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Utah Pioneers |
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Human use of the Zion National Park
landscape dates back to at least 6,000 B.C. Archeologists
have divided this long span of human history into four cultural periods, each
characterized by distinctive technological and social adaptations, that are briefly
summarized here.
During the Archaic period
(approximately 6000 B.C.- A.D. 500), small groups hunted game and collected wild plants,
seeds, and nuts across the broad expanse of the Great Basin and western Colorado Plateau. This mobile lifeway left few traces in the
archeological record, with the exception of materials recovered from dry caves and a few
deeply buried sites. In these protected
settings, perishable artifacts, such as baskets, cordage nets, and yucca fiber sandals,
survived. The Archaic toolkits also included
flaked stone knives, drills, and stemmed dart points.
The dart points were hafted to wooden shafts and propelled by throwing devices,
called atlatls.
By about 300 B.C.,
some archaic groups had begun to supplement wild foods in
their diets by cultivating small patches of corn and squash
along rivers and near springs.
Archeologists have labeled these groups the Basketmakers,
because of the abundance of coiled and twined baskets found
in many late Archaic sites. These early experiments with horticulture reduced group mobility
and increased the need for food storage.
Basketmaker sites often have grass or stone-lined
storage cists and shallow, partially underground dwellings,
called pithouses.
Within a few centuries, small-scale
gardening had intensified into the full time horticulture that typifies the Formative
period (A.D.500-1300). Two distinctive
horticultural groups, the Virgin Anasazi and Parowan Fremont, appear in the archeological
record of Zion National Park during this period. They
established year round habitation sites (often called pueblos, the Spanish word for
village or community) with pithouses, storage cists, and later,
above-ground masonry room blocks. Grinding
stones (manos and metates) signal the importance of corn in the diets of both
groups. Sedentary lifestyles encouraged the
production of plain and painted ceramic vessels. These were used for storage, food
preparation, and as trade goods across broad geographic areas. The new technology of the
bow and arrow also gained widespread acceptance during the Formative period. The extent to which the Virgin Anasazi exploited
wild plants and game is still unclear. Some
researchers suggest that they were almost totally dependent on cultivated foods. By contrast, the Parowan Fremont may have
continued to hunt and collect a broad spectrum of wild resources to supplement cultivated
foods.
Virgin Anasazi sites typically occur
on river terraces along the Virgin River and its major tributaries, overlooking the
fertile river bottoms where corn, squash, and other crops could be grown. There is evidence that hunting and collecting
parties made forays to nearby upland areas, like the Kolob Plateau. Parowan Fremont sites are found along stream
courses and near springs. They cultivated a drought and cold tolerant variety of corn
(called Fremont Dent) that could be successfully grown at higher elevations. The Virgin Anasazi and Parowan Fremont appear to
have interacted along cultural contact zones, such as the Kolob Plateau, during the last
years of the Formative period.
Both the Virgin Anasazi and the
Parowan Fremont disappear from the archeological record of southwestern Utah by about A.D.
1300. Extended droughts in the 11th and 12th
centuries, interspersed with catastrophic flooding, may have made horticulture impossible
in this arid region. Some researchers have
suggested that the sedentary horticultural groups could not successfully compete for wild
resources with the more mobile Numic language speakers (such as the Southern Paiute and
Ute) who were in the region by at least A.D. 1100.
The time span between A.D. 1300 and
the late 1700s has been described as the Neo-Archaic by some researchers,
since the lifeways were reminiscent of the earlier adaptation. The Numic language speakers were the only
occupants of the Zion landscape. They
depended on a wide array of wild plants and animals, moving seasonally to hunt game or
collect ripe seeds and nuts. This mobile lifestyle was reflected in their material
possessions, which consisted of baskets, nets, and snares, as well as bows and arrows. Some, particularly the Southern Paiute, also
planted fields of corn, sunflowers, and squash to supplement their collected wild foods. These more sedentary groups made brownware vessels
that were for storage and cooking.
The Historic period begins in the
late 1700s, with the exploration and settlement of southern Utah by Euro-Americans. Initial explorations by traders from New Mexico
blazed the Old Spanish Trail, which followed the Virgin River for a portion of its length. During the next century, American fur
trappers and government surveyors added new overland travel routes across the region. In 1872, John Wesley Powell explored the
areas around Zion Canyon, as part of western surveys conducted by the U.S. Geological
Survey. The early pack trails soon became
well-used wagon roads, connecting Santa Fe to the California markets.
In 1847, Brigham Young led members
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) to Utah Territory,
establishing settlements in the Great Salt Lake Valley.
Within a decade, Mormon pioneers were sent to settle the southern part of the
territory and grow cotton in Utahs Dixie.
Towns like Shunesberg, Springdale, Grafton, Adventure, and Paradise sprang up along
the upper Virgin River during the 1860s. In
1863, Issac Behunin built the first log cabin in Zion Canyon, near the location of the
Zion Lodge. Soon the canyon was dotted with
other homesteads, including that of William Crawford, near Oak Creek.
During the remainder of the century,
the small communities and homesteads struggled to survive.
Catastrophic flooding by the river, little arable land, and poor soils made
agriculture in the upper Virgin River a risky venture.
Some of these settlements, including Shunesberg and Grafton, were ultimately
abandoned for more favorable locations.
By the first decade of the 20th
century, the scenic qualities of southern Utah, and Zion Canyon in particular, had been
recognized as a potential destination for tourism. In
1909, a presidential Executive Order designated Mukuntuweap (Zion) National Monument, in
Zion Canyon. The new monument was, however,
virtually inaccessible to visitors, since the existing roads were in poor condition and
the closest railhead a hundred miles away. The
Utah State Road Commission, established in that year, began construction on a state
highway system that would eventually improve access to the southern region. State officials also negotiated with the Union
Pacific Railroad to develop rail and automobile links and tourism facilities in southern
Utah. By the summer of 1917, touring cars
could finally reach Wylie Camp, a tent camping resort that comprised the first visitor
lodging in Zion Canyon.
In 1919, a Congressional bill
designating Zion National Park was signed into law. Visitation
to the new national park increased steadily during the 1920s, particularly after the Union
Pacific extended a spur rail line to Cedar City. The
Utah Parks Company, a subsidiary of the Union Pacific, acquired the Wylie Camp in Zion,
and offered ten day rail/bus tours to Zion, Bryce, Kaibab, and the North Rim of the Grand
Canyon. Construction on the Zion Lodge
complex, designed in Rustic Style by architect Gilbert Stanley Underwood,
began in the mid-1920s. In 1930, the newly
completed Zion-Mt Carmel highway allowed motorists to travel through Zion to Bryce and
points east. This highway was one of the
greatest engineering feats of modern times, requiring the construction of a 5,613-foot
tunnel to negotiate the vertical sandstone cliffs of Zion.
Visitor numbers at Zion National
Park have continued to increase over time, necessitating the construction of trails,
campgrounds, and other facilities. The
economic benefits of tourism now support the small communities surrounding the park,
ensuring their survival into a new millennium of human history. |