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Show Fruf Trees at Capitol Reef Carryover From Pioneer Settlement By George Davidson (EDITOR'S NOTE: Davidson is a park ranger responsible for the public information program at Capitol Reef National Park) CAPITOL REEF NATIONAL PARK Visitors to Capitol Reef National Park are often curious about the thousands of fruit trees that lie within a mile or two of the visitor center. These trees apple, peach, cherry, apricot, mulberry, even Potawatamee Plum are the most obvious reminder of the pioneer community that once prospered in the narrow valley of the Fremont River. Settlement came late to south-central Utah; the Capitol Reef area wasn't chartered by credible explorers until 1871. In the last half of that decade, Latter Day Saints (Mormon) settlers moved into the high plateau lands west of Capitol Reef and established communities based on short-season farming and grazing. They then looked to the east, along the corridor of water snaking through the soaring cliffs and domes of the Waterpocket Fold the Fremont River. The origin of the little community at the junction of the Frwnont River and Sulphur Creek is obscure. The first "resident" may have been an 1879 squatter by the name of Franklin Young, but the first landholder of record was Niels Johnson. Others soon followed and the community that sprang up became known as "Junction." The Fremont River was the key to life; without irrigation, farming would have been impossible. Unlike some of the other small settlements that grew up further downriver Aldrich, Caineville, Blue Valley Junction was usually spared the more extreme With the sheer, colorful rocks in the background, Capitol Reef National Park' worker prunes,, tree at. orchard. to assure continued quality in fruit bearing there. Older trees are removed and new ones planted regularly. devastation caused downriver by frequent flooding. The orchards of her residents prospered and before the turn of the century Junction was known as "the Eden of Wayne County." In 1900 the name of the little settlement was changed to "Fruita." The settlement never incorporated. Local authority such as it was was vested in the Mormon "presiding Elder." The population averaged about 10 families. Although it became widely known in south-central Utah for its orchards, Fruita residents also grew sorghum (for syrup and molasses), vegetables and alfalfa. Fruit growers usually picked the fruit prior to maturation and hauled it by the wagonload to bigger towns like Price and Richfield and beyond. This was a formidable undertaking when one considers that in 1901 it took the Mormon Bishop of Torrey more than an hour and a half to travel the nine miles between Fruita and Torrey in the best weather. If the road between Torrey and Fruita was-difficult, the "road" between Fruita and Hanksville 37 miles east was nearly impossible. In 1883, residents of Fruita (then Junction) had built a passage through Capitol Gorge that extended to Caineville and Hanksville. This primitive roadway was called the "Blue Dugway" and it served to connect the river settlements with the rest of Utah until after World War II. This narrow wagon track: was so difficult, however, that the little communities remained some of the most isolated in America until the mid-20th century. Along the Fremont River, barter served as the means for acquiring goods and services; cash was in short supply. Although some Fruita men worked on the state roads, annual fruit sales remained the major , source of cash income. The one-room schpolhouse, constructed by residents in 1896, served also as t. community center. The desks were movable and the community enjoyed dances and box socials in the little building. Residents also held church activities there as well as in private homes. Women often quilted together and men and boys were especially fond of baseball. "Putting up" foods was not a hobby in Fruita; it was essential for survival through the winter. Well into the modern era, farming techniques in Fruita remained in the 19th century. It was not until World War 11 that the first tractor was purchased. Fifty years ago, Fruita was spared much of the anguish that the great depression brought to other com- munities in America. Long reliance on barter as the main method of obtaining basic life needs sheltered the Fremont River settlers from the cash drought that plagued the nation. Contrary to what one might imagine. Fruita sheltered passionate supporters of Franklin D. Roosevelt as well as more conservative "Hooverites." Althoueh it wasn't recoenized at the (Continued on Page 6) Just as easy as pie cherry pie, that is, as woman climbs ladder to reach the sweet fruit at Capitol Ileef National Park orchard. Hundreds of persons anually harvest crops from the vast orchards. Fru7 Trees af Capitol Reef Carryover From Pioneer Settlement (Continued from Page 1) time, the establishment of Capitol Reef National Monument in 1937 would become a tolling bell for the Fruita community. After World War II, visitors began to arrive in increasing numbers; the road from Richfield to nearby Torrey was paved in 1940. In 1952, the pavement was extended to Fruita; the world had found the Capitol Reef country. As visitation to the monument increased in the post war years, the National Park Service (NPS) determined to purchase all the Fruita property still in private hands. By the late 1960s most of this had been accomplished on a "willing seller -willing buyer" basis. Many of the residence structures and outbuildings were razed. Although most of the structures of the Fruita settlement are gone (with the exception of the restored schoolhouse, the Pendleton-Gifford house and barn and a few others), the orchards remain and dominate the landscape. The new general management plan for Capitol Itecf National Park cites the value of the orchards as "historical landscape" and affirms the resolve of the NPS to preserve the. The orchards all owned by the Untied States are maintained at a level of about 2,500 trees with 1,800 "in production." A small crew is kept busy year-round with prunning, irrigation, replanting and spraying. As each fruit crop comes into season, the fruit (apples, cherries, peaches, apricots and pears) is made available to the public on a "pick your own" basis. The park superintendent sets the per pound or bushel price after checking local commercial orchard prices. Although he may take the isolation of Fruita into consideration in setting prices, he is not permitted to undercut private enterprise. Management of the orchards, especially during picking season, presents some difficult problems to resolve. Because the trees were planted as smallish family orchards originally each with a wide variety of fruit fruit ripens in many "mini-orchards" at varying times. It is very difficult for park rangers to "open" orchards for picking in small "penny packets" and still exercise the control needed to protect the trees from damage and pickers from unsafe acts. However, as trees become overage, horticultural workers are slowly replacing the patchwork quilt-like layout of the orchards with a more orderly arrangement consisting of large tracts of monocultures, e.g., all peaches in one large orchard, all apricots in another large orchard, etc. In this way, the gross aspect of the "historical landscape" will be maintained but the fruit harvest will be much easier to manage. For both visitors and regional residents, Fruita will continue to be the "Eden of Wayne County" into 2001 and beyond. |