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Milford
is located in a broad valley a few miles east of the geographical
center of Beaver County. Originally, Milford was nothing
more than a few shacks built on the hills near mines under
excavation. Many of the miners who first came to Milford
left within a few years after trying their fortune, but
others came to stay. Arvin Stoddard was the first settler
of the area, claiming 160 acres of land in 1880, building
the first house in the area, and planting the first trees.
During this same time, prospectors were searching the
hills to the west and southwest for lead, silver, and
gold. A Welsh smelterman, John D. Williams, came to Milford
in 1880. He eventually built a smelter on land adjoining
the Stoddard claim. Some contemporaries described Milford
as a "perfect mudhole," or the "perfection of desolation."
Cattle-raising
was also important in Milford's development. In the early
1870s three brothers settled at Pine Grove in Pine Valley
west of Milford and established a cattle ranch. Within
a few years several cattle companies had stock grazing
in the land surrounding Milford. B.F. Saunders of Salt
Lake City owned Utah's largest cattle herd--the Pike Springs
Ranch--and he made Milford his shipping point. Cattle
grazing was possible on nearby public domain land year
round. Meadow grass covered the Beaver and Milford valleys
from Hay Springs to Black Rock and supported as many as
20,000 head of cattle and 5,000 head of horses.
During
the 1880s Milford became the railroad terminal for the
Southern Utah Line, and it was particularly important
as a loading place for the cattle of southern Utah. The
railroad also enhanced Milford's importance as a supply
station and the shipping center for local mines; it also
facilitated trade with regional markets. Milford became
the terminus for freighting activities for a region that
included southern Utah, southern Nevada, and northern
Arizona.
The
railroad attempted three different times to extend rails
from Milford to California. In 1881 work was begun on
the roadbed but was quickly abandoned. In 1890 a second
attempt was cut short by the national depression. The
third attempt, in 1898, was successful and resulted in
a line to Caliente, Nevada, by 1901. Milford was a valuable
division terminal because of its excellent location and
water facilities.
At
the turn of the century, Milford had a population of 279,
and in 1903 these inhabitants petitioned the county commission
for incorporation. This facilitated both the codification
of local ordinances and the unified planning for growth.
Milford's Main Street was characterized by its simple
frame architecture typical of mining towns. Saloons, boarding
houses, and mercantile outfits lined both sides of the
street. As might be expected, the town was plagued by
fire and many structures burned to the ground from time
to time.
In
an article published in the Deseret News on 8 November
1914, Joseph Hickman claimed that "Milford has been Utah's
most thorough representative of all types of frontier
life." This statement describes the diverse nature of
Milford's social, cultural, and economic life. Established
first to service local mines, it quickly became an agricultural
and stock-raising center of significance. This diversification
is what allowed Milford to survive the closure of the
mines, local smelters, and the slow-down of the mining
industry.
Since
1950, when Milford's population was at its highest number--1,673
residents--the number of residents has declined steadily--to
1,106 in 1990. Still, the community has a high school,
library, Southern Baptist church, Catholic church, and
two LDS wards. The Union Pacific Railroad is the community's
largest employer.
Martha
Sonntag Bradley
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