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WASHINGTON COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
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LOCATION
GPS Location: 37° 32.117' North, 113° 36.464' West
HISTORY
Jacob Hamblin started a ranch and built a house for his family in 1856 near Mountain Meadows.
As other settlers built homes in the area, the town became known as Hamblin.
Others included Hamblin's two brothers, Dudley, Leavitt, as well as
Jacob Mica Truman, Edwin Westover, Milo Andrus, James Canfield, John Day, and James Holt.
Hamblin was primarily a supply stop for people traveling along the Old Spanish Trail.
The facilities for ranching were good as well as farming land due to the local springs.
Drinking water was procured from a clear spring on a hill above the village
while the irrigation water came from lower springs.
Their homes were built close together along one street with the church and school at the far end.
They made butter and cheese and sold what they could not use to the immigrant trains
which passed by on the old spanish trail on their way to California.
The town site was surveyed in 1873.
Richard Gibbons was the first presiding elder of this branch of the Mormon Church.
The overgrazing, flooding of the gullies and valley and loss of lower springs water
caused the people to leave, many going to Enterprise.
Jacob Hamblin received an Indian mission call from Brigham Young and left for Fort Kanab with his family in 1869.
By 1900 the village had all disappeared.
Hamblin Cemetery and a few foundations of homes are all that remains in this pioneer town.
PHOTOS
Other photos on the web: Photo of a stone marker at the Hamblin Cemetery telling about the history of the town Photo of a Hamblin Township marker 5/20/1942 photo of Lamont Tueller (Iron County Agricultural Agent) inspecting silvicultural practices, raising crested wheatgrass, in the Hamblin Valley. 10/1/2006 photo of power lines near the old Hamblin town site 10/1/2006 photo of the Hamblin Town Site sign 10/1/2006 photo of the road between Hamblin and Enterprise 10/1/2006 photo of Road 769 as it approaches Hamblin REFERENCES
A history of Hamblin
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