Area:
4,487 square miles;
population:
22,211 (in 1990);
county seat:
Vernal; origin
of county name:
after the Uinta-Ats
Utes; principal
cities/towns:
Vernal
(6,644), Maeser
(1,850), Naples (1,334),
Ballard (644), Jensen
(400), LaPoint (250),
Whiterocks (200),
Fort
Duchesne (200);
economy: cattle,
hay and alfalfa, lumber,
oil, gas, and oil
shale; points of
interest: Dinosaur
National Monument,
Red
Fleet Reservoir State
Park, Steinaker
State Park, Utah
Field House of Natural
History State Park,
Ouray National Wildlife
Refuge, Stewart Lake
Waterfowl Management
Area.
The geography of Uintah
County diverse and
includes the high
mountain terrain of
the Uinta Mountains,
the fertile Ashley
Valley, a significant
portion of Dinosaur
National Monument-including
the quarry- and the
Green River, which
bisects the county
from the northeast
to the southwest and
forms the boundary
between Carbon County
and Uintah County.
Fort Duchesne, which
was established as
a military post by
the United States
Army in 1886 and operated
until 1913, is not
the headquarters for
the Ute Tribe.
Uintah County is located
in the central portion
of the Uinta Basin,
which extends sixty
miles into western
Colorado. The northern
rim of the basin is
formed by the Uinta
Mountains, the western
rim by the Wasatch
Mountains, and the
southern rim by the
Roan and Book cliffs.
The basin is the geological
remains of prehistoric
Uinta Lake, formed
during the late Tertiary
period, the same period
when sediment was
deposited in the lake
bottom to form gilsonite,
oil shale, tar sands,
and oil. Ashley Creek
and the White, Uinta,
and Green rivers are
the major streams
in the county. The
Green, the largest
of the four, slices
through the central
portion of the county.
Prehistoric Indian
sites suggest that
the Uinta Basin was
inhabited thousands
of years ago by Archaic
and more recently
by Fremont peoples.
In historic times
it was part of the
Utes' domain. The
first white men in
the area were Fathers
Dominguez and Escalante
who traveled through
the Uinta Basin in
1776 searching for
a land route to Monterey,
California. In his
diary Escalante called
the basin "a fine
plain abounding in
pasturage and fertile,
arable land, provided
it were irrigated."
Nearly fifty years
later American and
French trappers found
the Basin rich in
beaver and other wildlife.
In 1831-32 Antoine
Robidoux, a French
trapper licensed by
the Mexican government
(Utah was part of
Mexico until 1848),
built a small trading
post near present-day
Whiterocks where trappers
could trade beaver
pelts for supplies.
The post was abandoned
in 1844 because of
difficulties with
the Indians.
In 1861 Brigham Young
sent a small party
to explore the basin
for possible settlement.
They reported "that
all that section of
country lying between
the Wasatch Mountains
and the eastern boundary
of the territory,
and south of Green
River country, was
one vast contiguity
of waste and measurably
valueless." With this
report, Young decided
not to send settlers
there.
That same year, President
Abraham Lincoln created
the Uintah Indian
Reservation, thus
beginning the relocation
of many Utah and Colorado
Indians to the Uinta
Basin. In the 1880s
the Uncompahgre Reservation
(now part of the Uintah
and Ouray Reservation)
was created in the
southern portion of
Uintah County. Ashley
Valley was not part
of either reservation,
and by 1880 enough
ranchers and farmers
had settled there
that the territorial
legislature created
Uintah County, taking
most of the land from
Wasatch County. The
county seat, originally
in Ashley, was later
moved to the larger
community of Vernal.
With the building
of irrigation canals
other towns were founded,
including Jensen,
Maeser, and Tridell.
In about 1888 Gilsonite
was discovered in
various parts of the
county and on the
eastern portion of
the Uncompahgre and
Uintah reservations.
Miners quickly persuaded
the federal government
to withdraw 7,000
acres from the Uintah
Reservation so that
they could legally
mine Gilsonite. This
area, called "The
Strip," for a time
lacked any law and
order.
Uintah County's economy
rests on farming,
ranching, and the
removal of oil and
gas. It is increasingly
influenced by worldwide
energy prices.
Uintah High School
located in Vernal
and Union High School,
which serves residents
of both Uintah and
Duchesne County, is
located exactly on
the county boundary
on the eastern edge
of Roosevelt. The
county's largest celebration
is the Outlaw Festival,
a month-long festival
held each summer in
Vernal which celebrates
the Old West traditions
and folklore that
were part of the history
of Uintah County.
Craig
Fuller