|
History and
Genealogy |
|
Area: 1,476 square miles; population:
20,422 (in 2000); county seat: Price; origin of county name: from the
vast amounts of coal found there; principal cities/towns: Price,
Helper, Wellington, East Carbon, Sunnyside; economy: coal mining,
transportation (railroad), energy; points of interest: Helper Historic
District, Scofield Reservoir, Price Canyon recreation area, Western
Mining and Railroad Museum (Helper), College of Eastern Utah
Prehistoric Museum (Price), Nine Mail Canyon. In 1894 the territorial
legislature created Carbon County from a portion of Emery County. Most
of the county’s residents live in the Price River Valley and at the
foot of the Book Cliffs. The western end of the county rises to the
Wasatch Plateau and slopes down eastward to the Price River, which cuts
through Castle Valley. This valley stretches across the southern half
of Carbon County and continues into Emery County, with the Wasatch
Plateau and Range on the north and west and the Book Cliffs all along
the east. The Green River marks the eastern border of the county.
Geographically, Carbon County is in the Colorado Plateau physiographic
province. Evidence of the Fremont Culture is extensive in the county.
Figurines have been discovered as have many rock art panels, such as
the “Head Hunter,” located in the Gordon Creek area. Evidence of
prehistoric life includes many dinosaur footprints found in the coal
mines.
Mormon settlements were established all along the Price River in the
late 1870s. The high barrier of the Wasatch Range and Plateau had
delayed settlement until that time. Routes into the region included
offshoots of the Old Spanish Trail and a trail over Soldier Summit.
Farming and ranching became early economic activities, giving Carbon
County a tradition of cowboys and outlaws, with the likes of Butch
Cassidy and “Gunplay” Maxwell roaming the area. The Nine Mile Canyon
freight road from Price to the Unita Basin became an important
transportation link.
During the early 1880s the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad,
seeking a route from Denver to Salt Lake City discovered and opened up
the vast coal lands of Carbon County. Coal mining became the major
catalyst for development in the county. Coal companies often built and
ran towns in Carbon County and imported many southern and eastern
European and Japanese laborers to work in the coal mines and on
railroad gangs. Helper became known as the town of “57 varieties”
because of its ethnic diversity. Mine explosions near Scofield in 1900
(200 killed) and at Castle Gate in 1924 (172 killed), as well as major
strikes in 1903-04, 1922, and 1933 brought tragedy, violence, and
eventual unionization to the mine.
Coal mining continues to play a vital role in the county’s economic and
social development, with ups and downs in the industry creating periods
of boom and relative bust. Utah Power and Light built a main electric
generating plant near the former town of Castle Gate; in 1980 the
Carbon plant generated 171 megawatts of electricity. Ninety-eight
percent of UP&L’s power comes from thermal steam plants that burn
coal. The College of Eastern Utah, established in 1937 in Price,
promises to become a more important facet of the county’s economic and
social development in the future, in a county already noted and
celebrated for its rich cultural diversity and tradition as well as its
importance to Utah’s economy.
Source: Philip F. Notarianni -- Utah Association of Counties
Contributed by Sandy Denney
Visit our National Site
