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The
Sevier River drains a 5,500-square-mile portion of the
mountainous desert transition zone between the eastern
border of the Great Basin and the Colorado Plateau. The
Sevier flows about 240 miles north from Garfield County
through desert lands before it bends west and then south
to empty into the mostly dry bed of Sevier Lake in West
Millard County at the end of its 325-mile length.
During
historic times, the Native Americans known as Paiutes
and Goshutes have occupied the drainage. When the Dominguez-Escalante
party came through the area in 1776, they reported the
natives to be more Spanish than Indian because of their
beards. The explorers' cartographer, Don Bernardo de Miera,
named Sevier Lake after himself and called the river Rio
Buenaventura, the "river of the good journey." The Sevier
takes its name from an appellation by the Spanish trappers
Moricio Arce and Lagos Garcia, who came from Taos in 1813
to trade with the Utes around Utah Lake. Escaping south
after troubles with the Utes, they said they traveled
to the "Rio Sebero" (also reported as Severo or Seviro--Spanish
for "severe" or "violent"). Trapping was popular in the
region until about 1830. The river is on the California
leg of the old Spanish Trail, a trade route which joined
Santa Fe to the west coast; it arched north into the Great
Basin to avoid the impassable barrier of the lower Colorado
River.
Settlement
of Utah territory by whites began in 1847 and led to colonies
in the region both north and south. In 1850 Mormon settlers
were sent by Brigham Young to the Sevier River Valley.
Native Americans in the area felt threatened when settlement
encroached, and an altercation between settlers and Indians
in 1852 left four Indians dead in Salina. At the same
time, coming west through Salina Canyon on a railroad
route survey was a government party led by John W. Gunnison.
The surveyors were caught in an early morning ambush by
vengeful Indians, who killed Gunnison and six of his crew.
Irrigation
near the mouth of the river started with settlement in
1859 in west Millard County. Obtaining water for irrigation
was the most significant challenge for settlers in the
semi-arid land. Uncontrolled flooding caused downstream
irrigators to abandon many dams before they were finally
permanently established in 1912.
After
floods, upriver diversions were the next most vexing challenge.
The Higgins Decree of 1900 divided the waters of the lower
Sevier at Vermillion Dam and established a commission
to adjudicate user rights. Other decisions followed until
1936, at which time the Cox Decree finally allotted all
the water of the Sevier River. It is one of the most used
rivers in the United States. Less than 1 percent, or 44,840
acre-feet, of the total precipitation is not consumed.
Consumption is about 1,100,000 acre-feet annually.
Jay
M. Haymond
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