CAPITOL REEF NATIONAL PARK

Capitol Reef National Park
Called by some Native Americans the "Sleeping Rainbow," Capitol
Reef National Park takes its name from a segment of the Waterpocket Fold,
which, with its many domes of white Navajo sandstone over red Wingate sandstone
cliffs, resembles the domes of the U.S. and other capitol buildings. The
Waterpocket Fold is a north-south upthrust ridge of slickrock nearly unbroken
in the one hundred miles of its length from Thousand Lake Mountain to Lake
Powell.
Before the fourteenth century, the area was occupied by prehistoric people
known as the Fremont Indians, who scratched petroglyphs and painted pictographs
on rock walls of the land near trails and watercourses.
In 1878 Franklin D. Richards, a Mormon settler, established Fruita in Wayne
County where park headquarters is now located. Other pioneers tried to establish
small communities along the Fremont River. Ephraim P. Pectol of Torrey thought
of the "Wayne Wonderland" as a candidate for national or state
park status in 1910. Joseph H. Hickman, a member of the Utah state legislature
convinced his colleagues to set aside 160 acres as a park. In 1933 Pectol
was elected to the legislature and convinced it to memorialize Congress
to accept Wayne Wonderland as part of the national park system. Capitol
Reef National Monument was the result--established by presidential proclamation
in 1937. Those most responsible for its establishment include E. P. Pectol,
J. E. Broaddus, a Salt Lake writer, and Dr. A. L. Inglesby of Torrey. After
national attention was drawn to the Canyonlands area by the creation of
Lake Powell, the monument was expanded to include most of the Waterpocket
Fold, and in 1971 the natural wonder was declared a park in the national
park system.
The park's Central district includes the original Monument and the road
that follows along the river between Fruita and Cainsville. This route along
State Highway 24 features wonderful views of colored and eroded rock. The
North district is primarily Cathedral Valley, which consists of cliffs and
buttes of awesome size and beauty that resemble the shapes of huge gothic
buildings. The South district is the long spine of Waterpocket Fold. As
a barrier to travelers this spine marks a drift line on the east flank of
the plateaus drained by the Colorado River.
Jay M. Haymond