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LIFE IN BOULDER, UTAH: The King
Story
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By Nethella King Griffin Woolsey
Agreka™ Books 1888106093
Soft Cover 8.5 x 11 152 pages.
Click Photo for Full Image Nethella King Griffin
Woolsey.
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Foreword
Boulder, Utah, has been considered the most isolated community in the United
States–the only one to which the mail was still brought on pack mules, as late
as 1940. Situated as it is on the southeast slope of the Great Divide and lying
among the gulches and canyons tributary to the Colorado River, it has no natural
outlet to other settled communities.
Travel was on horseback and pack mule. Disassembled farm
machinery, sewing machines, in fact, almost every thing used in the home or on
the farm or the range found its way to Boulder by means of the faithful mule or
jackass over roads that were hardly more than dangerous trails.
If the mountain roads were made safe, residents felt Boulder
would quickly become a regular route for tourists, since travelers agree that
for rugged, varied, and colorful scenery, the Boulder country is unsurpassed.
During the New Deal, the Civilian Conservation Corp workers
built a road to Boulder. Besides that road, they also built a lower road, a
direct route to Escalante, through sand and ledges. This road, hewn into the
rock along sheer sides of canyons, provides delight to tourists.
Cattle was a big industry for Boulder, Utah. "I should estimate," said
John King, "that Boulder cattle at that time (1890 to 1900) numbered around
12,000 head. We drove about 1500 steers out to sell every fall. Of course in
those days, we kept the beef steers until they were three, four, and five years
old." Cattle rustling by the Robbers Roost Gang was a problem.
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Cattle ranged on the mountain slopes and open flats during
the summer months and then were moved to the "Lower Country" for the
winter. This lower country, viewed from the mountain above, is a picturesque
expanse of twisted canyons and gorges, inter-spaced by unbelievably colorful
flats and mesas. The mesas and canyon afford good pasture, and there are small
streams of drinking water and sandrock holes on the high places that, when
filled with rain water or melting snow, make ideal drinking troughs.
Striking names were given to places in this country by early
stockmen–Wolverine, Silver Falls, Circle Cliffs, Brigham Tea, Rattlesnake,
besides the more prosaic ones such as Long Canyon, Horse Canyon, Wide Mouth,
King Bench, Bowns Bench, Moody, and Wagon Box Mesa.


Horse Canyon. Boulder, Utah.
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John King in corral.
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