COVE FORT

Cove Fort
Cove Fort is located immediately northeast of the junction of I-15 and
I-70, in the southeast corner of Millard County, twenty miles south of Kanosh
and twenty-four miles north of Beaver. Cove Fort was constructed in 1867.
Prior to its construction, the site was occupied by a ranch-fort erected
by the Charles William Willden family in 1860.
This site on Cove Creek was the natural location for a night's encampment
between the communities of Fillmore and Beaver. The abandonment of Fort
Willden in 1865 left travelers without a sanctuary from hostile Indians
(the Black Hawk War commenced in 1865), or from severe weather conditions.
In addition to private parties traveling that route, it was also necessary
to afford some degree of safety to carriers of the U.S. mail, operators
of the Deseret Telegraph, agents of the stagecoach line, and freighters
who sought the refuge and convenience of that place.
Recognizing the necessity of a permanent facility at this strategic midpoint,
Brigham Young directed Ira Nathaniel Hinckley to both superintend the LDS
Church ranch at Cove Creek and to build a substantial fort at that place.
In company with Brigham Young, Ira went to Cove Creek, arriving there on
29 April 1867. Other workmen were called to the site, including Ira's brother,
Arza Erastus Hinckley. The building crew occupied Fort Willden during the
construction phase of Cove Fort. Between April and November 1867, the primary
structure was completed. The walls of the fort form a square which is 100
feet on each side. The walls are comprised mainly of black volcanic rock
and dark limestone laid up in lime mortar, and are eighteen feet high.
From its construction in the nineteenth century into the twentieth century,
a number of families occupied the fort, sometimes on a lease arrangement
with the LDS Church. On 21 August 1919 President Heber J. Grant as Trustee-in
Trust for the LDS Church signed over title to Cove Fort to William Henry
Kesler, who had leased the land since 1903. In 1988, the Ira and Arza Hinckley
families purchased Cove Fort from the descendants of William H. Kesler,
and in ceremonies conducted at the fort on 13 August 1988 donated the structure
back to the LDS Church for restoration as a historic site. On 9 May 1992
LDS general authority Gordon B. Hinckley dedicated the newly restored fort.
Plans for the reconstruction of outbuildings such as the blacksmith shop
and barn are now in process. Cove Fort remains today one of the very few
pioneer fortifications still standing in good condition, of the scores built
during territorial days.
Larry Porter