|
Kanab Details
|
Golf
Course: Coral Cliffs 9
hole Golf Course, 825 E. Hwy 89 - Phone: 435-644-5005
Churches:
Baptist, Catholic, Jehovah's Witness, LDS, United Methodist
Medical
Services: George R. Aiken Hospital, 221 W. 300 N.
- Phone: 435-644-5811
Auto
Services: 13 gas stations (some 24-hour), 3 auto
repair |
|
Destination Mileage from Kanab
|
Bryce Canyon
National Park -77
Capitol Reef National Park - 197
Cedar Breaks NM - 64 |
|
Grand Canyon
National Park - 78
Glen Canyon (Lake Powell) NRA - 70
Zion National Park - 41
Salt Lake City, Utah- 303 |
|
Cedar City,
Utah- 79
Saint George, Utah- 83
Page, Arizona - 75 |
|
|
Kanab History
Kanab,
Utah, is a city celebrated for its breathtaking scenery, temperate
climate, and sturdy settlers. A sort of oasis in the surrounding
desert environment, Kanab's wide, tree-lined streets and substantial
architecture create a favorable atmosphere. The word "Kanab"
comes from a Native American word for a willow basket used to
carry an infant on its mother's back. The first attempt by Anglo-Americans
to establish a permanent settlement was made on 7 June 1858.
The story of Kanab's first two decades is one of a series of unsuccessful
efforts at colonization, each discouraged by attacks from hostile
Native American tribes who were clearly opposed to whit settlement
of the area. Originally, the area was considered suitable for
cattle raising. But equally important was the extension of Mormon
dominion into northern Arizona.
Jacob Hamblin played a key role in negotiations with the
Native Americans that eventually opened up the area to white occupation.
LDS Church President Brigham Young appointed Hamblin president
of the Santa Clara Indian Mission on 4 August 1857. Hamblin organized
a series of expeditions to the Paiute, the Moquis, and the Navajo
to negotiate terms of peacefully sharing the land. Nevertheless,
through the 1860s raids and confrontations occurred regularly
between the two groups. Initial attempts at settlement of Kanab
included a fort built in 1864-65 (soon vacated), another in 1868,
and a third attempt in 1870 by a colony of seventeen settlers
who came to the area from Cottonwood, south of Salt Lake City.
Fort Kanab: Levi Stewart was called by President
Brigham Young to lead a group of pioneers to settle this area.
On June 14, 1870, he brought a party with seven wagons from Pipe
Spring, where they had camped temporarily, to Fort Kanab. The
fort had been built a year before by Jacob Hamblin and Indian
missionaries.
During the summer of 1870, the fort at Kanab was
described as a bustling center of activity. It became the focal
point for local pioneering, missionary work, and exploration,
and was also a relief point, trading-post, and base of operations
for the Geological Survey. President Young visited the fort in
April 1870 to bless the land and set it apart for the gathering
of the Saints. He made the decision to stock the country with
cattle, sheep, and horses. Within months, the townsite was surveyed
and town lots were distributed among the local families. The next
day the Mormons organized a ward; in September the group built
a schoolhouse.
A
visitor to Kanab one year later described the struggles of the
desert town: "The grasshoppers had taken part of the wheat
that was growing. The crop was light at the best, having been
planted with a lick and a promise and not watered until too late
to have a satisfactory stand." Because of the difficulty
in working the land, the locals decided to organize cooperatively
for farming. The group farm was located south of the town and
included 120 acres of corn, cane, and other food products. In
1881 President John Taylor of the LDS Church called James Guthiar
and Ruben Broadbent to move to Kanab to build a grist mill in
Kanab Canyon, three miles north of town. During the 1890s, Zadok
K. Judd built a small grist mill on his own property to the east
of town. In 1915 a group of investors built a third major grist
mill.
Although the railroad never came as far south and
east as Kanab, the Deseret Telegraph line came to town in 1871
and connected the area to the rest of the world. Frederick Dellanbaugh,
a member of the John Wesley Powell expedition through southern
Utah, described Kanab in his book Canyon Voyage: "The village
which had been started only a year or two was laid out in the
characteristic Mormon style, with wide streets and regular lots,
fenced by wattling willows between stakes. Irrigation ditches
ran down each side of every street. The entire settlement had
a thrifty air as is the case with the Mormons. Not a grog-shop
or gambling saloon, or dance hall was to be seen; ordinarily the
usual disgraceful accompaniments of the frontier town."
As early as 1922 Kane County's scenery and climate
attracted movie producers and actors when Tom Mix filmed "Deadwood
Coach," with the Vermillion Cliffs as a backdrop. The motion
picture industry provided a needed economic boost for Kanab during
much of the twentieth century.
Kanab had always been a cattle town, but
its landscape became favored in many cowboy movies. Since the
1920s hundreds of movies have been filmed locally. Of significance
to the development of Kanab was the construction of Glen Canyon
Dam, begun in late 1956. The population of Kanab grew because
of the boost to the economy.