Utah Adventure, Part 2

I’m now well into the Utah trip and we’ve shifted our focus from the mountains to the desert.


Golden Spike National Historic Site

The Golden Spike National Historic Site marks the point of completion of the first transcontinental railroad across the United States in 1869. It’s in the middle of nowhere. I am not exaggerating (map). The nearest major road is about twenty five miles away and I found myself surrounded by complete emptiness upon arriving at the park.

Significance

The Central Pacific Railroad built from the west while the Union Pacific Railroad built from the east. Their meeting in northern Utah launched celebrations nationwide. It became perhaps the first national media sensation. Reporters transmitted progress relentlessly via telegraph during construction, and covered it in newspapers coast-to-coast.

In that one moment, travel times across North America dropped from months to days. The so-called Golden Spike gained particular significance as the ceremonial “final” spike connecting the two lines.

Of Particular Note

I observed at least two oddities, albeit perhaps more historical than geographical.

First, the history books that many of us used during our school days were wrong. I’d always heard about this event taking place at Promontory Point. However, Promontory Point is the tip of the peninsula that juts into the Great Salt Lake, some forty miles to the south. This event actually took place at Promontory Summit, the highest rise of the valley extending through the Promontory Mountains (map).

Big Fill Loop Trail; Promontory, Utah. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
The “Big Fill”

Second, the two railroads were competing against each other and this led to some dysfunctional behavior. They each received huge financial incentives and land grants for every mile of track. Obviously it was in their respective self-interests to build as quickly as possible to lay more track and gain more money and land than their rival. However they couldn’t agree on where to meet so their construction teams graded, cut and filled paths directly past each other well out in advance of track work. They were each trying to squeeze every last mile to their own advantage.

We hiked through some of these dueling paths which were ridiculously close to each other. I could have thrown a stone easily from one to the other. The government had to step in and declare Promontory Summit as the final spot or the two sides probably would have kept on going indefinitely.


Rocket Park

I got some great ideas for sites to visit from the loyal readers of Twelve Mile Circle. One of the most interesting came from Marc Alifanz who recommended the ATK Rocket Park. He suggested that I should combine the rockets with the Golden Spike site, and he was absolutely correct. It added maybe five minutes of extra travel time.

This used to be the Morton Thiokol rocket park but it’s now part of the ATK Launch Systems Group. They run a huge facility in the middle of the Utah desert, which I imagine would be for safety reasons given the volatility of rocket testing. Out front they display a large sample of rockets they’ve produced for the United States government.

It’s not something I’d travel hours out of my way to see but we were already in the middle of nowhere and it was practically no detour at all. Thanks for the great suggestion, Marc. The kids loved it, as did I.

Also, if I haven’t completely bored you with my videos yet, I finally uploaded one for a site in the previous installment: a video from Timpanogos Cave National Monument.


The Interstate 84 Oddity

I discovered this oddity along Interstate 84 as I searched for driving routes in advance of our trip.

This occurs just east of Ogden, Utah. Heading westbound, drivers remain in Weber County (pronounced Wee-ber, oddly enough) while eastbound drivers remain in Davis County. Here I-84 straddles both banks of the Weber River which marks the boundary between the two counties. The anomaly lasts for more than a mile.

Interstate 84 in Utah split by two counties. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

A special thanks goes to my wife who was a good sport and took this photograph even though she thought it was supremely silly. This view is westbound, so we are in Weber County. The tractor-trailer on the hillside is in Davis County.


Pioneer Day

The 2011 Pioneer Day Parade in Ogden, Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

I had no idea we were planning to come to Utah during their Pioneer Day holiday. In fact I’d never heard of it before. It’s an official state holiday held each July 24 (or this year on July 25 because the 24th fell on a Sunday) that celebrates the arrival of the first Mormon Pioneers on July 24, 1847. To me, as an outsider, if feels like the Utah equivalent of the 4th of July: lots of fireworks; parades; patriotic displays and the like.

There are religious undertones but with plenty of secular trappings as well. Anyone who arrived in the Salt Lake Valley between 1847 and the coming of the transcontinental railroad is considered a pioneer for these purposes, and that is the heritage being celebrated here. Not every early settler was a Mormon. This is how it they rationalize it as a secular State holiday.

We did learn about this event early enough in our travel planning to take it into account. Everything is closed for the holiday so instead of sitting around wondering what to do, we decided to partake in as many Pioneer Day activities as possible. The rodeo in Ogden was particularly enjoyable.


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Comments

4 responses to “Utah Adventure, Part 2”

  1. Marc Avatar
    Marc

    Glad you liked the Rocket Park! When I stumbled upon it a few years ago it just seemed like such a random thing to find literally in the middle of nowhere.

  2. Peter Avatar

    Rocket Park sounds fun to visit, unless of course the adjacent too-dangerous-for-populated-places factory happens to blow up during your visit 🙂

    1. Twelve Mile Circle Avatar

      I did notice that they had a series of huge earthen berms between the facility and the road… don’t know how effective they would be or whether they were for show.

  3. Dale Sanderson Avatar

    The bit about Promontory being the location of the final spike in the first transcontinental railroad is so ingrained in our country’s culture that it’ll probably never be corrected, but… the fact is, when that spike was nailed, that RR line had no bridge over the Missouri, and the west terminus was at Sacramento. Hardly transcontinental. The final spike in the first truly transcontinental RR was actually pounded in at Strasburg, Colorado about a year later. There’s a very little-known museum at the site: http://www.cchscolorado.com/

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