|
In
the spring of 1880 a direct supply and access road connecting
southwestern and southeastern Utah was completed. Known
as the Hole-In-The-Rock Trail, its direct penetration
through the Colorado River gorge and surrounding topography
shortened distances over alternative routes by up to hundreds
of miles. Built by Mormon pioneers answering a mission
call to colonize the southeastern section of the territory,
the trail provided a crucial link for one year before
the most rugged stretches were bypassed with the opening
of Hall's Crossing.
The mission which resulted in the trail's construction
was initiated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints to secure peaceful relations with the Indians and
to open the area to further colonization. After four months
of exploring for a feasible route to their intended destination,
the pioneers selected a direct route from Escalante. Although
it was the least explored of all the possible routes,
it was by far the shortest.
As winter approached at the end of November 1879, 250
men, women, and children, with 80 wagons and 1,000 head
of cattle, found themselves up against terribly broken,
seemingly impassable terrain. The settlers had been en
route for more than two weeks when they reached the 1,200-foot-deep
Colorado River gorge, sixty-five miles southeast of Escalante.
For six weeks, the men labored on a wagon road down the
sandstone cliffs to the Colorado River. Built by chiseling
and blasting a path through a steep crevice named the
Hole-in-the-Rock, their road stands today as a testament
of pioneer ingenuity and determination. Construction consisted
of cutting away a 40-foot drop-off at the top of the crevice,
moving huge boulders, leveling high spots, filling depressions,
and widening crevice walls. To avoid the steep grades
near the bottom of the Hole-in-the-Rock, the pioneers
tacked their road onto the face of the north wall of the
crevice. The tacked-on road was supported by oak stakes
secured into holes drilled into the crevice wall at two-foot
intervals.
After driving the wagons through the Hole-in-the-Rock
and ferrying across the 300-foot-wide river, the emigrants
proceeded east out of the river gorge. On 6 April 1880,
after another ten weeks of grueling labor in harsh winter
conditions, the missionaries reached a sandy bottomland
along the banks of the San Juan River where they established
Bluff City.
The hundred miles of road built after descending the Hole-in-the-Rock
crossed some of the most rugged terrain in North America.
Deep ravines and washes were crossed, trails down thousand-foot
drop-offs blasted, deserts traversed, paths through thick
cedar forests cut, and steep cliffs ascended. Many grades
required seven spans of horses to pull the heavily laden
wagons, and the worst stretches could be identified by
the blood and matted hair from the forelegs of the struggling
teams.
In all, the trek took six months. Food supplies were depleted,
and teams had been worn to the point of exhaustion. Two
babies were born en route and, miraculously, no one had
died. The pioneers had toiled under the most trying of
circumstances in a harsh land. Most significantly, their
ordeal forged them into a self-reliant colony ready for
the formidable tasks of nurturing peace with the Indians,
controlling the lawless who sought refuge in the area,
irrigating with the unruly San Juan River, and eking out
a living from the sun-baked land.
Lamont Crabtree
|