This map shows with the "X," approximately where Hebron was located.
TREMBLER was the last
straw to break Utah town's back …
You won't find the
city of Hebron on most Utah maps these days. It's a ghost town, having met its
demise almost 100 years ago when earthquakes — possibly including the famous
San Francisco quake of 1906 — sent the residents packing by damaging most of
its brick buildings.
Located seven miles
west of Enterprise in Washington County, this biblically named town thrived in
the late 1800s because of mining work in the area.
The Pine Valley
earthquake on Nov. 17, 1902, damaged almost all houses in Hebron, many
severely. There may not have been a chimney left standing in the town.
The quake destroyed
so many homes that residents slept in the tithing granary or in Orson Welcome
Huntsman's slab-type house at night.
"People are
frightened, seven distinct shocks were felt at Pine Valley" was a Salt
Lake Herald headline from Nov. 18, 1902. Aftershocks continued for weeks. Snow
and cold increased the suffering in late November.
According to a 1902
diary excerpt from Huntsman, the quake got people seriously thinking about
moving down canyon to Enterprise. The quake wasn't the only difficulty in
Hebron. Water was sparse in dry years and yet other years there was flooding.
St. George and
Santa Clara also had substantial damage from the quake. "St. George
damaged by earthquake, Buildings shaken and cliffs torn asunder; some made
seasick" was a Deseret News headline from Nov. 21, 1902.
Salt Lake County residents,
mostly those in the southern end, also felt the Pine Valley quake. The shocks
produced lots of fear and frenzy and even stopped clocks in Salt Lake City,
though no damage was reported.
"Earthquake
sways big buildings of Salt Lake" was a Herald headline from Nov. 18,
1902.
No one knows the
exact magnitude of those early 20th Century quakes in Utah. There were no
seismographs in the state then.
The Pine Valley
quake is believed to have been 6.0-plus and its largest aftershock on Dec. 5,
1902, is estimated at 5.0.
Some 3 1/2 years
after the Pine Valley quake, the great San Francisco earthquake came along and
may have destroyed what was left of Hebron, according to one historical report.
This apparently caused its remaining residents to move away.
Today a few remote
home sites dot the road west of Enterprise. One small side road leads to the
Hebron Cemetery, about all that's left of a once thriving pioneer town.
The San Francisco
quake was recorded by seismographs all over the nation and was believed to be
about 7.7 in magnitude. It apparently had a greater effect on Hebron than any
other area in Utah, perhaps because of the damage that still existed there from
the previous quake.
Sue Nava, seismic
network manager at the University of Utah, said the Pine Valley quake was
significant and caused considerable damage. However, she disputes claims that
the San Francisco earthquake of 1906 would have caused any damage in Utah, even
in southwest Utah and Hebron.
She said the San
Francisco quake would have produced some shaking in Utah, but she's skeptical
and unaware of any damage it caused here.
U.S. Geological
Society records show that the March 12, 1934, "Kosmo" (Hansel Valley)
earthquake has been Utah's largest since the pioneers settled here, being a 6.6
magnitude.
-Written by
Lynn Arave and originally in the Deseret News, March 4, 2001.
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