- Kelton, Utah
Kelton is a
ghost town , just north of theGreat Salt Lake , in the Park Valley area of Box Elder County,Utah ,United States . The town was inhabited during the period 1869–1942. Once an important section station on theFirst Transcontinental Railroad , Kelton was dependent on the railroad throughout its history.History
The site was first settled, under the name of "Indian Creek", when the mostly-Chinese work crew of the
Central Pacific Railroad arrived onApril 12 1869 , less than a month before the driving of thegolden spike . When thepost office was established here onDecember 16 1869 , it was named "Kelton" after an early stockman. [cite book | last = Huchel | first = Frederick M. | title = A History of Box Elder County | series = Utah Centennial County History Series | year = 1999 | month = January | publisher = Utah State Historical Society | location =Salt Lake City, Utah | pages = p.358 | isbn = 0-913738-16-6] It quickly grew into a prosperous town, soon including several fine hotels, stores, homes, a whole row of saloons and gambling halls, and even atelephone exchange .cite book | last = Thompson | first = George A. | title = Some Dreams Die: Utah's Ghost Towns and Lost Treasures | year = 1982 | month = November | publisher = Dream Garden Press | location = Salt Lake City | isbn = 0-942688-01-5 | pages = p.144–145]Kelton was ideally positioned to link the railroad to the large northern markets:
Oregon ,Idaho , andMontana . Already by the summer of 1869 astagecoach route was established between Kelton andBoise, Idaho . By 1871 the Kelton Freight Road was the best road leading into southwestern Idaho. cite book | last = Jones | first = Larry | title = Kelton Road | month = January | year = 1972 | series =Idaho State Historical Society Reference Series 74 | url = http://www.idahohistory.net/Reference%20Series/0074.pdf | format =PDF | accessdate = 2007-12-07 ] In the 1870s and early 1880s, the Wells Fargo stage line running between Kelton and severalgold mine s in Idaho and Montana was robbed more often than any other stage line in the Old West. Treasure hunters still search for the hundreds of thousands of unrecovered dollars rumored to be cached in the nearbyCity of Rocks .The importance of the freight road waned as the
Oregon Short Line Railroad and theUtah Northern Railroad pushed into Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. By July 1884 the stage route was defunct, but Kelton still had the transcontinental railroad. Even that was taken away in 1903–1904, when the main line was relocated to the south to a route called theLucin Cutoff , across the Great Salt Lake itself. Kelton's former section was relegated to a mere backup line, used in case of high water, and to service local farmers and ranchers.cite book | last = Carr | first = Stephen L. | coauthors = Edwards, Robert W. | title = Utah Ghost Rails | year = 1990 | month = March | publisher = Western Epics | location = Salt Lake City | pages = pp.13,15 | isbn = 0-914740-34-2] There was so little traffic on the line that the weekly local train would often stop for a half hour ofrabbit hunting .cite book | last = Carr | first = Stephen L. | title = The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns | edition = 3rd edition | origyear = 1972 | origmonth = June | year = 1986 | publisher = Western Epics | location = Salt Lake City | pages = p.11 | isbn = 0-914740-30-X]On the morning of
March 12 1934 , Kelton was hit by the most powerfulearthquake ever recorded in Utah. At a magnitude of 6.6 and an intensity of VIII, the so-called Hansel Valley quake and itsaftershock s might have been devastating in a densely-populated area, but only two people were killed. [cite web | url = http://earthquake.usgs.gov/regional/states/events/1934_03_12.php | title = Historic Earthquakes | work = Earthquake Hazards Program | publisher =United States Geological Survey | accessdate = 2007-12-05] Great fissures and holes opened in the earth, muddy water gushing from them. [Huchel, p.247.] Houses and other buildings were severely shaken, and the Kelton schoolhouse was left leaning at such a precarious angle that it had to be abandoned.As late as 1937 Kelton was still an important local shipping point, and a population of 47 remained. The final death blow came suddenly, when the
Southern Pacific Railroad completely dismantled the old railway line in a week,July 1 1942 –July 8 1942 , and contributed the hardware to the war effort. The last residents of Kelton left, taking some of the houses with them. Nothing remains but some ruins, fallen buildings and abandoned foundations, and a deteriorating cemetery. The railroad grade is still clearly visible, although many of thetrestle s are falling down.References
External links
* [http://www.prospector-utah.com/kelton.htm Kelton photos] by Randy W. Lewis
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