ESCALANTE

Escalante, Utah, 1940
Although the Anglo-American settlement of Escalante began in the spring
of 1875 by a group of men from Panguitch desiring to find a location with
a milder climate, signs of inhabitation of the area reached back much farther
with evidence of the Fremont and Anasazi cultures in the area.
In 1866, during the Black Hawk War, Captain James Andrus's cavalry pursued
Indians through the area, naming it Potato Valley. A.H. Thompson, who was
the chief map maker of John Wesley Powell's crew, traveled through the plateau
regions on different trips naming the points and mapping the trail. On an
excursion in 1875, Thompson's party met four Mormons from Panguitch planning
to establish a settlement in the area. Thompson advised the pioneers to
name it for Father Silvestre Velez de Escalante, who passed near the Escalante
River on his expedition from Santa Fe to California in 1776.
Drawn by the mild climate and abundance of grazing land, the settlers raised
cattle and sheep. Dairying, timber harvesting, and mining were also important
to the economy of the settlement. Escalante remained an outpost on the Mormon
frontier for many years and was the last community through which the famous
Hole-in-the Rock expedition passed in 1879 on its epic six-month journey
to the San Juan River in southeastern Utah.
Blessed with beautiful topography, fertile lands, and a relatively long
growing season, Escalante has been called the "Land of the Sleeping
Rainbow." The early pioneer settlers built more than fifty homes of
native brick which stand as a legacy today. The town was laid out on the
"Zion Plan," with four homes to the block and ten-acre farms surrounding
it. Wide streets and neatly landscaped yards with corrals and barns are
still characteristic of the town. Home industries, including gardening,
home canning, livestock raising, quilting and making of handicrafts continue
as a rich part of the community life.
Many current residents, as in the case in most Utah communities, trace their
roots to a few hardy pioneers. Those frequently associated with Escalante
are the families of Willard, Henry, and Thomas Heaps; Hosiah Barker; Earnest
Griffin; Jared Porter; Don Carols Shirts; Napoleon and Lorenzo Roundy; Perry
Liston; William Henry Deuel; Joseph Spencer; William Alvey; James McInelly;
Morgan Richards; William Cottam; and Andrew P. Schow, who served as Mormon
bishop and leader of the community for thirty-five years.
During the 1930s Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camps set up under federal
New Deal legislation brought new life to the community and improved roads
to Posey Lake and Boulder. However, increased government management of public
lands brought new and sometimes onerous restrictions to some whose livelihood
was based on the land. World War II saw a migration to the industrialized
cities, as local growth was limited to what the natural resources could
sustain.
Hardy pioneers, closely knit by family and neighborhood relationships, build
a strong, conservative community. Isolated from major highways and large
cities, the people battled the elements to build irrigation systems, electrical
and telephone services (which eventually became locally owned), service
stations, a bank, an airport, and other facilities which have made Escalante
an important oasis for the thousands of tourists who visit the area each
year. Visitors come to hike the Escalante River, follow the historic Hole-in-the-Rock
Trail, view ancient Indians structures and rock art, traverse the magnificent
Burr Trail to Lake Powell, and drive the 120-mile-long "Scenic By-Way"-Highway
12-connecting Bryce Canyon National Park and Capitol Reef National Park,
along which Escalante is located in the middle.
The community is still dependent on a multiple-use-of-resources system with
tourism, livestock, and timber the mainstays of the local economy. The community
remains predominately Mormon; students attend the local elementary school,
the junior high school, and the high school. Escalante reached its largest
population in 1940 with 1,161 residents, but it has dropped to its lowest
number, 638 inhabitants, by 1970. Since 1970 the population has gradually
increased to 818 in 1990.
Marilyn Jackson