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Perched on White Mesa near Blue Mountain in southeastern
Utah, the town of Blanding sits at the southern end of
the Great Sage Plain. Documented Anasazi occupation of
this site extends to as early as A.D. 600, with dwellings
being constructed as late as the early 1200s. Archaic
Indian sites that far predate this period also exist at
the foot of White Mesa. Utes and an occasional Navajo
also camped in this area because of the water from local
springs and seeps. Before the town was built, Navajos
called the location "Sagebrush," because of
that plant's luxuriant growth that swept through the pinyon
and junipers to the base of the mountain.
In 1886 Francis A. Hammond, newly appointed LDS stake
president, sent out an exploring party from Bluff to evaluate
possible townsites that could support an agricultural
and livestock economy. Monticello, twenty-two miles north
of Blanding, received the initial attention in this colonizing
effort. For ten more years White Mesa remained the haunt
of the diminishing livestock herds of the non-Mormon L.
C. outfit. Not until 1897, when Walter C. Lyman with his
brother Joseph loaded a buckboard with supplies and left
Bluff to investigate White Mesa's potential, did the idea
of a community there start to take shape. At one point,
Lyman looked out over the sea of sage and, according to
accounts, had a vision that one day this isolated area
would have an LDS temple and play an important role in
serving Naive Americans, especially through education.
This idea was hard to accept at the time, and it was just
as difficult to imagine how irrigation water could be
obtained from the mountain. But a half-dozen people believed,
marked out the route of a canal from Johnson Creek, and
then went to work to make it a reality. The LDS Church
called many of these men on missions, but by 1903 they
had returned and completed their work. By April 1905 Albert
R. Lyman, Walter's nephew, had pitched his tent amid the
sagebrush in the newly surveyed town. By July, five other
families were established and the town had started its
climb in population.
First known as Grayson (after Nellie Grayson Lyman, wife
of Joseph), the town changed its name in 1914 when a wealthy
easterner, Thomas F. Blanding, offered a thousand-volume
library to any Utah town that would adopt his name. Grayson
vied with Thurber (now Blanding) for the prize; the two
towns split the books and Grayson assumed Blanding's wife's
maiden name - Blanding. However, the people of Blanding
were somewhat disgruntled to find that many of the books
they received were of poor quality.
Between 1912 and 1916 Blanding received an infusion of
new blood because of political unrest in Mexico. Many
Mormon families, who had previously fled south of the
border during the intense anti-polygamy persecution of
the 1870s and 1880s, abandoned their Mexican homes and
moved back to the United States. Some found refuge in
San Juan County. In January 1914 the town could claim
a population of 500 people; five years later it had risen
to 1,100. Not all of this growth was attributable to events
in Mexico, but a sufficient amount of immigration occurred
to create in the minds of at least some of the early settlers
a slight division between them and the newcomers, called
"Pachecoites."
During this same era, modern conveniences started to become
a part of the town's life. Schools moved from tents with
sideboards to a frame building in 1908. A year later,
a phone line stretched from Blanding to Monticello, connecting
residents to Moab and the outside world. Electricity arrived
on a part-time basis in April 1918 and became a full-time
reality in 1935. Improvement and maintenance of the water
system remained an ongoing task. In 1916 the town constructed
a reservoir with a distribution system comprised of wooden
pipes that frequently had to be replaced. By 1921 work
had started on a 5,400-foot tunnel on top of the mountain
to bring excess water from its north side. Thirty-one
years later, at a cost of $125,000 and a great amount
of hard work, the townspeople completed the tunnel and
watched the precious water flow into the reservoirs below.
Blanding, like most communities, actively supported national
efforts during World War I, the Great Depression, and
World War II. The town, however, received lasting notoriety
for its involvement in the 1923 Posey War, billed by enthusiasts
as the last Indian uprising in the United States. Far
from being that dramatic, the event was more accurately
a last bid for freedom by some desperate Utes living on
the outskirts of town.
In economic terms, Blanding has ridden the waves of boom
and bust cycles. Livestock and agriculture came to include
lumber operations; all gave way in the 1950s to the burgeoning
uranium and oil industries. New roads, service industries,
and an increased population gave rise to a significant
cash flow that increased local opportunities for education
and employment. By the 1980s, however, when area ore was
barely marketable, many people who had come in with the
boom packed up and went elsewhere. State and federal government
as well as educational institutions, however, continued
to be large employers for those who remained. Organizations
such as elementary through college schools, social services,
and the Edge of the Cedars Museum provided local employment
as well as attracting people to the community.
According to the 1990 census, Blanding has a population
of 3,162 people, over a third of whom are enrolled in
some type of educational program. The College of Eastern
Utah - San Juan Campus, established in 1977, provides
a number of two-year degrees to an average of 500 students
per year, half of whom are Native Americans. Many area
people today refer to Walter C. Lyman's vision and believe
it is still unfolding.
Robert S. McPherson
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