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The
community of Duchesne is located just above the junction
of the Strawberry and Duchesne rivers in the Uintah Basin
of northeastern Utah. It was first identified as a potential
town site by Father Escalante when the Dominguez-Escalante
expedition camped near the present-day town 18 September
1776 while on their epic journey. Duchesne is strategically
located not only due to its location at the junction of
the rivers but it is also at the mouth of Indian Canyon,
the major route into the Basin through the Tavaputs Plateau
from Price.
The
town came into being in 1905 when the United States government
opened the region to homesteading under the Allotment
Act. The land that forms all of Duchesne County and western
Uintah County had formerly belonged to the Ute Indians
as part of their reservation. A.M. Murdock, an Indian
trader at Whiterocks, obtained permission from the government
to set up a trading post at the site that became Duchesne
City. With the assistance of several other men, he set
up a large circus tent for a general store and trading
post. Government surveyors laid out the streets and the
survey was accepted by the government on 18 October 1905.
Other settlers soon pitched their tents and built pioneer
dwellings that were replaced over the next months and
years with more modern buildings for homes and businesses.
The
town was originally called Dora, after Murdock's baby
daughter. This name was replaced for a short time by the
name Theodore, in honor of President Theodore Roosevelt.
But when town to the east adopted the name of Roosevelt,
it was thought that two towns in the same county named
for the same president would be too confusing for mail
delivery. The name Duchesne was utilized for the new community.
The name Duchesne is taken from the name of the river
that runs through town and was likely named by fur trappers
in the 1820s in honor of Mother Treasa Duchesne founder
of the School of the Sacred Heart near St. Louis, Missouri.
On
1 January 1915 the eastern portion of Wasatch County was
split off to form Duchesne County; by a vote of county
citizens, Duchesne City became the county seat. Today
Duchesne is a community of approximately 1,200 people.
It hosts four chapels (two LDS, a Baptist, and a Catholic),
two schools (an elementary and a high school/junior high),
several businesses and the county offices. For several
years, work on the Central Utah Project boosted the community's
population and business; a park and a bowling alley were
built to make the city more attractive for construction
workers. However, in the mid-1980s the dam projects were
completed and Duchesne's population declined by several
hundred people. The economic base of the community is
presently centered in farming and oil industry. As county
seat, Duchesne's major celebration is the annual county
fair held in August. Due to the late date of settlement
of the community, even at the present date several of
the older citizens remember coming into the region as
pioneers as childern with their families.
John
D. Barton
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