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The
product of 20 million years of geologic faulting, volcanic
activity, and glaciation, the Wasatch Mountains, the western
range of the Rocky Mountains, stretch across Utah from
the Bear River in the north to Mount Nebo near Nephi in
central part of the state. Most elevations along the range
are generally between 9,000 and 10,000 feet; Mount Nebo
is the highest peak at 11,877 feet. Some of the other
significant peaks from north to south include Willard
Peak, Mount Ogden, Bountiful Peak, Mount Olympus, Lone
Peak, Mount Timpanogos, Provo Peak, Spanish Fork Peak,
and Loafer Mountain.
Since
the earliest days of Mormon settlement, the majority of
Utah's population has chosen to settle along the range's
western front, where numerous river drainages exit the
mountains. The mountains were a vital source of water,
timber, and granite for early settlers. Today they continue
to serve as the primary source of water for the populous
Wasatch Front, and to provide year-round recreational
opportunities to residents and visitors alike.
The
mountains were first viewed by white men in 1776 when
Fathers Francisco Atanasio Dominguez and Silvestre Velez
de Escalante traversed the range, exiting near present-day
Spanish Fork. The next entry into the mountains was during
the 1820s by fur trappers and traders from Santa Fe and
Taos; among them Etienne Provost, from whom the city of
Provo takes its name. Following Provost into the Wasatch
came British and American trappers, including Peter Skene
Ogden, William Ashley, Jedediah Smith, James Bridger,
James Clyman, among others. The competition between British
and American fur interests throughout the west became
moot when, by 1840, silk replaced beaver fur as the height
of fashion.
In
1846, having left Fort Bridger and following the instructions
of frontier entrepreneur Lansford Hastings, the members
of the ill-fated Donner-Reed Party hacked out a wagon
road from near the site of present-day Henefer and down
into the Salt Lake Valley. Eleven months later, in July
1847, the first Mormon emigrants negotiated this same
wagon road in only three days.
When
Mormon loyalty to the United States was questioned during
the Civil War, Colonel Patrick Connor and his Third California
Infantry were ordered to Utah to establish Fort Douglas
at Salt Lake City. With Connor's encouragement, the Californians
spent much of their time prospecting for minerals in the
Wasatch and other areas near the city.
In
186, prospectors discovered silver, lead, and zinc deposits
in the canyons and mountains southeast of Salt Lake City,
particularly in Big Cottonwood, Little Cottonwood, and
Parley's Canyons. By 1870 towns like Alta and Park City
had sprung up and taken on the aspect of other mining
towns found throughout the West. Alta at one time supported
twenty-six saloons and six breweries, while the major
portion of Park City's municipal revenues were received
from saloon licenses and fines for prostitution.
After
experiencing years of decline, Alta and Park City have
experienced something of a rebirth as winter ski resorts.
Indeed, skiing has become one of Utah's major attractions,
prompting the development of many major and world renowned
resorts in the Wasatch Range, where snow has been claimed
to be the world's finest for skiing.
Kevin
Halleran
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