By Lynn Arave
THE roaring 1920s had more prohibition in place than just with alcohol -- there were many game sanctuaries designated across the nation, including in Utah, prohibiting hunting and firearms.
Weber County
was the first in Utah with its Mount Ogden Game Sanctuary in 1920. This
180-square-mile wildlife
preserve stretched from Willard Peak to Weber Canyon and from the foothills east
to Ogden Valley. It featured no hunting or gun-toting allowed. Signs were
posted and penalties were up to $200 for violations, according to various
reports in the Ogden Standard-Examiner.
“Bird Sanctuary is
created in East Mill Creek” was a June 5, 1920 headline in the Salt Lake
Telegram newspaper. Although just 16 city blocks in size, no hunting or
firearms were allowed there.
The City of Murray
followed with its own game sanctuary between 900 East and 1300 East and between
45th South and 49th South. This sanctuary not only
protected birds, but small animals and even fish, according to the Telegram of
July 13, 1920.
The Telegram of June 30,
1921 reported plans for a 49,000-acre game preserve in Big Cottonwood and Mill
Creek Canyons. Deer and elk herds were to be added to the area. This preserve
still allowed an annual deer hunt and continued as a reserve into the early
1940s.
By August of 1922, Salt
Lake County declared a huge bird sanctuary, stretching from Ensign Peak on the
north, across the foothills to 7500 South.
A year later, in July of
1923, Mount Timpanogos was designated as a game preserve too, with no firearms
allowed. In 1931, the St. George area also considered a preserve for the Pine
Valley Mountains.
Cache County established
a 10,000 acre preserve for deer and elk in the summer of 1933, according to
Telegram of June 8 that year. The mountain boundaries stretched from the Logan
River south to the Blacksmith Fork, as a precursor to the much smaller Hardware
Ranch of today.
Some of these
sanctuaries, like Weber County’s, were gone by the late 1920s. Others faded
away by the late 1930s. Not only were the vast areas had to patrol, but they
let the populations of some of the more undesirable animals spike out of
control. For example, in the Mount Ogden Game Sanctuary, coyotes prospered and
they not only attacked hen houses more in the valley below, but rabies fears
worsened too.
Malans Peak in Weber County, where the Game Sanctuary used to be in the 1920s.
Malans Peak in Weber County, where the Game Sanctuary used to be in the 1920s.
Mountain Lions were also
on the rise and attacked more cattle and sheep, even though dogs were used to
keep chasing them further eastward in Weber County. Deer populations were also
rising and more deer were causing problems along the foothills of Weber County
each winter.
Davis, Box Elder and Morgan counties likely had a huge increase in
hunters during the 1920s, since much of Weber County was off limits. Deer
hunting still happened each year in most of Utah, despite the fact it was
outlawed in the Mount Ogden Sanctuary. For example, in 1926, Utah deer
hunting season was from Oct. 20-30.
This same time period -- the mid-1920s -- was also when the
grizzly bear was pretty much wiped out long the Wasatch Front. The legendary
"Old Ephraim" in Logan Canyon was killed by a sheepherder in 1923 and
the last grizzly in the Mount Nebo area was also taken out in the 1920s.
In the end, regular
annual hunting seasons for deer and other animals were established as the rule
of the land, instead of having vast game preserves.
The exceptions were the
establishment of bird refuges along the shores of the Great Salt Lake and other
water sources, with limited annual hunting seasons for ducks and other waterfowl.
For example, the Bear River Bay was declared a bird sanctuary in June of 1925.
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