Area:
2,422 square miles;
population:
48,560 (in 1990);
county seat:
St. George; origin
of county name:
after President George
Washington; principal
cities/towns:
St.
George (28,502),
Washington (4,198),
Hurricane
(3,915), Santa Clara
(2,322), La
Verkin (1,771),
Hildale (1,325); economy:
tourism, education,
services, trade; points
of interest: Coral
Pink Dand Dunes State
Park, Dixie
College, Gunlock
State Park, Quail
Creek State Park,
Snow
Canyon State Park,
Zion
National Park,
Red Cliffs Recreation
Site, St. George Temple
and Tabernacle, Pine
Valley chapel, Wells
Fargo & Co. express
building in Silver
Reef, Jacob Hamblin
home in Santa Clara,
Brigham Young home
in St. George.
Washington County
in the southwest corner
of the state includes
a large area around
St. George in the
valley of the Virgin
River and its tributaries;
it has the highest
average temperatures
in the state and very
mild winters. The
eastern third of the
county, including
spectacular Zion National
Park, is part of the
Colorado Plateau province.
The western two-thirds
lies in the Basin
and Range geographic
province. The lowest
point in the state,
along Beaver Dam Wash
(2,350 feet), is near
the county's southwest
corner, while the
Pine Valley Mountains
in the north top 10,000
feet.
Traces of the prehistoric
Archaic and Anasazi
cultures have been
found in the area,
and the Santa Clara
and Virgin rivers
provided an important
base for the development
of Southern Paiute
life. The Dominguez-Escalante
expedition in 1776
recorded the first
description of the
Indians in this area.
In 1980 the federal
government restored
traditional tribal
lands west of Santa
Clara to the Shivwits
branch of Southern
Paiutes. The Shivwits
Reservation, set aside
in 1903, had been
terminated in 1954.
In an attempt to establish
an overland route
to the Pacific and
southern California
(the so-called Mormon
Corridor), the Mormons
founded a string of
settlements running
southwest from the
Salt Lake Valley.
Brigham Young sent
small groups into
southwestern Utah
as early as 1852 to
test the agricultural
potential of the warm
climate. Fort Harmony
was established in
1852, Santa Clara,
1854, Washington,
1857; Toquerville,
1858; Grafton, 1859;
and Adventure (Rockville),
1860. But until 1861--when
several hundred families
were called by church
leaders to go to the
area to raise cotton,
figs, olives, grapes,
sugar, almonds, and
tobacco--colonization
remained chiefly an
experiment. St. George,
settled in 1861, became
the center of the
area, nicknamed Dixie
because of its southern
location, climate
and agricultural produce,
and the colonists
succeeded in producing
sizable amounts of
cotton, wine, and
molasses. The demand
for cotton lasted
until after the Civil
War. The wine industry
also grew during this
period, as did mining,
but when mining decreased
so did the demand
for wine. From 1875
to 1880 Silver Reef,
northwest of Leeds,
was a booming mining
town, and Wells Fargo
reportedly shipped
more than $8,000,000
in bullion from the
mines there.
The boundaries of
Washington County,
formed in 1852 by
the territorial legislature,
stretched the entire
width of the territory
(at that time some
600 miles). After
several changes, the
county achieved its
present size and shape
in 1892.
The economic base
of the county has
changed significantly
over the years from
its agricultural foundation
to a much more diversified
mix. Zion National
Park (established
in 1909 as Mukuntuweap
National Monument)
has always been one
of the state's premier
tourist attractions.
The trade and service
industries have grown
steadily to accommodate
not only increasing
numbers of tourists
but the development
of the area as a major
retirement center.
Communities such as
Bloomington, south
of St. George, as
well as numerous condominiums
and trailer parks
housing thousands
of winter residents.
Two-year Dixie College
with some 2,300 students
is a major employer
as well as a cultural
and sport focal point
in the area.
During the past three
decades, Washington
County has been one
of the fastest growing
counties in the state.
In 1970 the population
stood at 13,669; during
the 1970s it nearly
doubled to 26,065
in 1980. It nearly
doubled again during
the next ten years
hitting 48,560 in
1990. Projections
for the 1990s are
that this growth rate
will continue. The
county is host to
several outstanding
events each year,
including conferences
and conventions, art
festivals and art
shows, golf tournaments,
the Dixie Rotary Bowl
Football Game, the
St. George Marathon,
and the World Senior
Games.
Linda
Thatcher