Sunday, March 22, 2020

The Founding of Payson, Utah


The Daughters of the Utah Pioneers Plaque commemorating the Founding of Payson, Utah [1]


The Settlement at Peteetneet Creek, Utah (1850)

“In the Autumn of 1850 President Brigham Young advised a settlement be made on the banks of Peteetneet Creek. [2]

Andrew Jackson Stewart, Sr. writes, “In 1850 we came to Utah.[3] He arrived with his family “in Salt Lake City September 16, 1850. Here he was asked [by Brigham Young] to join the party headed for Peteetneet in central Utah.” [4]

Enroute, he made a survey for other possible settlements, as requested by Brigham Young. [5]

On the evening of October 20, 1850, three families, James Pace, John Courtland Searles and Andrew Jackson Stewart, and two boys, Allison Hill and Nathanial Haws, 17 souls in all, drew up in their wagons and made camp. As winter would soon arrive they immediately began to harvest the wild hay found growing there, made corrals and erected log cabins. The cabins were built from rough hewed cotton-wood logs, chopped along the banks of Peteetneet Creek. Not having a broad-axe they hewed the logs with an ordinary axe. [6]

Andrew Jackson Stewart was accompanied by his wife, Eunice Pease Haws Stewart, and their children: Sarah Catherine Stewart and Andrew Jackson Stewart Jr. Eunice’s brother, Nathaniel Haws, 18, was also with them. [7]

On arriving, the 16 pioneers said they found sagebrush and sunflowers as far as the eye could see. A few cottonwood trees grew on the banks of Peteetneet Creek. [8]

The first work involved cutting poles and building corrals to hold the stock. Andrew Jackson Stewart also made plans to draw a survey of the area, as directed by Brigham Young. [9]

Andrew “then made a survey of the area at Peteetneet,” and he states, “We settled in Payson that year [1850]…” [10] [11]

Another source states:


The first house was built by James Pace, after whom Payson (first spelled Pacen), was named. John Courtland Searle was the possessor of the next building and Andrew J. Stewart the third one. All were built from rough hewed cottonwood logs, chopped along the banks of Peteetneet creek.

The first farm was the forty acres on which Ammon Nebeker’s home now stands near the southeast corner, by Andrew J. Stewart. John Courtland Searle occupied the adjoining forty acres on the north, extending to the “Half Mile Road.” James Pace chose forty acres just east of Stewart’s farm, the land on which stands the clump of trees known as Dixon’s grove. [12]

The men went up the nearby canyon, to fell some trees, which could be used for building fences to hold the livestock. Andrew Jackson Stewart surveyed Payson, as directed by Brigham Young. John Courtland Searle dug the first irrigation ditch in the colony. The ditch was later known for over a hundred years as Ditch #4 in Payson City’s irrigation plan. Wild hay was harvested for winter, to feed the livestock. Log cabins were quickly constructed, on what later became Third North, from Second West to Second East streets. Said the son of James Pace, William Byram Pace, in his journal, ‘We built a double log house with a sod chimney in the middle and were very comfortable. Stewart and Searl turned an Ell to the north. Then we all set up pickets of cottonwood and made a nice little fort so that we wintered nicely.’ Peteetneet Creek, their source of water, ran through the center of the fort. [13]

After traveling through Payson two months later, the Apostle George A. Smith wrote to President Brigham Young:

While we were here waiting for the rear wagons, the people of this place came together and were organized into a branch. (Dec 20, 1850) Brother James Pace was appointed to preside; Brother Andrew J. Stewart was appointed clerk. The branch will be known by the name of the Peteetneet Branch with thirty-five members, old and young. We then gave the saints there such instructions as the spirit directed. We had a first-rate visit and were warmly entertained by Brother Pace and the brethren at this place. [14]

The names of those present at the organization of the Peteetneet Branch [15]

On August 25, 1947, a marker was erected in Payson to commemorate the arrival of the settlers:

Payson was settled Oct. 20, 1850, when a group of Mormons consisting of James Pace, John C. Searle, Andrew J. Stewart with their families, and two boys, Allison Hill and Nathaniel Haws, arrived at the north-western extremity of the city. The creek on which Payson is located, derives its name from the Indian Chief Peteetneet, for whom the town was first named, later changed to "Pacen" in honor of James Pace, hence "Payson".

In mid-March of 1851:


[In 1851] the fort (at Payson) was considered too small and plans were made for enlargement. About the middle of March, Andrew J. Stewart made a new survey.” [16]

“[T]he settlers of Payson decided to enlarge the fort, to accommodate the new arrivals. Andrew Jackson Stewart again surveyed the land.” [17]


Land certificate issued to John B. Fairbanks by Andrew J. Stewart, Utah County surveyor, for land in the Peteetneet survey, April 23, 1853 [18]


Early Days in Payson

On July 4, 1852:


[T]he settlers of Payson celebrated Independence Day with horse races on the flat land above the hill to the south of the fort. Horse races at Payson became a popular annual event from that time, until, eventually, a horse track and grandstand were built. [19]

Originally named after the nearby creek, Peteetneet Creek, the community was incorporated on 21 January 1853. [20]

Andrew’s daughter Eunice Lestra Stewart Morrison (1853-1941) described the early days in Payson and Provo: [21]


In Provo blue clay was used to make sun dried bricks. Lime mortar was used even from the first. My father, Andrew Jackson Stewart, built the first adobe house in both Payson and in Provo.

The first home I lived in was of sawed logs dovetailed together on the corners and spiked into place. The doors were very thick and were reinforced with iron bands.

Tallow candles made from beef tallow and molded in tin molds [were used to light our first home in Utah]. Wood [was used as fuel in our first home].

Clothing was all home made. We used wool mostly, and it was carded, woven and sewed by hand. Cochineal was used for red dye, peach leaves for yellow, indigo for blue, and peach leaves and indigo were combined for green.

Wheat was five dollars a bushel in 1855. Other food was also expensive but I do not remember the prices.

Bears came down Provo River, but deer were not plentiful in the valleys. There were lots of deer in the mountains however. The Indians had kept them pretty well cleaned out of the lower country. We dipped venison and beef in brine and dried it in the sun. We called it jerky. There was a great abundance of trout and other kinds of fish in all the streams. Lots of times the farmers would bring home trout which came down with their irrigation streams.

There was lots of wild hay in the sloughs and swamp land. The cattle could stay out all winter in the foot hills. They ate the long grass which grew in the greasewoods.

Wheat was the first to be planted in this section.

We paid [our teacher] in goods from my father’s store. Eggs, molasses, etc.

My most vivid impression was the lack of food among the early settlers. My own family was more fortunate than many others.

Describing the native Utes she said:

[I] lived around the Indians since infancy in Payson and Provo. [They] lived in teepees made from bear skins, [and] later used cloth. There were a large number of [Indian burial] mounds north of Payson. [22]



Building Fortifications (1853)

A journal entry by Albert King Thurber on July 20, 1853 states:

This morning we learned that A. J. Stewart’s horses were stolen by the Indians during the night from this place (Peteetneet). [23]

In the summer of 1853 Brigham Young instructed the people to build forts for protection from the Indians. [24]

In later years Andrew filled in an “affidavit concerning service in Indian Wars within the State of Utah and of service relating thereto: [25]

On the 22nd day of July 1853, I was enrolled in Company C AO, commanded by Col. George A. Smith; that at said time I was a resident of Payson, Utah County, Utah, and of the age of 34 years; that I was a member of said organization for 35 days…and was honorably released from service with said command on the 25th day of August, 1853.

That during said service in Company C AO under Col. George A. Smith I participated in the following engagements and duties: served as teamster 35 days. [26]

Of the rest of this year Andrew also writes:

In 1853 I was Colonel of [the] Militia and spent five months planning and building forts at the various settlements. [27]

Fort Payson Markers [28]


At the First Annual Exhibition of the Payson Branch of the Deseret Agricultural and Manufacturing Society, held on Sep 25th,1860 in the Payson Social Hall, the Deseret News article states:


On the mechanics table, the horse shoes, nails, wood turning, etc., contributed by Messrs. Sabin, Beebe, Stewart & Co., were all of superior workmanship, and in the opinion of competent judges can not be excelled in the Territory.”

The stock on exhibition was of a superior order, and creditable to the stock breeders in this vicinity. [29]

Nails from the First Nail Factory in Utah Owned by Benjamin Franklin Stewart and Andrew Jackson Stewart [30]


Legacy


Pioneer Day, July 24, 1882, was celebrated in the following manner as reported to the ‘Deseret News’:

‘The people assembled at 10 a.m. at the grove.

After singing and prayer by the Chaplain Thomas Mills, a speech was given by Benjamin F. Stewart, one of the Pioneers; a salute was fired by the Infantry; a speech by A.J. (Andrew Jackson) Stewart, on behalf of the Sunday School; a speech on behalf of the Relief Society, by Mr. Sarah Koontz; a song by Mrs. Keturah Richardson, entitled, “Beatuful Star,” …a speech on behalf of the Y. M. MI association, oration, original poetery, YLMI speech, another speech, singing and prayer by the chaplain. Dancing in the grove for the juveniles. [31]


The historic Payson Opera House. [32]

On October 20, 1891, Andrew was honored as a distinguished guest, along with the three other surviving original settlers of Payson, at a celebration banquet, concert and dancing for Payson’s Pioneer Day at the Opera House. As one of the four surviving original settlers, he gave also gave a “reminiscent speech” on the occasion:


Payson was settled in 1850, just forty-one years ago the 20th of this month, when a little band of Mormon colonists made their way here and squatted down on the banks of Peteete creek, the beautiful little mountain stream flowing out of the cañon near by. Among that little band of pioneers were W. S. Pace, after whom Payson was named, Alison Hill, Courtland Searle and Andrew Jackson Stewart, who are the only survivors of the settling company. They were all very young men then.

Next Tuesday being the 20th and the forty-first return of Payson’s pioneer day, a move has been set on foot to celebrate the event in great style. There is to be a banquet, concert and dancing, the arrangement of which is now being made by a committee of 100 citizens, made up without regard to class distinction. The various sub-committees are hard at work and report everything progressing satisfactorily. Among the distinguished guests of the day will be his Excellency, Governor Arthur L. Thomas; W. S. Pace, Alison Hill, Courtland Searle, Andrew Jackson Stewart, four of the original pioneers; Mayor and City Council, Revs. A. C. Todd and T. R. Smith, and others. An elaborate programme is being prepared about as follows:

At daylight, salute of fifteen guns in honor of first settlers.

At surise a salute of four guns in honor of the four survivors.

At intervals till sundown, salutes to number in all forty-one guns, one each for every year since the settling of the town.[33]

At an event in remembrance of the Indian Wars, the following was published on July 3, 1909:


One of the Veterans. We were pleased to notice, the other day, our old friend Andrew Jackson Stewart, of Benjamin, Utah Co., among the Old Folks who honored the city as its guests. Mr. Stewart is now somewhat over 89 years of age, but he looks young and he intends living, he says, until he becomes as old as Moses was when he was called -- that is 120 years. Bro. Stewart joined the Church in Iowa in 1844, before the Prophet’s martyrdom. He says he was the first to have an outfit ready for the Exodus, and that President Brigham Young was very much pleased with the arrangements he had made. He sent his brother with his outfit but remained behind himself until 1850, when he came to Utah. Here he spent many years surveying and helping to locate the Saints. he held the position of United States deputy surveyor for 35 years. We hope Bro. Stewart will have as many years of life as he wants, and that he may enjoy them to the last.” [34]

At the 1910 60-year anniversary celebration of the founding of Payson, Andrew was honored as one of three surviving founders. A thousand children paraded through the main streets to site where the first camp was pitched on Peteetneet Creek on October 20, 1850.


After the rendition of the “Star-Spangled Banner” by the band an address of welcome was made by Mayor Joseph Reese, in which he presented the keys of the city to the Peteetneet Sons and Daughters of the Utah Pioneers. President G. Frank Pickering of the Society followed with an address of welcome and formally presented the city’s keys to the survivors of the days of settlement.

Each of the three veterans then made a short address, after which they were decorated with garlands of roses… [35]

On the stage of the Opera House that evening:


Andrew Jackson Stewart, 91 years of age, danced an old-fashioned step dance. [36]

Andrew was honored at the Payson Homecoming Jubilee on October 19-22, 1910 as one of the last two surviving founders of Payson.

Since 1984, Payson is the site of the annual Payson Scottish Festival to celebrate the heritage of those of Scottish descent, including the Stewart founders of Payson.


Logo of the Payson Scottish Festival [37]

In 2015, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints dedicated its 146th operating Temple in Payson.


The Payson, Utah Temple. [38]










[1] Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum, Payson 10 North 600 East Payson, UT 84651.

[2] The Payson Story, Payson Centennial publication, 1950, p. 1.

[3] Andrew Jackson Stewart, Dictation.
[4] (The Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia , page 308).). Another source indicates they arrived in the Salt Lake Valley on September 15th.
[5] (The Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia , page 308).
[6] The Payson Story, Payson Centennial publication, 1950, p. 1.
[7] Utah History.
[8] Utah History.
[9] Peteetneet Town: A History of Payson Utah, p. 2.
[10] The Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia , page 308.
[11] Andrew Jackson Stewart, Dictation.
[12] https://catalog.lds.org/assets?id=621848f3-e07d-49aa-be00-754659aa248e&crate=0&index=112
[13] Utah History.
[14] The Payson Story, Payson Centennial publication, 1950, p. 2.
[15] https://catalog.lds.org/assets?id=621848f3-e07d-49aa-be00-754659aa248e&crate=0&index=10
[16] Peteetneet II by Madoline Cloward Dixon.
[17] Utah History.
[18] Church History Library, MS 8795. https://catalog.churchofjesuschrist.org/record?id=6f2ffb8f-8838-4850-a323-012230d9325f&view=browse&subView=arrangement
[19] Utah History.
[20] https://collections.lib.utah.edu/details?id=420115
[21] Interview dated November 1, 1936.
[22] Eunice Lestra Stewart Morrison (1853-1941) interview.
[23] Treasures of Pioneer History, p. 294.
[24] Memories that live: Utah County Centennial History p. 184
[25] In 1909.
[26] http://images.archives.utah.gov/cdm/ref/collection/2217/id/12668
[27] Andrew Jackson Stewart, Dictation.
[28] Located at the southeast corner of Utah Avenue and 2nd East in Payson.

[30] Daughter of the Utah Pioneers Museum, Payson.
[31] Benjamin Ward Manuscript History and Historical Reports, LR 662 2 Microfilm, Church History Library. (Des. News 31:463)
[32] https://www.heraldextra.com/news/local/historic-buildings-still-standing-in-payson/collection_6cf0e745-4a80-59bc-a404-a1589aca6965.html#6
[33] The Daily Tribune, Monday, October 19, 1891.
[34] News Editorial (Unknown paper). 3 July 1909.
[35] https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=10488270&q=%22andrew+jackson+stewart%22
[36] https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/details?id=10488270&q=%22andrew+jackson+stewart%22
[37] http://www.paysonscottishfestival.org/
[38] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4c/Payson_Utah_Temple_2014-11-28.jpg

Sunday, March 15, 2020

The Provo West Coop: The 2nd Site for the First Store in Provo (1860-1869)

The Provo West Coop on Center Street, originally the store of Andrew Jackson Stewart from 1860-1869 [1]

As early as 1853, Andrew Jackson Stewart, Sr. and his wife Eunice Pease Quinby Stewart ran the first store in Provo from their home, which was adjacent to the Public Square. In 1855 and 1856-1858, Andrew served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Eunice ran the business during his absence. [2]



The Stewart Home at 55 South 500 West, the first store in Pioneer Provo [3]

Upon returning from his mission to Australia in October 1858, Andrew resumed merchandising in Provo. [4] During his absence, the Utah Territory had been occupied by the US Army under General Johnston, based at Camp Floyd. Andrew saw this as a business opportunity and began trading with soldiers at the fort to obtain goods from the East in exchange for provisions and other necessities.


A.J. had some rather extensive business dealings with members of Johnston’s Army and was evidently told by Brigham Young to sell his pigs to them for $6.00 a piece, but to others for two. [5]

Camp Floyd in 1859 [6]

To expand and separate his business from his residence, Andrew obtained a property for a new store. The Deseret News of September 27, 1860 reports under “Improvements at Provo”:


Mr. A. J. Stewart is building a large store on Centre street. [7]

Once the building was completed, Andrew transferred his merchandising business from his Provo house to the new building, located at 466 West Center Street. Tullidge’s 1883 history of Utah describes it as “the first store of any importance in Utah County.” [8]

The earliest mention of the building in use is in 1861:

On May 4, 1861 the trustees and teachers of the Utah County schools held a convention in the new building that Benjamin Franklin and his brother Andrew Jackson had built in Provo. [9]

The withdrawal of the U.S. Army from Camp Floyd in July 1861 proved to be economically advantageous for Andrew:



When the army was leaving Camp Floyd, he purchased a great many horse and mule shoes, over a thousand wagons, guns and a great many other things, and engaged for a time in extensive wholesale and retail merchandising at Provo. [10]

Andrew and Eunice ran the store continued to run the store until Eunice passed away.


On June 30, 1868 his wife Eunice passed away with a severe case of pneumonia. She had never been robust, but was a capable manager and financier, helping her husband to accumulate and manage his property well. She was forty-three at the time of her death. [11]



 This 2003 photo shows the Provo West Coop building with the original 1890 trim at the top, which has since been removed. [12]

Around 1869 Andrew left the merchandising business and sold the store to the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Church opened the Provo West Cooperative Mercantile Institution in the structure, better known as the “Provo West Co-op.” Around 1890 the building was remodeled to its current form.

The historic site plaque on the Provo West Coop building.

The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 21, 1996, and a plaque on the front reads:


Constructed c.1866 and remodeled c.1890, this building is historically significant as one of the oldest extant examples of stores that were developed in the cooperative merchandising movement sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the late 1800s.  The cooperative system was devised by LDS church leaders in order to encourage trading among church members and to combat the increasing outflow of financial resources to non-Mormon businesses.  In 1869, this cooperative movement had its start in Provo with the formation of the Provo Cooperative Institution, which was later known as the East Co-op. The West Co-op was established later that same year in this building, which had been purchased from A.J. Stewart, a Provo merchant, who had built it about three years earlier.

Note: The year of construction ca. 1866 on the plaque and on the National Registry is incorrect as documented in the earlier statements; the correct year of construction is 1860, and this error has been communicated to The National Register of Historic Places: Division of State History.

The current structure is described as follows:

A two-story painted brick building, the Provo West Co-op is in relatively good condition today. The inside of the Co-op consists of wood and adobe. One bay deep and three bays wide, Tuscan columns built on pedestals surround the entryway, and the Victorian Eclectic style detail is evident in the double hung sash windows on the second floor. Dentils and consoles are symmetrically aligned on the cornice. Although changes have been made and the building does not retain its original integrity, it still preserves much of the character of the buildings of the late 1800s. [13]

The building is currently occupied by Foxglove, "a full service flower and gift shop located in historic downtown Provo, Utah." [14]



[2] Memories that live: Utah County Centennial History p. 125
[4] Tullidge’s Vol. 3
[5] From a recorded interview by Hal G. Ferguson with children of Otto Ren Stewart.
[6] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/67/CampFloyd1.jpg
Correspondence. “Improvements at Provo.” The Deseret News, 26 Sept. 1860.
[8] Tullidge’s Quarterly Magazine, Volume 3.
[10] From his Obituary. Memories that live: Utah County Centennial History p. 124
[11] Biography by Granddaughter Ida Christmas Stewart Peay.