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Lee's Ferry photograph collection, 1985

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Webb, Roy
Title
Lee's Ferry photograph collection
Dates
1985
Quantity
9 photographic prints
Collection Number
P0277
Summary
The Lee's Ferry photograph collection contains photographs of the area around Lees Ferry taken by Roy D. Webb.
Repository
University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library
University of Utah
295 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT
84112-0860

Telephone: 8015818863
special@library.utah.edu
Access Restrictions

Twenty-four hour advanced notice encouraged. Materials must be used on-site. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.

Languages
English
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Content Description

The photographs in this collection were taken by Roy Webb on a visit to Lee's Ferry in 1985.

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Historical Note

In March of 1864, pioneer from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) Jacob Hamblin and his men built a raft at the mouth of the Paria and made the first successful crossing at the point on the Colorado that would become Lees Ferry, transporting all fifteen men, their supplies and horses. Hamblin was on a mission to warn the Navajo of northern Arizona to stop making raids into Utah, stealing livestock and threatening LDS expansion. The lands into which the pioneers wanted to move was viewed as "unsettled" territory, theirs for the taking under the precepts of Manifest Destiny, despite millennia of native occupation. Over the next few years, the "war" between the natives and the LDS settlers escalated, with the Paiute beginning to make raids on White settlements as well. In an effort to deflect native threats to their vulnerable southeastern frontier, the LDS posted guards at the Ute Ford/Crossing of the Fathers and at "Pahreah Crossing" (Lees Ferry) in the winter of 1869-1870.

September, 1870, Hamblin guided an expedition from southern Utah to the upper Paria River, and on to Pipe Springs. This notable expedition included Major John Wesley Powell, LDS church President Brigham Young, and LDS leader John D. Lee. As a result of this fortuitous meeting of powerful leaders, John D. Lee was sent to establish a ferry crossing. Lee's new post was also brought about by another factor: his supposed role in a bizarre and violent chapter in Mormon history, the Mountain Meadows Massacre. Lee became the sole Mormon scapegoat for the murder of 120 eastern emigrants and was excommunicated; his relative seclusion at the ferry kept him from other Mormons and the authorities, while the Church of Latter-Day Saints turned a blind eye to the situation.

John D. Lee, a practicing polygamist, as was common at the time, built stone and wooden homes for the two of his families that lived with him, as well as a dam and an irrigation system for farming. The ranch at Lees Ferry was named Lonely Dell due to its austere remoteness. The LDS Church provided the lumber and manpower to build the first real ferryboat at Lees Ferry, the Colorado, first launched on January 11, 1873. Although approach roads on either side of the river had yet to be built, wagonloads of colonists began arriving to be ferried across the Colorado River to begin new lives in LDS settlements in Arizona. Tensions between the settlers and the Navajo began mounting again in 1874, precipitating the construction of a defensive fort, which was soon converted into a trading post, and later a residence, school, and mess hall. This building, the Lees Ferry Fort, is one of the few historic buildings still intact at Lees Ferry.

In 1877, John D. Lee was executed for his role in the massacre, the only member of the LDS Church ever held accountable. Ownership of the ferry operation fell into the hands of Lee's wife, Emma, a capable woman who operated the ferry and farmed the ranch for several years. By this time, the LDS Church was well aware of the importance of Lees Ferry as a link between settlements in Arizona and Utah. In 1879, the Church bought the ferry rights from Emma Lee for $3,000, and sent Warren Marshall Johnson and his plural families to the ferry to take over operations.

Source: Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, NPS website

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Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Use

The library does not claim to control copyright for all materials in the collection. An individual depicted in a reproduction has privacy rights as outlined in Title 45 CFR, part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects). For further information, please review the J. Willard Marriott Library's Use Agreement and Reproduction Request forms.

Preferred Citation

Collection Name, Collection Number, Box Number, Folder Number. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah.

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Administrative Information

Acquisition Information

Gift of Roy D. Webb.

Processing Note

Processed by Roy Webb in 1985.

Related Materials

See also: The Reynold Brown digital photograph collection, The Glen Canyon: A Dam, Water, and the West photograph collection

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Detailed Description of the Collection

  • Description: Lee's Ferry
    • 1: Lonely Dell Ranch, Lee's Ferry, Arizona
    • 2: Looking up Paria River Canyon from front porch of Lonely Dell Ranch house, built by John D. Lee.
    • 3: Emma Lee's Cabin, Lonely Dell Ranch, near Lee's Ferry
    • 4: view up Paria River Canyon from Lonely Dell John D. Lee's Ranch
    • 5: Boiler from steam boat Charles H. Spencer, just downstream from old Ferry site, Lee's Ferry
    • 6: Oldest building at Lee's Ferry, just downstream from old Ferry site.
    • 7: Looking upstream (Colorado River) at old site of Lee's Ferry-Sandy beach on left side of pictures. Dugway visible on right.
    • 8: Boiler brought to Lee's Ferry circa 1900 by Charles H. Spencer
    • 9: E. W. Stevens inscription on oldest house at Lee's Ferry.
    Container: Box 1, Folder 1

Names and Subjects

Corporate Names

  • Lees Ferry (Ariz.)--Photographs

Form or Genre Terms

  • Photographic prints
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