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Tag Archives: Washington County

Duncan’s Retreat

17 Friday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Duncan's Retreat, Ghost Towns, Grafton, historic, Rockville, utah, Washington County

2017-03-04 16.44.46

Historic taken from wchsutah.org

Chapman Duncan, Alma Minnerly, and a few others settled this area in 1861. But a flood in January of 1862 washed away much of the good farmland. Most of the first settlers moved away and sold their claims to William Theobald, Joseph Wright, William Wright, Clayborne Elder, Jonathan B. Pratt, Robert W. Reeve, and Thomas Burgess. Other settlers moved into the area and formed the village of Duncan’s Retreat.

There are several theories about the origin of the name, Duncan’s Retreat. One of them is that the name came the idea that Chapman Duncan had retreated from this area. Another is that Duncan retreated to this area after botching a canal surveying job in Virgin.

Farming produced good crops of cotton, corn, wheat, and sorghum.

A post office was built in 1863 and a schoolhouse in 1864. They also built an L.D.S. meetinghouse.

In 1866, when the Black Hawk War caused widespread fear of Indian attacks, the town was evacuated to Virgin, although farmers returned to Duncan’s Retreat each day to work their fields. Residents moved back permanently in 1868.

The Duncan’s Retreat settlement was all but abandoned in 1891. By 1930, hardly a trace remained – only a few foundations and trees.

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Population

  • About 70 at the end of 1862
  • 50 in 1864
  • There were 11 families and 79 people in 1880
  • There were 9 families in 1890
  • The village was all but abandoned in 1891

L.D.S. Church History

  • William Theobald was Presiding Elder between 1864 and 1866.
  • William Martindale was Presiding Elder starting in 1868.
  • Joseph Wright was Presiding Elder and/or Branch President until he died in 1873.
  • The Duncan Branch of the Virgin Ward was formed in 18?? and continued until about 1891.
  • Samuel Stansworth was Branch President starting in 1873.
  • Moses W. Gibson was the next Branch President.
  • David B. Ott was the next Branch President.

Discovery of Zion Canyon

16 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

DUP, historic, Historic Markers, LDS Church, Springdale, utah, Washington County, Zion Canyon

2017-03-04 16.21.14

DUP Marker # 42 in Springdale.

In 1858, Nephi Johnson, one of Brigham Young’s scouts, with a party of Indian guides arrived at the mouth of the canyon. Due to superstition, the Indians refused to enter the canyon. Nephi Johnson, alone, followed up river to the Narrows, a place “where the sun is seldom seen,” returning to the mouth at nightfall. Isaac Buhannin, an early settler, seeing the spires remarked, “surely this is God’s first temple and should be called Zion.” William Heaps helped to build homes for the early settlers in the canyon.

2017-03-04 16.21.09

Rockville Bridge

16 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bridges, historic, NRHP, Rockville, utah, Washington County

 

2017-03-04 14.53.54The Rockville Bridge spans the east fork of the Virgin River in Rockville. The bridge was built for the National Park Service in 1924 to provide a link between Zion National Park and the North Rim area of Grand Canyon National Park. The new bridge allowed motorists to take a circular tour of the national parks in southern Utah and northern Arizona. The Rockville route was superseded in 1928 by the construction of the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway.

The bridge was designed by the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads for the Park Service, fabricated by the Minneapolis Steel and Machinery Company, and erected by Ogden contractor C.F. Dinsmore. The bridge spans 217 feet in a single span, using a steel twelve-panel Parker through-truss.

The Rockville Bridge was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 4, 1995.

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Grafton Cemetery

15 Wednesday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cemeteries, Ghost Towns, Grafton, historic, Rockville, Washington County

2017-03-04 13.28.30

In 1862 John W., William, Robert and Joseph Berry with their families, were called to help colonize the St. George area. In the spring of 1866, Joseph and Robert Berry with Isabelle Hales Berry, the latter’s wife, were returning from a trip to Salt Lake City. They stopped at Kanarraville and while there the two-year-old baby girl of Robert and Isabelle died. The Berrys resumed their journey, traveling in a light wagon, camping for noon, April 2, 1866, at Short Creek, where they were attacked by Piutes, who it is claimed had been following them from Corn Creek in Millard County.

Their dead bodies were found several days later by John and William Berry. The details of the tragedy will never be known. It appears that they attempted to escape by running their horses across the country and finding they could not do so, fought desperately for their lives, but in vain. One dead Indian was found nearby. Joseph was found lying face down in the wagon box; his leg had been bandaged, no doubt, while they were fleeing as fast as they cold from the Indians. Isabelle had been shot through the head with a six-shooter and was lying on the ground, while Robert’s body was astride the wagon tongue with the head leaning into the wagon. The Indians said afterward that Robert was a “heap brave fighter.”

Robert and Joseph were large men, tall of stature. The burial of these pioneers took place at Grafton, Utah. In Church Chronology it is recorded that this massacre occurred four miles from Maxfield’s Ranch on Short Creek, Kane County, Utah. There is a small knoll between Short Creek and Kane Beds which marks the place and is called Berry Knoll. When President Young heard of this outrage on the part of the Indians, he sent word to Cedar City for the men of that place to form a company of militia and go to Berryville and escort the people back to Dixie. The late John Parry of Cedar City was a member of that escort, and furnished the writer much of the information for this sketch.(*)

2017-03-04 13.26.19

Grafton, Utah

10 Friday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Ghost Towns, Grafton, historic, Historic Buildings, Historic Churches, Rockville, Washington County

2017-03-04 13.49.48

Grafton Posts:

  •  
  • Grafton Cemetery
  • Rockville
  • Russell Home (Alonzo and Nancy)
  • Russell Home (Louisa) 
  • Wood Home (George)
  • Wood Home (John and Ellen)

Grafton is a ghost town, just south of Zion National Park in Washington County. It is said to be the most photographed ghost town in the West and it has been featured as a location in several films, including 1929’s In Old Arizona—the first talkie filmed outdoors—and the classic Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. The nearest inhabited town is Rockville.

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The site was first settled in December 1859 as part of a southern Utah cotton-growing project ordered by Brigham Young. A group from Virgin led by Nathan Tenney established a new settlement they called Wheeler. Wheeler didn’t last long; it was largely destroyed on the night of January 8, 1862 by a weeks-long flood of the Virgin River, part of the Great Flood of 1862. The rebuilt town, about a mile upriver, was named New Grafton, after Grafton, Massachusetts.(*)

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The town grew quickly in its first few years. There were some 28 families by 1864, each farming about an acre of land. The community also dug irrigation canals and planted orchards, some of which still exist. Grafton was briefly the county seat of Kane County, from January 1866 to January 12, 1867, but changes to county boundaries in 1882 placed it in Washington County.

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Flooding was not the only major problem. One particular challenge to farming was the large amounts of silt in Grafton’s section of the Virgin River. Residents had to dredge out clogged irrigation ditches at least weekly, much more often than in most other settlements. Grafton was also relatively isolated from neighboring towns, being the only community in the area located on the south bank of the river. In 1866, when the outbreak of the Black Hawk War caused widespread fear of Indian attacks, the town was completely evacuated to Rockville.

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Continued severe flooding discouraged resettlement, and most of the population moved permanently to more accessible locations on the other side of the river. By 1890 only four families remained. The end of the town is usually traced to 1921, when the local branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was discontinued. The last residents left Grafton in 1944.

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Catholic Pioneer Cemetery

09 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Catholic, Cemeteries, historic, Silver Reef, utah, Washington County

2017-03-04 11.58.52
HISTORY
In the Silver Reef Catholic Cemetery, there are 3 graves with tombstones and 15 grave unknown markers.
 
GRAVES
Henry C. Clark, Born March 13, 1853 / Died December 1, 1878
 
John Richard Clark, Born 1820 / Died 1880
 
James D. F. Grim, Born January 10, 1934 / Died September 2, 2008
 
Park Morehous, Born May 18, 1877 / Died August 14, 1878
 
Dale Bryon Spencer, Born September 24, 1934 / Died December 3, 2001
 
2017-03-04 11.59.21

 

Protestant Pioneer Cemetery

08 Wednesday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cemeteries, historic, Protestant, Silver Reef, utah, Washington County

2017-03-04 11.33.20

In the Silver Reef Protestant Cemetery, there are 11 graves with tombstones and 32 grave unknown markers.

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St. John’s Church

07 Tuesday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Chapels, Churches, Ghost Towns, historic, Historic Buildings, Historic Churches, Silver Reef, utah, Washington County

st-johns-catholic-church1

Archbishop Joseph S. Alemany of the Diocese of San Francisco asked Father Lawrence Scanlan to settle in the mining town of Silver Reef and minister to the miners and their families. Father Denis Kiely arrived in Utah in 1874 and assisted Father Scanlan in Silver Reef. Fathers Henry T. Hyde, P. O’Conner, and P. Galligan also also served the people in Silver Reef from 1880 to 1882.

In 1879, Father Scanlan established the St. John’s Catholic Church, the Silver Reef Hospital, and St. Mary’s School in Silver Reef.

When the church was first constructed, it didn’t have a tower. But Father Hyde collected money and eventually the tower was erected and a 400 lb bell was installed.

St. John’s Church was closed in 1885.

In 1895, William Stirling purchased and moved the vacant St. John’s Catholic Church from Silver Reef to Leeds. He converted the building into the Leeds Social Hall or “Old Stirling Hall.”

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Silver Reef, Utah

06 Monday Mar 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Ghost Towns, Historic Markers, Leeds, Ruins, Silver Reef, utah, Washington County

2017-03-04 10.54.25

Silver Reef Posts:

  • Catholic Pioneer Cemetery
  • Protestant Pioneer Cemetery
  • St. John’s Church
  • Tale of Three Towns
  • Wells Fargo and Company Express Building
2017-03-04 10.48.46

Silver Reef is a “ghost town” in Washington County, near Leeds. Silver Reef was established after John Kemple, a prospector from Nevada, discovered a vein of silver in a sandstone formation in 1866. At first, geologists were uncertain about Kemple’s find because silver is not usually found in sandstone. In 1875, two bankers from Salt Lake City sent William Barbee to the site to stake mining claims. He staked 21 claims, and an influx of miners came to work Barbee’s claims and to stake their own. To accommodate the miners, Barbee established a town called Bonanza City. Property values there were high, so several miners settled on a ridge to the north of it and named their settlement “Rockpile”. The town was renamed Silver Reef after silver mines in nearby Pioche closed and businessmen arrived.

By 1879, about 2,000 people were living in Silver Reef. The town had a mile-long Main Street with many businesses, among them a Wells Fargo office, the Rice Building, and the Cosmopolitan Restaurant. Although adjacent to many settlements with a majority of Mormon residents, the town never had a meeting house for Latter-day Saints, only a Catholic church. In 1879, a fire destroyed several businesses, but the residents rebuilt them. Mines were gradually closed, most of them by 1884, as the worldwide price of silver dropped. By 1901, most of the buildings in town had either been demolished or moved to Leeds.

In 1916, mining operations in Silver Reef resumed under the direction of Alex Colbath, who organized the area’s mines into the Silver Reef Consolidated Mining Company. These mines were purchased by American Smelting and Refining Company in 1928, but the company did minimal work as a result of the Great Depression. The Western Gold & Uranium Corporation purchased Silver Reef’s mines in 1948, and in 1951, they began mining uranium in the area. These operations did not last long either, and the Western Gold & Uranium Corporation sold their mines to the 5M Corporation in 1979. Today, the Wells Fargo office, the Cosmopolitan Restaurant, the Rice Building, and numerous foundations and walls remain in the town site, and a few dozen homes have been constructed in the area.(*)

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Between 1875 and the end of 1876, Silver Reef boomed with development, going from a boulder-strewn flat to a town of 1,500 people, one of the largest in Washington county.
Silver Reef soon became the center of permanent development, and many stone and wooden buildings were erected along a mile-long Main Street. Among the many businesses and buildings were six saloons, nine grocery stores, two dance halls, a brewery, billiard hall, the Wells Fargo Express Office, post office undertaker, citizens hall, jail, Masonic and Oddfellows halls, telegraph office, barber shop, physicians office, Chinese laundries (the walls are standing today), and a Catholic church with a hospital included. The Wells Fargo building, which you stand before, has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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St. George Children’s Museum

22 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Children's Museums, Historic Buildings, museums, NRHP, St. George, utah, Washington County

2017-02-18-11-31-08

Located in the historic Dixie Academy, The St. George Children’s Museum encourages its guests to touch, feel, play, and explore in our ten exhibit rooms. The rooms are designed to encourage interaction between adults and children. Minds both old and young will discover a world of imagination as they play and interact with the museum exhibits. It is the museum’s goal to offer and provide educational opportunities for all children and adults to learn and grow.

“Discover, Imagine, and Create” is the museum’s motto for a particular reason. Everything the museum provides, all the specific designs of each exhibit piece, and every activity planned and offered strives to provide a way for its guests to discover, imagine, or create. Discover new worlds, participate in imaginative play, and create fun with us at the St. George Children’s Museum.(*)

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