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Tag Archives: spanish fork

Battle of Diamond Fork Canyon

12 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

Battle, Black Hawk War, Diamond Fork Canyon, historic, Mapleton, spanish fork, spanish fork canyon, utah, utah county

Today I decided to go back up Diamond Fork Canyon to the Diamind Battle stone marker and look around, the story is that back in 1866 during the Black Hawk War there was a battle here.  I’ll post my photos and then some stories and links I’ve found useful.

See other historic markers in the series on this page for SUP Markers.

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http://www.blackhawkproductions.com/diamondbattle.htm

June 1866 brought the Uintah Utes into the conflict. Up until that time a few hot-headed young fighters joined Black Hawk but Chief Tabby and others had kept the Utes in the Uintah Valley reservation out of the war. The call for an additional 350 men from Salt Lake and Davis Counties to strengthen Mormon settlements angered Tabby and his fighters. But Black Hawk’s brother, Mountain, Isaac Potter and Richard led separate war parties toward Utah Valley. They found a Nauvoo Legion detachment at what is now Indianola and attacked. The pinned the militia down for most of the day, but a second detachment under John L. Ivie arrived late and kept the first detachment from being overwhelmed. The soldiers were convinced that Chief Tabby had led the attack. When and additional 130 men under Warren Snow arrived, it was agreed to chase the Utes up Spanish Fork Canyon. Fearing another Salina Canyon disaster, the troops moved cautiously but on arriving at Soldier Summit Pass found that the Utes had split up and gone in different directions. He turned his men around and marched them back to Sanpete Valley.

Mountain had led his men to Spanish Fork to exact vengeance on William Berry who years before had beaten Black Hawk with an old bucket for a supposed theft. They killed Berry and drove off about forty cattle and horses and fled into the Wasatch Mountains through Maple Canyon. The militia, who were already on alert, gave chase. They intercepted the Utes at Diamond Fork River but were outnumbered and pinned down by desultory rifle shots and arrows. A second force of eight men rushed the Utes and three were shot dead. The others put the Utes in a crossfire. The Utes quietly withdrew leaving the livestock and camp to be plundered by the militia. Among the gear they found US issued items, which showed the Utes had been accepting food and supplies at the Uintah Reservation. Leaders of the militia swore affidavits that white men had been seen directing the Utes. It was feared that the US Indian officials were aiding and abetting the Utes in their war against the Mormons.

These incidents were a turning point in the war. Mormons had begun to be vigilant as Brigham Young had repeatedly encouraged them to do. Fort building and evacuations of small settlements, combining livestock herds under guard, and the hundreds of additional soldiers patrolling commonly used canyon trails stymied the ability of Utes to drive off the numbers of cattle and horses of the first two years in the war. Tabby used his influence after the defeat of the reservation Utes to keep most of his people out of the conflict. It would not be until 1872 in the final days of the war that reservation Utes caused any more trouble. The ‘defeat’ of the reservation Utes encouraged Mormons to continue to prevent attacks whenever possible.(*)

Lake Shore Fort

30 Friday May 2014

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DUP, Forts, historic, Lake Shore, Palmyra, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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In 1865 a fort was erected one mile and a quarter north from this spot, on the west bank of the Spanish Fork River. It was a square and covered one acre of ground. The walls were four feet thick at the base and tapered to about two and a half feet at the top. It was nine feet high with a porthole in each corner. It first served as a resting place for travelers and a refuge from the Indians. In later years Thomas Draper made a dugout inside the fort and lived there with his family.

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

Old Academy

29 Thursday May 2014

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DUP, historic, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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In 1872 a group of young men organized a debating & public speaking society with Geo. H. Brimhall, President. They erected this building. Samuel Brockbank had charge of getting logs and construction. John F. Gay, carpenter, Nicholas Smith, timekeeper. 45 or 46 shares at $15,00 each were subscribed; a stove, teacher’s desk and blackboard purchased. Cost $675.00. School opened February 3, 1873, William Beesley instructor. Each student bought a desk. Building used for meetings, schools, socials and library. Moved to Park February 22, 1932.

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Daughters of Utah Pioneers historic marker #192, located at 160 West 300 North in Spanish Fork, Utah

  • D.U.P. Historic Markers

Pond Town Fort

22 Thursday May 2014

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Tags

DUP, Forts, historic, Payson, Salem, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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In 1851 David Fairbanks and David Crockett located land adjacent to a small stream at the head of Salem Lake and built a dam. In 1856 Eli Ashcraft, Royal Durfey, Silas Hillman, Acquilla Hopper, Jacob Killian, Truman Tryon and their families settled Pond Town and began the fort for protection against Indians. The fort was 160 feet north and south and 150 feet east and west. Robert David and Thomas Killian arrived later in the same year. The name of Pond Town was changed to Salem (the City of Peace) by Lyman Curtis.

The text above is from Daughters of Utah Pioneers historic marker #36, located at Salem Pond at 99 South 300 West in Salem, Utah

  • D.U.P. Historic Markers
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First Icelandic Settlement in USA

22 Thursday May 2014

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Tags

DUP, historic, Historic Markers, Icelandic, spanish fork, utah, utah county

  • 2018-04-16 19.11.13

First Settlement of
Icelanders
in the United States

Leif Eriksson, an Icelander, discovered America in 1000 A.D. Eight centuries later 1855-1860 sixteen pioneers from Iceland established in Spanish Fork the first permanent Icelandic settlement in the United States. They were: Samuel Bjarnson & Wife Margret; Thordur Didriksson & wife Helga; Gudmundur Gudmundsson; Loftur Jonsson & wife Gudrun; Jon Jonsson & wife Anna; Gudrun Jonsdottir: Magnus Bjarnson & wife Thuridur; Vigdis Bjarnadottir (Holt); Gundy E. Haflidiason; Ragnhildur S. Hanson and Mary H. Sherwood.

See also:

  • Icelandic Memorial

  • 2018-04-16 19.11.33
  • 2018-04-16 19.11.26
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Spanish Fork Indian Farm

20 Tuesday May 2014

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Tags

DUP, historic, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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Daughters of Utah Pioneers
No. 5
Erected June 1, 1935
The Spanish Fork Indian Farm Reservation Comprising twenty square miles and extending from the state highway and the Spanish Fork River to Utah Lake, was set apart in 1854 by Brigham Young, Utah Supt. of U.S. Indian Affairs. Joseph E. Beck was appointed farm superintendent. Dr. Garland Hurt succeeded Brigham Young in 1855, and erected a trading post 60 rods north of this spot. Col. O. H. Irish succeeded Dr. Hurt, and in 1865 made a treaty here with 15 Indian chiefs whereby the Indians surrendered their title and in 1867 moved to the Uintah Basin.
Stephen Markham Camp – – – Utah County”

Here are some more photos from May 2016:

The monument is at N 40.09834 W 111.69387, which is in Leland (west of Spanish Fork) where River Lane meets Highway 115 (900 S in Spanish Fork, 7300 S in the county.)

The trading post was 1000 feet north of there, so approximately at N 40.10113 W 111.69360

  • Trading post

Benjamin, Utah

21 Monday Apr 2014

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Tags

Benjamin, Palmyra, Payson, Salem, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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Benjamin Posts:

  • Benjamin  Cemetery
  • Benjamin Park
  • Hide-Tallow Service Station
  • Leland, Utah
  • Made Men Filming Site
  • West Mountain, Utah

Benjamin is a small town of 1,145 as of the 2010 census.

Some residents made a request in February 2009 to make Benjamin an incorporated town, in an effort to prevent annexation by the neighboring cities of Salem, Spanish Fork, and Payson.(*)

Benjamin was settled in 1863 by Barry Wride. A natural outgrowth of Payson, a town just three miles to the north, the townsite of Benjamin was first surveyed in 1886. It was Benjamin Franklin Stewart, an LDS presiding elder from 1868-85, after whom the town was named. Other early settlers included John Hawkins and Benjamin’s brother, Andrew Jackson Stewart.(*)

Old Fort

22 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

DUP, Forts, historic, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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Spanish Fork had its beginning in two sites, the upper settlement in 1850-1851, located in the southeast river bottoms, the other at Palmyra, 1851. Fearful of Indian trouble settlers built an adobe fort between the two places in 1854, located two blocks south of this site, with walls two feet thick and twenty feet high. Homes were built inside the fort with portholes in each compartment. A well in the center provided water. The only entrance was a gate four feet thick and sixteen feet high.

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Pioneer Cemetery

21 Tuesday Jan 2014

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Tags

Cemeteries, DUP, historic, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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Pioneers were buried here between 1851 and 1866, when this cemetery was abandoned. James Higginson was sexton. The bodies of those who remain here are Sarah Holt Tindral, John Hardison Redd, Elizabeth Hancock Redd, John Holt Bowen, Mary King, Phoebe Justin Darger, Oran Thomas, infant son Raymond, and approximately thirty-five others.

Located at the Pioneer Heritage Cemetery in Spanish Fork, Utah

Palmyra’s Early Buildings

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

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DUP, historic, Palmyra, spanish fork, utah, utah county

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Here is D.U.P. Marker # 500, where we read of the first buildings in Palmyra, Utah.

Palmyra‘s First Amusement Hall

To the north of the little one-room schoolhouse, the people of Palmyra began building the lumber Amusement Hall on February 10, 1900. It took exactly one month to complete the building, and a dance was held in it that evening. A potbellied stove kept the building warm. There was no indoor plumbing; the outhouses were to the east of the building.
For several years, the Amusement Hall was used for church meetings and social activities, including basketball, wrestling, and dances. The Amusement Hall was used until 1933.

Palmyra’s Schools

The first school was built in the Palmyra Fort. The second school, an adobe brick building which measured twenty-four feet by thirty-two feet with a rock foundation, was built across the street in the early 1890s. The entrance was a six-foot hallway with a row of coat hooks around the wall and a shelf above for dinner buckets. There were four rows of double seats with one grade in each row – first, second, third, and fourth; one teacher taught all four grades. There was a potbellied stove in the northeast corner and a blackboard on the east wall. A flowing well was located near the east wall. Horses ridden to school were tied to a hitching post. Some children rode to school in a covered wagon. This school was replaced in 1920.

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