Area:
754 square miles;
population:
1,277 (in 1990); county
seat: Junction;
origin of county
name: after Paiute
Indians; principal
cities/towns: Circleville
(417), Marysvale (364),
Junction (132); economy:
agriculture (primarily
beef and dairy cattle),
education; points
of interest: Otter
Creek State Park,
Piute
Reservoir State Park,
Big
Rock Candy Mountain,
Tushar Mountains,
Piute County Courthouse.
Piute County was split
off from Beaver County
in 1865. Its western
boundary approximates
the crest of the Tushar
Mountains. Delano
Peak (12,173 feet)
is the high point
of the High Plateaus
section of the Colorado
Plateau. Most of the
county's population
is concentrated in
the Sevier River Valley.
Grass Valley (Otter
Creek) lies between
the Sevier Plateau
in the center of the
county and the Parker
Range on its eastern
border.
Evidence
of prehistoric inhabitants
has been found in
the caves of Kingston
Canyon (now an attractive
local recreation area),
but in general little
is known of the Paiute
Indians' predecessors.
The Paiutes were mainly
peaceful gatherers
and hunters of food
who produced beautiful
baskets for many uses
and rabbitskin clothing
for winter protection.
Circleville
and Junction were
settled in 1864 by
a group of Mormon
pioneers from Ephraim.
The Sevier Valley
provided good grazing,
and livestock remains
important to the economy.
Wild hay, alfalfa,
grain, and pastureland
provide feed for the
county's limited beef
and dairy production.
Earth-covered potato
cellars remain as
evidence of successful
crops in an earlier
era. The Piute School
District employs some
fifty county residents.
Less obvious contributors
to the local economy
are a small group
of retirees in the
larger towns. As in
most of Utah's rural
counties, "home" has
a strong pull on the
natives while economic
forces tend to push
recent high school
graduates toward the
opportunities of urban
areas. Piute County
residents depend on
nearby Richfield,
north on Highway 89,
for major services.
Earth's
riches once played
a dominant role in
the county's economy.
A gold and silver
boom in the Tushar
Mountains spawned
such towns as Bullion,
Kimberly, and Marysvale.
Later, lead, zinc,
alunite, and uranium
were significant products.
Cyclical mining, now
in a bust mode, could
boom again locally.
Piute and Otter Creek
reservoirs provide
good boating, water
skiing, and fishing
for county recreationists
and visitors.
Gary B. Peterson