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Tag Archives: Utah

Silver Reef Museum

If you are looking for a fun stop near Zion National Park you definitely want to check out Silver Reef Museum in Leeds, Utah. You can read about visiting Zion National Park here. Located a short way off the Leeds exit from Highway I-15, the museum is housed in the original 19th century Wells Fargo & Company Express Building, one of a few that are not only still standing but also remain in use. Opened in 1877, the Wells Fargo building is on the National Register of Historic Buildings.

This post contains affiliate links, and I may earn compensation when you click on the links at no additional cost to you. All opinions are my own though.

A unique museum in an historic building

We enjoyed learning how the rarest and richest silver was discovered and mined. Our guide was an older gentleman, a local who wore western clothing (I think he was supposed to look like Sherrif Sam Elliot) and told a lot of interesting stories. Since he was from the area he spoke of his personal experiences. You can see him in the video below. He was very knowledgeable and quite passionate about the history of the area. He showed us examples of tools and machinery that was used and explained some of the challenges the people had to overcome back when the town was thriving.

This ghost town of Silver Reef was once called Bonanza Town.

The quality of life in what used to be called Bonanza Town was once thriving. The land value there was the highest in the country, and they had the richest silver producing mines to date in all of America. The silver was extracted from rare, unbelievable ore. The guide takes you through the mine and explains how the silver was extracted. This is the only place where silver was discovered in sandstone.

The Silver Reef Museum also gives tours to school groups.

Inside the museum you feel like you are stepping into the past. There is an original safe from the 1800’s. There are artifacts and antiques from the true Wild West, showing all aspects of pioneer life in southern Utah. The museum is well-maintained and clean. There is also a great gift shop with cool things like jewelry and artwork – not cheesy tourist junk.

Stagecoach etiquette from the days of the Wild West

There used to be a real live (staged) shootout on the fourth Friday of the month, but this has been put on hold. There are walking trails outside. You can pick up a pamphlet in the museum and read about the numbered sites along the way. There is a mining machine yard right outside of the museum, and I could just imagine the place when it was full of life back in the day. There is no shade though, so if you plan to walk around a long time you will want to bring sunscreen and some water.

Mining machine yard outside of the Silver Reef Museum
This building next to the Silver Reef Museum is a replica of the original restaurant.
A genuine snake oil advertisement from Silver Reef in Utah.

Admission was only $3, and you can easily spend two hours there. It is worth the stop when you are in the area. We enjoyed it!

Here are some resources that will help you plan your trip to Utah or anywhere else. If you click through my links you will be able to access the best and most current prices and deals. These are companies that I trust and I think will be the most helpful to you as you plan.

Book a Flight

If you are not within close driving distance to your destination you will need to book a flight. I don’t know if you have heard of this company yet, but with Skyscanner you can find cheap flights anywhere in the world. The website is super easy to use, and if you use my link above you will be able to compare flights and prices and have a seat booked without all the hassle of multiple website searches. Skyscanner is awesome!

Book a Room

Hotels.com has great deals on National Park lodging. They are very reliable. If you want to see tons of reviews on places to stay, TripAdvisor has over 150 million reviews and opinions of hotels, restaurants, attractions, and more by travelers like you and me.

Book a Car

You could go through individual rental car companies if you want, but if you check out TripAdvisor they have great comparisons. Also, if you book hotel and rental car together it is oftentimes cheaper.

Luggage

If you are needing new luggage for your trip check out some really awesome deals on good quality luggage at Chester Travels.

Travel Insurance

One of the worst things is to be out of town and have something bad happen. Accidents, unexpected mishaps, and other troubles can and do happen. But if you are prepared you can have peace of mind. That’s why getting travel insurance is a great idea. And it does not cost that much. Travel insurance can help you deal with theft, health issues, and other troubles. I recommend World Nomads. The people at World Nomads are passionate travelers themselves, so they know what can happen. The link above will take you to their very best deals.

Most of all, have fun!

Please leave a comment below. Have you been to Utah?

Ghost Town Grafton

On our recent trip from Zion National Park back to Las Vegas where we were catching our flight home we decided to explore a ghost town in the small town of Grafton, Utah. As we followed our GPS, and the paved road turned to gravel we started to feel like we were really out in the middle of nowhere. We passed one or two houses on the way and tried to keep our speed slow so as not to kick up dust and make a lot of noise, but it was hard not to on that bumpy road. For about two miles more we saw no houses at all and wondered if we were going in the right direction. It was sort of creepy, and the banjo music from the Robert Duvall movie “Deliverance” kept playing in my head.

Ghost Town Grafton, Utah
Abandoned home in Grafton, Utah Ghost Town

This post contains affiliate links, and I may earn a commission if you click the links at no additional cost to you. All opinions are my own.

How to Get There

Grafton is right outside of Zion National Park and is reached from the tiny town of Rockville along Highway 9. Going south on a residential street called Bridge Lane, you cross the Virgin River on an old historic single-track iron bridge (constructed in 1924), and then west, along the base of the rugged low red cliffs of Moenkopi sandstone that stand guard over this beautiful lush green river valley.

After 1 1/2 miles the main road curves back south, goes up into the hills, and becomes the Smithsonian Butte Road, a 9-mile scenic back highway through mesas, canyons, and valleys that eventually meets Highway 59. At the point where Bridge Lane curves south, an unpaved road continues for another two miles to the actual ghost town.

After the two miles of dirt road, we finally came up to a clearing and saw an old graveyard. What made it so eerie was how completely quiet and isolated it was out there in the middle of the Utah cliffs and valleys. It seemed surreal that real people were actually buried there so long ago.

It was perfectly still except for a slight breeze, and there was not a soul in sight. We were completely alone out there … or were we? The silence only made the place seem even more creepy. Someone had placed pinwheels randomly in the ground, and they made an eerie whirring sound when the breeze picked up. We saw that the gate was unlocked so we went in. Isn’t that what Nancy Drew would do? It was incredible reading the epitaphs on the headstones from so long ago.

Grafton Cemetery
Grafton Cemetery

Grafton Cemetery

The old cemetery contains a few dozen graves from as old as 1860 to 1910. The headstone inscriptions tell a story of a very harsh life long ago. I learned that three Berry brothers and one wife were all killed by Indians on April 2, 1866. The Berry memorial is the largest one. It sits in the very center of the graveyard enclosed by a wooden fence for protection.

Grafton Ghost Town graveyard Berry
The Berry gravesite is inside a fence in the center of the graveyard.

What was really sad was reading that the five children of John and Charlotte Ballard all died very young between 1865 and 1877. The oldest was only 9 years old. The Ballard parents are also buried there. There are six babies buried there, all under one year old. They died in 1891 and 1901. Several Native Americans are also buried in the cemetery.

Coins left on headstone of grave in Grafton Utah
Coins are left at a gravesite in Grafton to show respect and bring good luck.

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Grafton Ghost Town

After visiting the graveyard we drove further until we finally reached the town. The town is only a quarter of a mile from the main highway to Zion National Park, but very few people visit since it is on the opposite side of the river, and can only be reached by a 3 1/2-mile road (that is unpaved for the last 2 miles). There are also very few signs.

Settled by Mormon pioneers in 1859, this abandoned frontier town near Rockville, Utah has been the backdrop for several films including “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.”

Grafton, Utah
Grafton, on the Virgin River, is surrounded by beautiful trees and cliffs.

Five large buildings remain, out of the original total of over 30, and all have been carefully restored by the Grafton Heritage Partnership, who now manage the site. The surrounding farmland and orchards are still used by a nearby ranch, and a few people still live in other houses in the sparse neighborhood.

wagon in Grafton Ghost Town
Old wagon in Grafton Ghost Town

Some parts of the former village are fenced off, but we could walk into most of the buildings. It did feel like we were in a deserted movie set of an old western. The town is authentic and so empty. It was noticeably quiet except for the occasional sound of running water in a stream. It was really peaceful and beautiful, surrounded by large groves of trees and the colorful high cliffs of the national park we had just left.

Barn in Grafton Ghost Town
Barn and farmlands in Grafton Ghost Town

The first building is a barn, with an outhouse, then hiding behind several centuries-old large cottonwood trees is the John Wood home built in 1877. The largest building is the combined church/schoolhouse which was built in 1886. It was also used as a church and public meeting place. 

Grafton Ghost Town church schoolhouse
Grafton Ghost Town church/schoolhouse

The Alonzo Russell home is a two-story house with a fancy veranda on the front. Right opposite is the Louisa Russell home. The farmland adjoining these homes still has several pieces of iron farming equipment and machinery out in the grass with no one left to put them to use. Last occupied in the 1940s, the remnants of this historic Mormon settlement remind us of a different world before cell phones and the internet.

Abandoned farm equipment in Grafton Ghost Town
Abandoned Farm Equipment in Grafton Ghost Town
Louisa Russell Home in Grafton Ghost Town
Louisa Russel Home in Grafton Ghost Town

Movies Shot in Grafton

Several American western movies were filmed in Grafton, Utah. According to the Grafton Heritage Partnership Project here is a list of the films all shot in Grafton:

  • Old Arizona, 1929 (First talkie movie filmed outdoors) and nominated for five Academy Awards including Best Picture. Starring Warner Baxter (who won the Academy Award for this role as The Cisco Kid), Raoul Walsh, Edmund Lowe, and Dorothy Burgess.
  • The Arizona Kid, 1930. Warner Baxter and Carole Lombard.
  • Ramrod, 1947. Starring Joel McCrea, Veronica Lake, Preston Foster, Charles Ruggles, Donald Crisp, and Lloyd Bridges.
  • Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, 1969. Paul Newman, Robert Redford, Katherine Ross (won four Academy Awards)
  • Child Bride of Short Creek, 1981. Diane Lane, Helen Hunt, Christopher Atkins, Conrad Bain.
  • The Red Fury, 1984. Wendy Lynne, Calvin Bartlett, Katherine Cannon, Juan Gonzales

History of the Town of Grafton

What was called the Dixie region of Utah was settled by Mormons following the direction of Brigham Young. They originally came to the Utah territory to escape religious persecution from the U.S. In 1859, five Mormon families—the Barney’s, Davies, McFate’s, Platt’s and Shirts—led by Nathan Tenney moved from nearby Virgin to a site one mile downstream of today’s Grafton. The last residents did not leave until 1944.

Cotton, wheat, and alfalfa were grown there originally, but floods, attacks by Indians, and harsh winter weather made farming difficult. In fact, in 1862, the Virgin River flooded and washed away the entire town, but the determined settlers persevered and reestablished Grafton about a mile upstream. Soon cotton production had to take a back seat to food crops.

In 1866, the conflicts with the Black Hawk and others led Brigham Young to instruct the people to combine themselves into bigger towns of at least 150 people. So Grafton was abandoned. However, farmers still came to tend their crops. Eventually, settlers returned and built the adobe schoolhouse (the one pictured above is the original building). Gradually the population shrank again as the young people moved away in search of new farmland.

According the Grafton Heritage Partnership Project, in 1929, the mostly intact and barely inhabited town of Grafton became the setting for the first outdoor talking movie ever filmed. In Old Arizona starred Warner Baxter (who won the Best Actor Academy Award for this role as The Cisco Kid), Raoul Walsh, Edmund Lowe, and Dorothy Burgess.

The remaining buildings in Grafton help preserve the memory of it’s former inhabitants. Towns like this are rare, and becoming even more scarce. Most former pioneer villages were either washed away in floods or have not been preserved. Every year families of former residents of Grafton have a reunion and all gather in the town to remember stories and try to keep the spirit of community alive.

Do you have a ghost town story of your own? Please leave a comment below and enjoy my video!