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The Spring Room |
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Although
it is called the "spring room.," Pipe Spring actually bubbled
out of the sandstone underneath the floor of the parlor. It then flowed
across the courtyard in a culvert, and emptied into the trough you see
in the lower right of the photo below. From here the water exited the
fort and fed the ponds where the cattle watered. |
Because
the spring water was covered for much of its short journey from the earth
to the spring room, it remained quite cold as it ran through the open
trough against the wall. This kept the temperature in the spring room
at between 48 and 50 degrees F. year-round. The room was used for both
cold storage and the production of butter. |
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day, the ranchers would milk between 80 and 100 cows. Some of that milk
would be brought into the spring room and placed in shallow pans on the
cooling rack shown above. In the cool temperatures of the spring room the cream would rise in the pans and be skimmed off. The cream was then churned into butter. Several types of churns are shown on the long table in the photo above. |
Each
day, the women and children would churn up to 40 pounds of butter; they
would also produce 60-80 pounds of cheese. The latter was produced in
what is now called "the cheese room," located next to the spring
room. Some of the butter and cheese was produced for family use, but the majority of these dairy products would be bound for St. George, Utah, to supply Mormon workers who were building a temple |
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