This
month communities from Arizona to Idaho celebrate the arrival of the
Mormon pioneers into the Salt Lake Valley on July 24, 1847. “Pioneer
Day” was an established legal holiday in Idaho for thirty years from
1912 to 1942, but was dropped during the 1943 legislative session
in a wartime initiative to reduce the number of legal holidays.
For more than half a century after Lewis and Clark entered what is
now Idaho at Lemhi Pass on August 12, 1805, the only white men who
lived in the Idaho wilderness were a few fur traders and missionaries.
Fort Henry, near St. Anthony, was established by Andrew Henry in 1810
as the first American fur post west of the Rockies.
The
first expedition to enter southern Idaho was not Mormon pioneers,
but a group led by fur trapper Wilson Price Hunt. In hopes of blazing
a trail from St. Louis to Astoria, Oregon, the Hunt party arrived
at Fort Henry on October 8, 1811. Hunt named the North Fork of the
Snake and its lake headwaters for Henry. The inscription, "For
Henry, 1811, by Hunt,'' was found on rocks unearthed over a century
later near Egin Bench.
At Fort Henry, Hunt’s party built canoes out of cottonwood trees, intending to navigate the
Snake River. Local Indians warned
them that the river was treacherous, but Hunt decided to let the horses
run loose, and descended the river by canoe. They traveled for nine
days before they hit rapids. One man was killed as the waters of the
Snake River tore his canoe to pieces. The party decided to abandon
the water route and continue the expedition by foot.
Thousands
of emigrants crossed southern Idaho over the Oregon and California
Trails in search of new farmlands or gold mines, but none of them
settled in Idaho. Then, in 1860, thirteen Mormon families from Cache
Valley, Utah, loaded wagons with all of their earthly possessions
and settled Idaho’s oldest city, Franklin. These early Mormon
pioneers thought they were still in Utah Territory. It was not until
a survey was conducted twelve years later that the settlers discovered
they were in the southeast corner of Idaho.
Under
the direction of LDS Church President Brigham Young groups of pioneers would go on to settle the majority of towns
in Southeastern Idaho. Mormon settlers from Northern Utah started
scouting out the Upper Snake River Valley as early as 1855. Then,
during the summer of 1879, Stephen Winegar and his four sons, George,
Willis, Leonard and John, put up the first log shelter in Egin, Fremont County’s first settlement. They cut and stacked the
wild hay in the river bottoms.
Thomas E. Ricks led a group from Logan to the present
site of Rexburg in 1883. The land was surveyed and laid out
in 10-acre lots and the first log cabin was constructed at the spot
where the courthouse now stands.

St. Anthony, which has one of the most impressive
Pioneer Day parades in the country, was not settled by Mormon pioneers.
In 1890, Carlos H. Moon built a store and a home on the Henry's Fork
of the Snake River and named the town St. Anthony because the area
reminded him of the Falls of St. Anthony on the Mississippi River
in Minnesota. In 1895 Carlos Moon deeded his land to Frank W.
Ross, who filed the townsite plat. In 1899, St. Anthony was incorporated
into a village and then a city in 1925.
In
1901, 640 acres were bought for the Ashton townsite from George
Harrigfeld, R.E. McGavin and Asa Hendricks. The first train arrived
there in 1906 and stage lines took passengers on to the western Yellowstone
Park entrance.
Joseph
Curr, first settler of Fall River, which was later named Chester,
arrived in 1885. James Siddoway was Teton's first resident.
He put in a water wheel and with William Naylor built the Teton Flour
Mill.
The
Birch brothers, Thomas, Edward, James, Dave, Robert, Jack and William,
arrived from Utah in 1883 to settle in Wilford. The Parker
townsite, named for Wyman W. Parker, was created in June 1883.
On
August 27, 1903, a group of men from Salt Lake City, led by Joseph
F. Smith, formed the Sugar City Townsite Company. Their intention
was to build a $750,000 sugar beet factory. The charter stated that,
“no intoxicating liquors shall ever be sold or otherwise disposed
of, nor shall gambling or prostitution ever be permitted.” To my knowledge,
Sugar City residents still maintain that standard.
The
Upper Snake River Valley was one of the last areas settled in this
nation because of its severe climate. Our Founding Fathers were not
only pioneers but strong and courageous leaders. May we honor them
this Pioneer Day as we reflect upon the rich pioneer heritage that
so strongly influenced the early development of this remarkable Idaho
valley in which we are privileged to live.