Area:
603 square miles;
population:
5,528 (in 1990); county
seat: Morgan City;
origin of county
name: after LDS
leader Jedediah Morgan
Grant; principal
cities/towns:
Morgan City (2,023);
economy: livestock,
manufacturing; points
of interest: East
Canyon State Park,
Lost
Creek State Park,
Mountain Green trappers'
confrontation site.
Located in a high
valley of the Wasatch
Mountains, Morgan
County is divided
by the Weber River.
The many streams that
feed into the Weber
made the valley attractive
to fur trappers in
the 1820s and to prehistoric
Plains Indians and
historic Shoshone
and Ute Indians. In
1825, near present
Mountain Green, trappers
of the British Hudson's
Bay Company under
Peter Skene Ogden
came dangerously close
to fighting competing
American trappers,
but Ogden kept the
situation from becoming
a major international
incident.
The county was created
in 1862. During the
Utah War (1857-58)
settlers in the town
of Milton supplied
feed for the horses
of Mormon troops stationed
in canyon passes watching
for Johnston's Army.
Lot Smith of Stoddard
blocked Echo Canyon,
burned U.S. Army supply
trains, and stampeded
government horses
and cattle. Despite
such incidents, the
"war" was settled
peacefully.
Morgan has more privately
owned land than any
other county in Utah.
Much of it is used
for stock raising--especially
beef and dairy cattle
and sheep--and for
hay and other field
crops. Lumber was
a major industry from
1860 to 1875 in Hardscrabble
Canyon. Thousands
of railroad ties were
furnished to build
the Union Pacific
Railroad line, and
charcoal was shipped
to Bingham for use
in smelting. During
the building of the
railroad in 1868 a
number of businesses
opened in Morgan City,
and it became the
county's trade center.
In 1904 the Morgan
Canning Company was
founded to can peas.
The business grew
and a second factory
was built in Smithfield,
Cache County. The
company was sold to
the California Packing
Corporation in 1935.
The manufacturing
of Portland cement
is a major local industry.
This important industrial
product has been produced
at the Devil's Slide
plant for more than
eighty years. In addition
to limestone--the
main ingredient in
cement--silver, lead,
copper, coal, iron,
sulphur, and mica
have been found in
Morgan County, but
most mining has been
on a small scale.
Agriculture, manufacturing,
and trade do not provide
enough jobs for county
residents, and in
recent years more
than half of those
employed--the largest
percentage in any
Utah county--have
worked outside Morgan,
mostly in the greater
Ogden area.
The county has benefited
from the Weber Basin
Reclamation Project.
Beginning in 1952
federal funds were
used to construct
dams and power plants.
The Lost Creek and
East Canyon reservoirs
constructed as part
of the project, are
popular recreation
sites for people throughout
northern Utah.
Miriam
B. Murphy