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Woods
Cross lies near the bottom of the Great Salt Lake Basin,
approximately eight miles north of Salt Lake City. It
was officially chartered in 1935 by the owners of the
Reservoir and Pipeline Company who pooled their Mill Creek
water shares and transferred their capital stock and assets
to the new city board of trustees. Woods Cross was originally
an unincorporated area extending from the southern boundary
of Centerville south to the Salt Lake County line and
including the areas and communities of Val Verda, Orchard,
North Salt Lake, West Bountiful, among others.
In
1847, after the initial Mormon settlement of the Salt
Lake Valley, Peregrine Sessions went north to locate pasture
lands. He selected a spot near Cudahy Lane, where he spent
the winter with is family watching over the herds. The
next year, 1848, other settlers arrived and built cellars
and dugouts along and near the banks of the Jordan River.
The
historical development of Woods Cross is directly linked
to water. Pioneer settlers in 1848 selected the area's
rich bottom lands to establish their farms -- generations
of fertile silt deposits from the overflowing channels
of Mill Creek created some of the best farm land in the
state. The mountain watersheds east of Woods Cross retained
rain and melting snows until saturation sent runoff water
into the boggy meadows and sloughs of the bottoms. Here
some of the water was trapped and absorbed into underground
aquifers preserving fresh water along the eastern edge
of the Great Salt Lake.
Among
the early settlers of the area was Daniel Wood, for whom
Woods Cross is named. By 1855 he was the wealthiest man
in Woods Cross with land, houses, and personal possessions
worth nearly $14,000. He built a school in 1854, a church
in 1863, and in 1869 gave the lower portion of his rich
farm gratis for a railroad depot and crossing--called
Woods Crossing, then shortened to Woods Cross.
Another
prominent early settler was Ira S. Hatch. The Hatch family
played an important role in the establishment and operation
of several brickyards in Woods Cross. Descendants of Ira
S. Hatch and his three wives were well represented among
the ninety-five original shareholders of the Deseret Livestock
Company which was organized in 1891 by Woods Cross sheepmen.
It remained a Woods Cross company until 1933, at which
time much of the stock was sold to Henry D. Moyle and
his brothers and the offices of the company were transferred
to Salt Lake City and the company's mercantile store in
Woods Cross was closed.
As
the watersheds in Bountiful were cleared to build homes
and the sloughs along the Jordan were drained for commercial
and industrial development, runoff had no place to go.
Woods Cross townspeople struggled to control and utilize
this water effectively. They built wooden troughs and
ditches along the foothills to channel the water where
they wanted it to go and they installed drains in the
bottoms to carry the excess to the lake. They also built
holding ponds and underground cisterns to save the runoff
until the residents had a need for it. Not until a federally
funded water project in the 1980s built concrete containing
walls, collecting basins, and lined ditches carry the
overflow to the Great Salt Lake did the city's surface
water problems disappear.
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