The Oaks restaurant sign today.
THE Oaks is a delightful little restaurant in Ogden Canyon, Utah. It WAS definitely the OLDEST operating business in Ogden Canyon for many decades. Then, it closed for about a year.
Now, in late spring of 2020, it is open again.
It has new managers (if not new owners too); a streamlined menu and the same seating -- including tables right by the river.
-However, The Oak's own history sells itself short and contains some shortcomings.
The Oaks is stated as having begun in 1907 in a history that's on the restaurant's own menus and also on the restaurant's walls.
Yet, "The Oak's Summer Resort, A pleasant retreat in Ogden Canyon discovered by City officials today" was a June 10, 1903 headline in the Ogden Standard Examiner.
That means the place started AT LEAST four years earlier.
A group of Ogden leaders on a retreat found themselves "seated beneath the shady trees at 'The Oaks,' as beautiful, clean and neat a spot as can be found anywhere in the canyon, conducted by Potter Bros. of Ogden, Ginger ale, lemonade and soda water,with an occasional stick in it, can be procured here at the usual prices," according to the Standard story.
The City leaders also noticed how well the grounds were kept at The Oaks, at a feast there "on short notice" and also discovered "At this resort, no one under the influence of liquor can be served."
The Ogden City leaders noted in the story that "the greatest trouble in the canyon is from the outing parties that take with them more liquor than the parties can well navigate with."
The Ogden River is just a step away from some of the tables at The Oaks today.
-In the July 31, 1903 Standard-Examiner was a report of some Ogden sisters who picnicked at The Oaks.
-On Aug. 6, 1903, the first outing of the Ogden Automobile Club was a drive to The Oaks and a banquet there, according to the Standard-Examiner. There were tables and meals served in 1903 at The Oaks..
-The Standard-Examiner of Sept. 5, 1905 stated that a boxer, Mike Schreck, was getting in shape for a big fight and was training at The Oaks.
-The Standard of Sept. 12, 1905 reported that it was the Canyon Resort Company that operated The Oaks and the business was making plans for a new restaurant and cottages. Plans also included a new system of roads through the place and a trail up the mountainside.
This view of a craggy mountain is visible at The Oaks.
-"Big time at The Oaks. Celebration at Ogden Canyon a huge success. Great crowd gathered at the popular resort and they had the time of their lives" was an Aug. 20, 1907 Standard headline. (So, it may be that The Oaks hit is stride in popularity in 1907, though). "Valley Day" was some sort of Ogden Valley celebration and that was what was being celebrated at The Oaks. Residents from Eden, Liberty and Huntsville attended.
(The Standard of Aug. 5, 1904 had also reported "Valley Day" being celebrate at The Oaks that year too.)
-A Japanese official visited Ogden in the summer of 1908 and had a special reception and dinner at The Oaks, according to the Standard-Examiner of Aug. 13, 1908.
-"Lightning hits The Oaks Resort" was a Sept. 1, 1909 headline in the Standard-Examiner. A resort guest, Miss Bertha Parkinson, was struck by lightning at about 5 p.m. on Aug. 31 as a storm rolled by. The efforts of a Dr. Woolley and others are credited in saving her, as she was believed to have taken the full force of the bolt and was seemingly dead for a time.
-The June 26, 1910 Standard-Examiner stated that The Oaks had improved its camping grounds, erected some new cottages and was still famous for the chicken and trout dinners served in its cafe.
-The Oak's own history states that the original Oaks was about a mile from its current location and built by C.S. Potter. It doesn't say if that was east or west, though. It was in 1933 that The Oaks moved to its current location -- higher ground -- to avoid frequent flooding from the Ogden River.
The Oaks was purchased in 1981 by Keith and Belinda Rounkles. They renovated the place into a full service eatery, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner.
-In 1994, the Rounkles purchased 120 surrounding acres to ensure that the area remains the same, private and secluded retreat, except for the busy highway nearby.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
1919: The year of the Christmas tree famine in Ogden
Malan's Basin in 2015.
HIGH prices for Christmas trees and general scarcity of them was the hallmark of the 1919 holiday season in the Ogden, Utah area.
The Ogden Standard-Examiner newspaper on Dec. 19, 1919 reported that both a scarcity of pine trees around the city, as well as heavy snows in the mountains during October had made it almost impossible to secure the trees for the holiday season.
The owners of the Malan Height property (Malan's Basin and Malan's Peak) also stated they were placing guards on their property to prevent the loss of trees. The Malan's resort had not been operating for many years, but there were hopes to revive it and the property was also be used by ranchers.
Pine trees along the Taylor Canyon trail to Malan's Peak/Basin.
HIGH prices for Christmas trees and general scarcity of them was the hallmark of the 1919 holiday season in the Ogden, Utah area.
The Ogden Standard-Examiner newspaper on Dec. 19, 1919 reported that both a scarcity of pine trees around the city, as well as heavy snows in the mountains during October had made it almost impossible to secure the trees for the holiday season.
The owners of the Malan Height property (Malan's Basin and Malan's Peak) also stated they were placing guards on their property to prevent the loss of trees. The Malan's resort had not been operating for many years, but there were hopes to revive it and the property was also be used by ranchers.
Pine trees along the Taylor Canyon trail to Malan's Peak/Basin.
-NOTE: The
author, Lynn Arave, is available to speak to groups, clubs, classes or other organizations
about Utah history at no charge. He can be contacted by email at:
lynnarave@comcast.net
Ogden Canyon: From echoes to a 'Z' to snakes
Ogden Canyon is most rugged at its west end.
OGDEN Canyon
has undoubtedly changed a lot over the decades. A wide road was built through
the Canyon and at one time there was a trolley line in the Canyon. However, as
recent as a century ago, there used to be a perfect echo location in a spot
above the Canyon; and in another location, there was the letter “Z” plainly
visible.
ECHO: This
ideal acoustic location was in a small side canyon, high above and near the
original Hermitage Inn. According to the Ogden Standard-Examiner of July 10,
1911, John Leavitt of Plain City and some friends stumbled across the site.
“Those in
the party say that the echoes heard from the voice of a person standing at one
point in the narrow canyon are almost supernatural,” the Standard reported.
The men
apparently experimented there and found the exact spot where even a whisper “was
made to sound as if a cave of winds had been unloosed.”
The men also
suspected that a small cave, nearby, that went about 10 feet into the mountainside,
as well as a 20-foot-long rock jutting out of the hillside, were probably
responsible for the acoustic effect.
Today's Alaskan Inn, near the site of the original Hermitage, now gone.
THE GIANT
LETTER Z: According to the Ogden Standard-Examiner of April 19, 1925, this
letter was visible in rock up Wheeler Canyon. A century ago, it was best viewed
about 100 yards south of the hotel in that area and by looking northward. A
U.S. Geologic Survey in the area in 1871 also reported seeing the giant Z
formation.
SNAKE
EXTERMINATION SOCIETY: The Standard-Examiner of July 27, 1893 reported that a
group of young women from Ogden had organized a snake extermination society,
tired of being plagued by the reptiles in beautiful Ogden Canyon.
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Before Pineview Dam there was the Wheeler Dam
Pineview Dam. Photo by Whitney Arave
IN 1898, the
first major dam east of Ogden was the Wheeler Canyon Dam. Located west of today’s
Pineview Dam, was some 300 feet long and about 40 feet deep.
According to
the Ogden Standard-Examiner of June 30, 1898, the Pioneer Power Company built
the dam of masonry and concrete.
Work on this
dam had started in 1897.
The
Standard-Examiner of Sept. 8, 1905 reported than an engineer had proposed that
a new dam be built to the east of Wheeler Dam, near the Shanghai River Bridge.
That was amazingly close to where Pine View Dam was eventually constructed
decades later.
After that,
the South Fork of the Ogden River was surveyed and even bull dozed somewhat for
a possible dam site that never happened, despite several decades of trying.
According to
the Standard-Examiner of Sept. 5, 1910, another dam was proposed to be built in
Coldwater Canyon.
All that's left of the Coldwater Canyon water system today is a small shack and some old piping.
However, that never happened and a 10-inch water that had been installed in Coldwater Canyon in 1909 was used for many years to supplement the Ogden City water supply.
The replica lime kiln near Coldwater Canyon today.
-The lime
kiln in Coldwater Canyon was reported operating again, according to the July
20, 1924 Standard-Examiner. After a three-decade lapse, the kiln was working
again and even a road was built to the site.
(Today, the
lime kiln is commemorated along the Coldwater Canyon trail as a pioneer
industry, complete with a rebuilding of a kiln.)
-NOTE: The
author, Lynn Arave, is available to speak to groups, clubs, classes or other organizations
about Utah history at no charge. He can be contacted by email at:
lynnarave@comcast.net
1922: When Antelope Island was in the running for a Utah State Prison
The north shore of Antelope Island.
“State
prison may be moved. Committee named to consider Antelope Island proposition”
was a Sept. 28, 1922 headline in the Ogden (Utah) Standard-Examiner.
In 2015
there was a lot of controversy about relocating the Utah State Prison from
Draper. Eventually the green light was given to move the Prison to west of the
Salt Lake Airport – despite protests from Salt Lake City leaders.
Back in
1922, the State Prison was still in its original location – where Sugar House
Park is today, 2100 South and about 1700 East. However, an expanding Sugar
House residential neighborhood was not deemed as be compatible with a prison.
Sugar House Park looking west across its lake.
Antelope
Island, an undeveloped island except for one ranch, was considered a possible
prison site. Of course, this move never took place. Decades later, the prison moved to Draper, then in the wide open
spaces.
Still, if
Antelope Island had been chosen as a prison site back then, it is a surety that
Antelope Island State Park would not exist and that some kind of permanent road
– likely to the southern tip of Antelope Island – would have been constructed
from the S.L. side.
In the
1950s, Fremont Island was also talked about as a future state prison site and
that didn’t happen either, likely because of its isolation and high road
building costs.
-There was a
big fire on Antelope Island in early September of 1917. According to the Ogden
Standard-Examiner of Sept. 5 that year, lightning started a big blaze on the
dry isle and it could be seen from both S.L. and Ogden. Back in that era,
Antelope Island support not only a large herd of buffalo, but had 400 head of
U.S. Army horses stationed there for training purposes, as well as some 1000
head of cattle.
-“Antelope
Island’s coyotes wiped out” was a Feb. 3, 1924 Ogden Standard-Examiner
headline. Because of the island’s importance as a cattle range, poison and some
hunters was used starting in 1921 and by 1924
had wiped out all the coyotes living on the island. Now sheep could be
safely ranged there too.
-“Fish
driven into Great Salt Lake was an Aug. 14, 1911 headline in the
Standard-Examiner. It was reported that carp were introduced into Mud Lake,
north of an adjacent to Bear Lake, a few years earlier. The carp multiplied
exceedingly. However, the electric power company had drained Mud Lake in the
early summer of 1911 and that forced all the carp into the Bear River. The carp
were reportedly rolling down the Bear River toward Utah and were eventually
expected to reach the Great Salt Lake, where they would die in its briny
waters.
The same
report stated that Bear Lake had known bottom and that 1,000 feet of cable had
been used over the lake and still found no bottom below. That myth was
prevalent in the early 20th Century, but Bear Lake was eventually
proven to be no more than 209 feet deep.
-NOTE: The
author, Lynn Arave, is available to speak to groups, clubs, classes or other organizations
about Utah history at no charge. He can be contacted by email at:
lynnarave@comcast.net
Baseball fever was high in 1912 Ogden
OGDEN, Utah
had lots of baseball fans in 1912.
According to
the Aug. 9 Ogden Standard-Examiner newspaper that year, “Young ladies will tag
you” was a large headline.
Aug. 10 that
year was declared as national “Tag Day” and Ogden was no exception to that. A
bunch of prominent young women fanned out in the city that day and these “diamond
missionaries” would “tag” baseball fans they met as they promoted the upcoming
baseball game between Ogden and Butte, Montana.
Pre-game
hype included an auto parade from the Train Depot and down Washington Avenue.
There was also a band and plenty of the young women “taggers” too.
Ogden’s ‘Power Place’ never got juiced up ….
Rainbow Gardens, center, as viewed along the Indian Trail.
By Lynn Arave
THE year 1890 was an ambitious time in Ogden City. A Methodist University, dubbed “Utah University” was being built on the present location of Ogden High School. (This “University” was never finished and was gone in four years.) Also, a large resort and housing development named “Power Place” simply never materialized, despite extensive plans.
THE year 1890 was an ambitious time in Ogden City. A Methodist University, dubbed “Utah University” was being built on the present location of Ogden High School. (This “University” was never finished and was gone in four years.) Also, a large resort and housing development named “Power Place” simply never materialized, despite extensive plans.
This Power
Place, planned to be 580 acres, was to be located near the mouth of Ogden
Canyon (where today’s Rainbow Gardens is). With an electric power plant
operating at the Canyon’s mouth in 1890, hence the name of the development.
Power Avenue
Junction, Farr View, Short Street, Bow Avenue, Factory Street, Lake Street and
Graham Avenue were some of the street names in Power Place, according to the
Ogden Standard-Examiner of April 18, 1890.
A historical marker near the mouth of Ogden Canyon.
However, a
nation-wide financial panic in 1893 scuttled the plans. In 1905-1906, a single
Victorian building was constructed at the mouth of Ogden Canyon – the Ogden
Canyon Sanitarium, with a hotel, dining room and mineral baths. Trolley and
wagons offered transportation to this resort, but a fire in 1927 destroyed it
completely.
A.V. Smith
bought the land in 1928 and rebuilt the resort in bricks to create El Monte
Springs. Wrestling matches, swimming, private mineral baths, boating, marathon
ballroom dancing and even motorcycle hill climbs were all offered at this
resort for almost four years.
The 1929
Great Depressing effect had closed El Monte by 1932. It sat dormant until the
early 1940s when Ogden’s Cowboy Mayor, Harman W. Peery purchased it and renamed
it Riverside Gardens. It offered mineral baths, swimming and dancing.
The Rainbow Gardens sign in the early 1950s.
In 1946, Peery’s son-in-law, Robert W. King took over operations, with his wife, Rosanne Peery King, and renamed it Rainbow Gardens. A bowling alley was added in 1961. By the 1970s, swimming pools were not popular enough and the Kings opened the Rainbow Gardens Gift Shop where the former dancing hall and indoor swimming pool were. In the spring of 1976, the Greenery Restaurant began in the former lobby to the old swimming pool. The bowling alley later closed and a souvenir/gift shop took its place.
In 1946, Peery’s son-in-law, Robert W. King took over operations, with his wife, Rosanne Peery King, and renamed it Rainbow Gardens. A bowling alley was added in 1961. By the 1970s, swimming pools were not popular enough and the Kings opened the Rainbow Gardens Gift Shop where the former dancing hall and indoor swimming pool were. In the spring of 1976, the Greenery Restaurant began in the former lobby to the old swimming pool. The bowling alley later closed and a souvenir/gift shop took its place.
Fred J. Kiesel
-The hot
springs at the mouth of Ogden Canyon was the main attraction to why resort
development centered there. It was a miner who claimed the hot springs and
surrounding land first. Fred J. Kiesel, Ogden businessman and eventually
Ogden’s first non-Mormon mayor, along with two over investors, purchased the
spring and land in the 1870s and offered free mineral baths.
The hot springs, private and inaccessible now, are located just off the highway.
According to the Ogden Standard-Examiner of Feb. 27, 1883, Bethesda Spring was the original name of these hot springs, named after a pool of water in Jerusalem, as mentioned in St. John. The claim was that the Ogden hot springs could improve health, with their minerals and soothing temperature.
The water’s
minerals were analyzed and its temperature was as high as 140 degrees.
-The Ogden
Herald newspaper of Aug. 27, 1879, mentioned the first known reference to a
“Bathing party” at these hot springs, with a group of gentlemen and ladies
participating. Swimming lessons were also given.
-NOTES: These hot springs at the mouth of Ogden Canyon are not publicly accessible today. They have caused a lot of vandalism and crime and the owners of Rainbow Gardens have posted them off limits -- no trespassing.
-Also, today, the original El Monte name for the mouth of Ogden Canyon resort lives on as the title for the golf course, located to the northwest.
-Also, today, the original El Monte name for the mouth of Ogden Canyon resort lives on as the title for the golf course, located to the northwest.
Friday, September 11, 2015
1924: A proposal for a Ben Lomond Peak Day
Ben Lomond Peak
THERE'S little argument that Ben Lomond Peak is the Ogden area’s most majestic
mountain. Back in 1924, there was a suggestion to have a “Ben Lomond” day each
year, though that never came to be.
“Once a year
there should be a formal acknowledgement of the scenic wonder of Ben Lomond,”
the Ogden Standard-Examiner stated on Dec. 15, 1923. “There should be a salute
to the first rays of light which play upon the topmost rocks and jagged edges
of this mountain.”
The story
also stated: “The people of Ogden can get more than one lesson by studying the
great mountain which enfolds Ogden. There is inspiration every day in the
grandeur of the cliffs and the peaks built by a Master Hand.”
More
historical tidbits:
-“Queer-shaped
cloud caused much comment” was a June 17, 1908 Standard headline. A “remarkable
appearing white cloud” was “long, narrow and perfectly white and rolled through
the atmosphere like a huge serpent in contortions” and floated westward over
the Great Salt Lake that morning. Some believed the cloud was moisture laden
and could burst and cause flooding. Others “watched the strange spectacle in
the belief that a cyclone was headed in the direction of Ogden.” However, soon
the strange cloud seemed to just melt away.
-There was a
“Dangerous practice” going on in Ogden Canyon back in 1887. According to a
Standard Story of Oct. 23 that year, workmen engaged in lime kilns and lime
burning often rolled boulders and used explosives in the canyon.
Residents of
Huntsville and Eden were the most affected, since they most often traversed the
Canyon. Evan Evans of Huntsville was going down the canyon when a boulder
smashed into the side of his wagon, demolishing the wheel.
-“Beanville
is City of Past” was a July 21, 1905 Standard headline. A large group of
teenagers had created a mushroom city in Ogden Valley with their large camping
group. Long before established campgrounds, the youth from Ogden and Salt Lake
spent a week there, with bonfires, talks, music and activities. The story
didn’t specify who organized the event, but “Beanville” was the temporary
community’s actual name.
-One of the
first restaurants in Ogden Valley was the “Valley Restaurant” in Hunstville.
According to the Standard of Aug. 3, 1908, Carl Johnson owned the eatery and
offered mountain trout, spring chicken and even overnight rooms.
-La Plata
was the most famous late 19th Century mining boom town in the Ogden
area. However, there were many other mines. One was the far lesser known Camp
Rich/Blue Bird Mine, between Wheeler Canyon and Mt. Ogden. According to the
March 20, 1896 Standard, its location remained a secret for several years, but
produced gold, silver and platinum. The miners were plagued by snow slides in
Wheeler Canyon, but persisted on their nine gold claims.
-Speaking of
snow slides. Seventeen Logan Temple construction workers in Logan were caught
in a giant avalanche Canyon during early March of 1880. Miraculously, only two
men were killed, according to the Logan Leader newspaper of March 5 that year.
Skull Crack vs. Causey Reservoir -- the tame name took hold
The South Fork of the Ogden River, just below Causey Reservoir.
OGDEN City
was becoming desperate for more reliable water sources in 1920 and Skull Crack
Canyon (part of today’s Causey Reservoir) was considered the best location for
a dam.
“Skull Crack
Canyon in South Fork Canyon is the most feasible place in which Ogden must look
for its future water supply,” Mayor Frank Francis said in the Standard-Examiner
of June 26, 1920.
A tour of
the area that month convinced the Mayor that Skull Crack was the premier
location. However, Mayor Francis did not receive the support needed for a dam
and so Ogden simply had to drill more and deeper wells in its Artesian Well
Park (located under the west end of Pineview Dam today), until Pineview
Reservoir came along in 1937. Causey Reservoir, a part of Skull Crack Canyon,
was not built until the 1960s, completed in 1966.
Skull Crack
received its unusual name for a 19th Century hunter who was said to
have hit his unruly mule over the head with his gun barrel, cracking the animal’s
skull. However, Thomas Causey had built a sawmill in the Skull Crack area in
pioneer times and it was his name that was chosen to eventually title the
reservoir.
The same
1920 Standard story also reported that the Weber LDS Stake had selected a site
in the meadows of South Fork for an upcoming “Fathers and Sons” outing. Young
men participating in this would take the train to Huntsville and then hike up
to the camp site.
More
historical tidbits:
-Back in the
automobile’s early days, 1911, an attempted hold up resulted in a wild chase –
car vs. horse, in a stretch of country, between Lagoon and Ogden. According to
a July 19 Standard story that year, a car driven by a Miss Guernsey of Ogden was
accosted by a band of highwaymen on horseback. She refused to stop the vehicle,
put it in high gear, drew up the glass windshield and outraced the robbers.
They even fired 10 shots at the car. Miss Guernsey’s father was in the vehicle
and he returned fire. No one was hit by any of the gunfire and a Davis County Sheriff
eventually arrested several suspects.
-Some of the
first known long-distance daily commuters along the Wasatch Front lived in Salt
Lake City, but took a train to Ogden. “Work in Ogden, reside in S.L.” was an
Oct. 17, 1920 Standard headline. More than 50 men from S.L. commuted to work in
Ogden each weekday, spending more than two hours on the train. Most were
employed by the Ogden Arsenal. Many men hoped to find homes in the Ogden area
to lessen their work travel time.
-Finally,
travel time from Salt Lake City to Bear Lake today is possible in just over two
hours. However, in 1880, it was a full three-day trek. Because of rugged canyon
travel and poor roads, it was no easy trip, according to the Logan Leader of
Nov. 12, 1880.
1891: A Second La Plata
Ogden Valley with the Monte Cristo and La Plata area in the far background.
By Lynn Arave
MINING fever was at its height in the Ogden area during 1891. Not only had La Plata, northeast of Huntsville, gained regional attention, but rumors of other claims were rampant.
MINING fever was at its height in the Ogden area during 1891. Not only had La Plata, northeast of Huntsville, gained regional attention, but rumors of other claims were rampant.
“A second La
Plata” was an Oct. 20, 1891 headline in the Standard-Examiner.
This second
claim was in the mountains northeast of Brigham City, south of Devil’s Gate
(not to be confused with the Weber Canyon formation with the same name).
Mose Jensen
of Brigham City made what appeared to be a rich strike of silver. “Prospectors
are now out searching the mountains in every direction, north, east and south
of Brigham,” the story stated.
History
proved this second La Plata claim was way overblown, but it was typical of the
mining frenzy of the early 1890s in the Ogden area.
Although La
Plata was just over the border in Cache County, it had the best access from
Weber County – and it was wrongly initially believed to be in Weber County.
According to the Standard of Aug. 16, 1891, a
sheepherder, “Mr. Johnson” (first name unknown), in July of 1891 noticed
an unusual rock after his horse accidentally chipped off a piece of mineral
along an old sheep trail and thus started the La Plata boom. Originally called
Sundown, a few more small pockets of silver ore were soon discovered there. The
sheepherder’s interest in La Plata was soon bought out for $600 by J. Ney,
owner of the 8,000 sheep in the area and Johnson’s employer. After Johnson had showed
Ney the rock, he recognized its value and filed claims.
“Mines are
being opened in every direction from the city,” the Standard reported.
La Plata
(meaning silver in Spanish) was soon dotted with tents and wagons. Three log
cabins went up in less than five days. Eventually, 60 buildings sprang up at La
Plata – stores, saloons, post office, hotel and more. Three different springs
supplied water to the area and miners were paid $3 a day for work there.
The Standard
of Nov. 26, 1891 reported that despite winter, La Plata was still a busy place
and some miners and even their families were well stocked and planning to spend
all winter there.
A total of
1,500 people were believed to have lived and worked in La Plata during its
heyday. Three summer seasons produced about $3 million, mostly in silver.
By the
summer of 1893, mines were closing fast in La Plata, the small veins having
been worked out. Come 1894, no one was left in La Plata and it became a ghost
town.
-Mines were
also scattered all over the mountains on Ogden’s east side. For example, the
Standard of Feb. 9, 1881 reported that Strong’s Canyon was home to the Star
Mine, some 164 feet deep, for gold and silver. The miners also had a water
wheel built there.
The Little
Quick mine was found at the same time in Waterfall Canyon. This gold mine was
made at least 50 feet deep in solid rock and required no timber for support.
-NOTE: The
author, Lynn Arave, is available to speak to groups, clubs, classes or other organizations
about Utah history at no charge. He can be contacted by email at:
lynnarave@comcast.net
Back when Riverdale road was muddy, not congested
“Cars stall
in mud. Team required to drag adventurous motorists to safety on highway” was a
March 18, 1922 Standard-Examiner headline.
Three feet
of heavy mud blocked the road at a point likely just east of today’s Riverdale
Road overpass at the Weber River – and there was no detour to be found back
then. Horse teams had to be mobilized to pull several autos that became firmly
imbedded in the mud. Then, the horse teams kept busy all morning in hauling
cars across the heavy sea of mud and sand.
-“Death
Curve” in Roy, where today’s Riverdale Road meets 1900 West, has long been a
dangerous place.
“Will put
sign at Death Curve” was an Aug. 30, 1926 Standard headline. After three
vehicles had turned over taking the sharp turn, causing 11 injuries, a sign was
placed near there that stated, “Death Curve ahead. Be careful.”
A Roy
resident near the curve said his fences are broken frequently by accidents
there and trees are impossible to grow there, being broken off.
-Before
1905, Riverdale Road or 24th Street were the only ways to access
Kanesville or Hooper from Ogden. It was that year that the “Sand Ridge Cut Off”
was built in a very sandy, barren area, a road roughly where today’s 30-31st
Street heads west to Roy.
-Some 70
stop signs were placed along the length of Washington Avenue/Highway 91
(today’s Washington Boulevard) in late November of 1927 at various
intersections to improve safety. Other signs were erected to show where various
side roads led.
This was all
part of an effort for better signage along the main highway through Utah,
between Idaho and Arizona.
-A historic
flagpole was erected on Lewis Peak back on Sept. 28, 1916, according to a
report in the Standard on Oct. 2 of that year. Participants drove to the top of
the North Ogden Divide by auto and then most of the party hiked or used horses
to haul materials to the peak. The peak’s namesake, Lewis W. Shurtliff and a
few other old-timers, Harry Newman and H.H. Frank, watched the younger members
climb the mountain.
Some members
of the party had to hike down the west side of the mountain to obtain water to
mix with the cement used for the pole. A U.S. Flag was also placed there. Shurtliff
was in the first group known to climb the 8,031-foot peak back on June 6, 1852
with two other boys, Martin H. Harris and Ira N. Tiffany. Lewis Peak is located northeast of Ogden’s Five Points.
1913: When Utah deer hunting was almost always open season
THE general
(rifle) deer hunting season Utah is almost always mid-October. However, hunting deer
wasn’t always as structured as it is today. Back in 1913, hunting deer was more
a matter of opportunity than a set season.
The
Standard-Examiner of Dec. 13 that year reported “Deer to the west of
Ogden.” George Folkman was with a group
of four other hunters near the Great Salt Lake, searching for geese and ducks
when they came across a deer, west of Plain City.
“The party
made a desperate effort to get close enough to the deer to shoot him with their
shotguns, but they failed in their attempts,” the Standard story stated. They
gave up after a four-hour chase and ended their hunt with five geese and some
ducks, but no venison.
More
historical tidbits:
-The Mount
Ogden Game Sanctuary was established in 1920 to protect wildlife. From Weber
Canyon on the south to the North Ogden Divide on the north and east in that
section of the Wasatch Mountains to Ogden Valley, no hunting was then permitted
there. At the 1919 deer hunt, some 60 deer were shot in that area. Deer were,
in 1920, believed to be the most abundant big game in the Sanctuary, according
to the Standard-Examiner of May 2, 1920. This wildlife sanctuary only lasted
through the 1920s before it was discontinued.
-B.M. Fox of
Ogden returned from his ranch in Viola, Wyoming in February of 1916 with an
unusual deer hunting story, according to the Standard of Feb. 4 that year. Snow
was so deep – 12 feet –in the La Barge Mountains of Wyoming that snow slides
occurred frequently. While Fox and others were watching a deer herd of 29 head,
a sudden snow slide, 100 yards wide, tore through the herd and buried 22.
Hunters managed to dig in the edge of the snow mass and take seven of the deer,
but the rest were lost. That winter was also reported as a tough one for
livestock.
-Deer
hunting is an annual fall adventure for thousands in Utah. However, 1945 was
one of the most tragic deer hunts ever. “Deer hunter toll mounts of 8 as S.L.
man dies” was an Oct. 24, 1945 Salt Lake Telegram headline.
From gun
accidents, to a fatal heart attack to falling off a cliff, this was a disastrous
deer hunting week. Bert Denning of Salt Lake was the latest fatality. His body
was found by a search party in the rugged Davis Canyon of South Davis County.
He was believed to have fallen off a 90-foot cliff, near a waterfall, in the
evening darkness.
-“Many hurt
in Ogden blast” was a May 6, 1923 Standard headline. A large Boy Scout bonfire,
soaked with gasoline, exploded and injured 14 people as hundreds of persons
looked on. Located at the corner of City Hall Park, near the police station,
the explosion shattered jail windows. The bonfire marked the end of
International Boys Week in Ogden. Flying timbers and glass caused most of the
injuries.
-Underground
seepage in the Plain City School partially submerged the building’s basement
heating plant with water, according to the Standard of Aug. 15, 1916. A
three-inch drain pipe was being installed and extended two blocks away to drain
off the water. Six men were reported to be working on this job for the past 10
days to solve the problem before the beginning of school.
1913: When the Church banned ‘Rag dances’
THE Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints put a stop to “Rag dances” for good in its
ward buildings in 1913, according to an Ogden Standard-Examiner report from March 24
that year.
These
masquerade balls were not deemed appropriate at social gatherings by LDS Church
leaders, as announced in North Weber Stake Conference in the Ogden Tabernacle
by James Wotherspoon, Stake President.
“Masquerade
balls have been forbidden in the ward halls,” he said.
(Even today
wearing masks in Church buildings, like for Halloween events, is frowned on,
except for special dramatic productions.)
Also,
statistical reports 102 years ago by Church leaders were surprising open. Tithing
by stake members was stated to have increased by $1,112.63 in the past year,
while the numbers of tithe payers also rose from 1,370 to 1,465. Stake
membership was up to 6,229 members, an increase of 410 in the past year.
-Some 13
years later in February of 1926, David O. McKay, then an Apostle, spoke at
Weber College and warned parents about the dangers involved with dancing and
also with automobile hazards.
He said
moral conditions at dances and in automobiles at night were a concern. He also
urged the young to avoid alcohol and tobacco.
To parents,
Elder McKay said, “Homes make the lawbreakers and also the law abiders.”
Proper
nutrition for children and striving to avoid diseases were subjects addressed
by other speakers at the meeting.
Other
historical tidbits:
-“Mormon
Church takes up Boy Scout activities” was a March 4, 1912 Standard headline. This involved
the first participation by the Church in the Boy Scouts, with 15,000 boys
at the time. (Last August, the Church stated it would still retain its
affiliation with the Scouts, despite some concerns.)
--“Kaysville
has new tabernacle” was a May 26, 1914 Standard headline. The Tabernacle cost
$38,263, while a remodeled Kaysville opera house cost $8,827. Bishop Henry H.
Blood and also John R. Barnes both spoke at the Tabernacle’s dedication on May
25, attended by a combined total of 2,421 people during the three meetings held
that day.
-“Chapel for
dead children” was a Feb. 17, 1915 Standard headline. Just over a century ago,
the Church announced plans for a chapel exclusively for the
hearing-impaired at 21st Street and Liberty Avenue, near Liberty
Park. At a cost of about $15,000, this meetinghouse would be less than two
blocks from the State School for the Deaf and Blind.
-A Standard
story on May 18, 1914 reported “Contests held in the Ogden Tabernacle on
Sunday.” Oratory, singing and retold story competitions were held for 120
participants from eight area stakes.
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