State of Utah
1776 -
Escalante and Dominquez (Franciscan Priests) enter Utah searching for a
direct route to Monterey, California. In the process they discover the
Green River.
1824 -
Etienne Provost and James Bridger (trappers) discover the Great Salt Lake.
They believed it was an arm of the Pacific Ocean.
1847 -
Brigham Young led Mormons to the area now known as Salt Lake
City.
1848 -
The region is given over by Mexico to the United States in the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo.
1850 -
Brigham Young serves as governor as the Territory of Utah is
created.
1869 -
The nation's first transcontinental railroad rails meet at Promontory
(Union Pacific and Central Pacific.)
1896 -
Utah is admitted to the United
States. |
Origin of Wayne County
1854-
John C. Fremont's final expedition crosses some of the areas in the
northwest corner of present-day Wayne County.
1860-
Creation of Beaver County, which is delineated by parallel boundaries
extending eastward into present Colorado, and westward about two thirds of
the way across modern Nevada.
1861-
Beaver County is truncated on the east by the creation of the
Utah-Colorado border.
1865-
General Warren G. Snow leads 103 Utah Militiamen into the Wayne County
area to investigate Indian activity during the Black Hawk War. A
skirmish is fought at "Red Lake", near Thousand Lake Mountain.
1865-
Piute County made from the eastern portion of Beaver County.
1873-
Brigham Young sends an expedition of 19 men into the area southeast of
Sevier Valley to secure a peace treaty with the local Indians.
Their translators are George W. Bean and Albert K. Thurber. After
travelling to Fish Lake, the group passes down the length of Rabbit
Valley, then to Pine Creek on the northwest flank of Boulder
Mountain. They return over the Awapa Plateau to Grass Valley where
the peace treaty is signed.
1874-
Mormon explorers from Sanpete County cross Rabbit Valley, and continue as
far as the Teasdale area. Their report prompts Apostle Orson Hyde to
suggest opening the area to settlement the following year.
1875-
Hugh McClellan and family build a cabin near the current site of Loa.
1875-
A. K. Thurber and Beason Lewis bring over a thousand head of cattle into
lower Rabbit Valley, near the mouth of Government Creek. The town
called Thurber is established just to the north of this area, and later
changes its name to Bicknell.
1876-
A. J. Allred and others settled in upper Rabbit Valley; first east of the
Fremont River, then moving west to Allred Point. Some move north to
the current Fremont location.
1876-
East Loa (now Lyman) settled by James P. Sampson.
1878-
Loa townsite is surveyed and mapped.
1878-
Willard Brinkerhoff and Ebb Hall take up land at the current location of
Teasdale.
Late
1870's- Peter Brown begins farming and ranching the Sand Creek area just
north of the present location of Torrey.
1880-
The Green River becomes Piute County's eastern border as San Juan County
is established.
1880-
Alex Keele and Will Bullard clear land at the later site of Grover.
1882-
Ebeneazer Hanks leads a group down the Fremont River to its confluence
with the Dirty Devil River. Originally known as Graves Valley, it is
eventually named Hanksville.
1882-
Elijah C. Behunin and Brigham Ney move east along the Fremont to find more
arable land, in order to establish Caineville. (Ney departs in
disgust the following day.)
1883-
Blue Valley receives first settlers. Hyrum Burgess and Henry Giles
are among the first; the new town spends some time known by the last names
of each of them.
1884-
Townsite for Fremont is laid out on the west half of Silas Morrell's
quarter section.
1884-
Franklin W. Young is the first settler at Fruita.
1886-
Notom is settled by Jorgen C. Smith.
1892-
Wayne County is created from the part of Piute County east of the Parker
Rim. |
| Sources:
Anne Snow, comp., Rainbow Views: A History of
Wayne County, 1953; Third edition 1977. Copyright
by Wayne Co. Chapter of Daughters of the Utah Pioneers
Miriam B. Murphy, A History of Wayne County,
1999 Copyright by Wayne County
Commission Utah State Historical Society's "Utah
Centennial County History Series" |
History of Wayne County |
Wayne County
Today |