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Sevier
Lake is located in the central and western part of the
state in the Pahvant Valley at about 4,500 feet elevation,
between the Cricket Mountains on the east and the House
Range on the west. Earliest reports of the lake indicate
that it was a large sheet of water and helped support
farms along the shore. The largest tributary feeding the
lake is the Sevier River, which drains a large section
of south-central Utah in the transition area between the
Colorado Plateau and the Basin and Range provinces. The
1776 Dominguez-Escalante party visited the lake and on
the map they made showed it and some tributaries. Pahvant
Indians are reported to have had farms on the east side
of the lake, and the Pahvant Valley acquired the name
"Corn Creek" due to the planting of that crop when settlers
arrived at the present site of Fillmore in 1850.
The
incident that made the lake better known was a conflict
in 1854 between settlers and the Indians living in the
Sevier Valley near Salina. John W. Gunnison was leading
a U.S. government survey party west to find a possible
"central route" to California. Gunnison's arrival coincided
with a local incident in which four Indians were killed.
Gunnison pursued his survey work and a few days later
camped near the mouth of the Sevier River at the north
end of Sevier Lake. Early next morning, the camp was attacked;
Gunnison and six of his men were killed by retaliating
Indians. Mormon settlers for a time were suspected of
complicity because they were hostile to the government
and hoped to keep the territory to themselves; but they
were later cleared of any complicity in the matter.
As
settlers continued to move to the area, irrigation was
required to sustain life in the semi-arid climate. The
Sevier River was the main source of water for irrigation
for the area's farmers. Its flow was interrupted and retained
in storage reservoirs to such an extent that the lake
bed has been usually dry since the turn of the century.
Mineral extraction from the brine at the south end of
the lake has been attempted since 1985. Earthen dikes
have been built to form 3,000 acres of first-phase solar
evaporation ponds, and an eight-mile brine collection
canal has been built, and salt deposited for competent
pond floors in order to produce halite and potassium sulfate.
Jay
M. Haymond
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