll; Soren N. Jespersen, badly mutilated, died at Wiregrass Flat. Jens Sorensen was killed April 12, 1865.

Related Posts:

  • Black Hawk War
  • Ephraim, Utah
  • Other D.U.P. Markers

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