Area:
3,255 square miles;
population:
12,537; county
seat: Duchesne
City; origin of
county name: after
the Duchesne River
which was possibly
named for a French
Canadian trapper;
principal cities/towns:
Roosevelt (3,842),
Duchesne
City (1,677),
Myton (500), Altamont
(247), Tabiona (152);
economy: livestock,
alfalfa and hay, oil,
natural gas; points
of interest: Starvation
Reservoir, High
Uinta Wilderness Area,
Big Sand Wash Reservoir.
Much of present-day
Duchesne County was
once part of the sprawling
Uintah and Ouray Indian
Reservation. Today
most of the county
is owned or controlled
by individual Indians
or the Ute Indian
Tribe.
The Uintah Reservation
was created in 1861
by President Abraham
Lincoln for the permanent
home of the Uintah
and Whiteriver Utes.
Later, the Uncompahgre
Utes were moved to
the Uintah and newly
created Uncompahgre
Indian Reservations.
At the turn of the
century, both Indian
reservations were
thrown open to homesteaders
under the Dawes Act.
This was done after
allotments of land
were made to Indians
of the three tribes.
On 1 September 1905
homesteading began
in earnest on the
former Uintah Indian
Reservation.
The settlement of
Duchesne County is
unique in Utah history,
for unlike much of
the state, it did
not occur under the
direction of Brigham
Young or the Mormon
church. Rather, it
was settled by individuals
who obtained 160 acres
under the federal
Homestead Act. Homesteaders
were required to prove
that they intended
to farm the land.
After five years of
living on the land,
making improvements,
and paying $1.25 per
acre homesteaders
were given title to
their homesteads.
As was the case in
other areas of the
state, farmers of
the county needed
water. The Dry Gulch
Irrigation Company
was incorporated in
1905 by William H.
Smart and Reuben S.
Collett to aid farmers
in securing water
rights from the state
and to help them divert
water onto their lands
from the many streams
flowing through the
county. Other irrigation
companies were also
organized. Some were
successful, others
were not. Homesteaders
on Blue Bench, located
just north of Duchesne
City, organized the
Blue Bench Irrigation
Company. With financial
support from wealthy
Jesse Knight of Provo,
heroic efforts were
made over several
decades to divert
water from the Duchesne
River to farmsteads
on Blue Bench. This
gallant effort ended
in failure for the
farmers and financial
disaster for Knight.
Duchesne County is
bordered on the east
and west by Uintah
and Wasatch counties
respectively, on the
north by Summit County,
and on the south by
Carbon County. In
1914 the legislature
created Duchesne County
from part of Wasatch
County. The county
became official with
the coming of the
new year-1915. The
state's highest mountain,
Kings Peak (13,528
feet), is located
in the county's Uinta
Mountains. Major streams
running through the
county include the
Strawberry, Duchesne,
Lake Fork, and Yellowstone
rivers.
The High Uintas Primitive
Area, situated in
the northern portion
of the county, is
dotted with some of
the most beautiful
alpine lakes anywhere
in the West. The lakes
are free of ice for
only a few months
of the year.
The county's economy
is based primarily
on the livestock industry,
but the area is also
rich in oil and natural
gas. As in Uintah
County to the east,
Duchesne's oil and
natural gas extraction
industries fluctuate
due to international
oil and natural gas
markets.
Craig Fuller