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Josephites
In 1866 a splinter group of Mormons, led by one of the sons of Joseph Smith, came to Malad City, seeking a community far enough away from Salt Lake City not to cause friction but close enough to allow missionary work. They formed the Josephites, the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, which still exists.

Grain elevator east of Twin Springs, along the Hudspeth Cutoff, (June, 1992).
Garden Creek Gap, looking west from west of Arimo. Garden Creek meanders through the narrow defile cut in hard east-dipping quartzite of the Scout Mountain Member of the Late Proterozoic Pocatello Formation. The stream is superposed, that is, it established its course on a cover of valley fill above the present level of the quartzite ridge. Vegetated stripes near the top of the slope north of the gap are normal faults, dropping the rocks down to the east, toward Marsh Valley, (august, 1982). Near here in July, 1994 supermodel Niki Taylor married Matthew Martinez, a McCammon man. Super-supermodel Cindy Crawford was among the wedding guests.

Indian Settlement at Washakie
After the Bear River Massacre in 1863, the Shoshoni Indians, with help of the LDS church, made a permanent settlement in Malad Valley. Chief Sagwitch, wounded at the massacre, lived to join the LDS church and is buried at Washakie 2 miles west of the Malad River south of Malad City.

Holbrook
The Holbrook valley, only fifteen miles west of Malad City, but drier and less hospitable, was settled in 1878, 30 years after the Pioneers entered the Salt Lake Valley. But the big rush of homesteading did not come until about 1895. The main growth was 1901-1907.

Holbrook did not get electricity until 1946. Today its homesteads are largely abandoned. Dry farming for grain and cattle grazing are the primary agricultural activities.

References

  1. Beus, S.S., 1968, Paleozoic stratigraphy of Samaria Mountain,Idaho Utah: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, v. 52, p.782-808.

  2. Eliason, Carol, and Hubbard, Mary, 1987, Holbrook and surrounding areas history book 1878-1987: Holbrook, Idaho, 491 p.

  3. Gittins, H. Leigh, 1976, Idaho's Gold Road: Moscow, Idaho, The University Press of Idaho, 165 p.

  4. Haines, A.L., ed., 1965, Osborne Russell's Journal of a Trapper: University of Nebraska Press, p. 124.

  5. Harstad, P.T., editor, 1972, Reminiscences of Oscar Sonnenkalb, Idaho Surveyor and Pioneer: Pocatello, Idaho, The Idaho State University Press, 66 p.

  6. Hope, A.C., 1990, Hudspeth Cutoff, Idaho's legacy of Wheels: Idaho Falls, Idaho, Bookshelf Bindery and Press, P.O. Box 2204, Idaho Falls, Idaho, 222 p.

  7. Howell, Glade F., 1960, Early history of Malad Valley: M.A. Thesis, Department of History, Brigham Young University, 130 p.

  8. Kerns, G.L., and Kerns, R.L., Jr., editors, 1985, Orogenic patterns and stratigraphy of north-central Utah and southeastern Idaho: Utah Geological Association Publication 14, 328 p.

  9. Link, P.K., and Smith, L.H., 1992, Late Proterozoic and Early Cambrian stratigraphy, paleobiology, and tectonics: Northern Utah and southeastern Idaho: in Wilson, J.R., editor, Field Guide to Geologic Excursions in Utah and Adjacent Areas of Nevada, Idaho, and Wyoming: Utah Geological Survey Miscellaneous Publication 92-3, p. 461-481.


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