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Price,
the county seat of Carbon County, is the largest city
in the county and is located in the Price River Valley
of the Colorado Plateau province of Utah. It is believed
that Price was named after LDS Bishop William Price of
Goshen, Utah, who explored the region in 1869. The area
was originally a part of Sanpete County, and then was
included in Emery County when it was created in 1880.
Price was organized on 14 July 1892 while it was still
a part of Emery County.
Caleb Baldwin Rhoades and Abraham Powell, trappers from
Salem, Utah, were the first recorded settlers in the Price
River Valley. They arrived in October 1877 and built a
cabin in the northwest corner of what is now Price. The
two returned to Salem when the trapping season was over.
Their talk aroused interest in the area among their friends
and families, and they soon convinced a group join them
in relocating in the Price River Valley. However, Abraham
Powell never returned to Price as he was killed by a bear
on 7 December 1878 while hunting in the Nebo Mountains.
On 21 January 1879 Caleb Rhoades returned to the valley
with two brothers, Frederick Empire Grames and Charles
W. Grames. The men helped each other build homes for their
families. Later that year, they were joined by their families
and others, most coming from Utah County.
These early pioneers of Price experienced much hardship.
Food was in short supply, and crops were difficult to
grow because of a lack of irrigation water. Water had
to be carried from the river in barrels and tanks. An
irrigation ditch to carry water to the fields was of utmost
importance. Construction of two ditches began in February
1879 when Caleb Rhoades and Frederick Grames began the
project. A community effort eventually finished the two
ditches, but it wasn't until the Price Water Company Canal
was finished in 1888 that the irrigation problem was solved.
The canal is still in use today.
The character of Price changed dramatically with the completion
of the railroad in 1883. Price was quickly transformed
from an isolated farming community to the commercial hub
of Castle Valley. The railroad was directly responsible
for Price becoming the retail, political, educational,
and cultural center of the area. The railroad also opened
up the nearby coal mines, which brought thousands of foreign-born,
non-Mormon immigrants to work the mines. Originally these
miners lived in the coal camps near the mines, but Price
gradually assimilated many of them, reflecting the ethnic
diversity of the county and becoming a cultural hub as
well. These immigrants came from many countries, but the
majority were Greek, Italian, Austrian, and Japanese.
This diversified population has remained today, making
Price one of Utah's most culturally complex and varied
communities.
Price has a variety of stores and businesses, as well
as many parks, recreational facilities, schools, and a
full-service hospital. Price is also the home of the College
of Eastern Utah, a rapidly growing community college.
The recent expansion and remodeling of CEU's Prehistoric
Museum have made it one of the best of its kind in the
world.
The economy of Price is very much tied to the coal industry,
and therefore has been through many up and down cycles;
but Price remains today the commercial and cultural center
of Castle Valley. Its population in 1990 was 8,712. Price
has always been and continues to be unique among Utah
towns.
Jane
Lyman Johnson
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