Logan, in northern Utah, was not much different than most early Mormon settlements. White settlers first arrived in 1859 and located near the Logan River. They planted crops, diverted the North Branch of the Logan River for irrigation, and the settlement grew. Canals and ditches were expanded and added to meet the city’s growing needs. Mills sprouted along the canals. Still more people arrived and with them came changes: adobe walls replaced logs, clapboard replaced adobe and brick replaced clapboard. However, one constant through the changes were the canals. Mills along the canals came and went, but the canals remained.
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“What a pretty little town!” My father heard that from my mother several times as they drove through Logan while traveling from California to Yellowstone, or Seattle to the Grand Canyon. That refrain may explain why, when my father’s twenty-one years in the navy were done, they bought ten acres of land near Logan. I was 13 and had already lived in the concrete jungles of San Diego and Los Angeles, the green hills of Seattle and Salinas, and the ocean-sprayed shores of Guam.

canal west of main street
I quickly found that Logan was not as remote as Guam, nor did it offer as many trees as Washington, or provide the opportunity to visit museums, missions and historical sites like California. It did have heat—dry heat—and, as I soon discovered, a large amount of water for such a dry place: like the continuously flowing drinking fountains dotting Main Street’s corners. And gutters flowing with water all summer long. Streets lined with giant maples shaded those gutters. One such maple-shaded gutter flowed in front of our house.
While my parents worked on building their dream home on their ten acres, we rented a red brick house across the street from the front doors of the high school. Two parking lots flanked the house. Across the parking lot to the east, on the corner, stood the nearly one hundred year old mansion of Moses Thatcher, son of Hezekiah Thatcher. Our gutter water mysteriously bubbled from the bottom of the gutter in front of that house.
I traced the source of our gutter water to a canal half a block further to the east. That canal began somewhere east of Main Street, flowed west under the road, then worked its slow course behind the V1 gas station kitty-corner from the Thatcher house, bisected the back of the high school grounds, crossed 300 West Street at 200 South Street then disappeared in backyards. I followed it a total distance of a half mile.
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In 1859, to supply lumber for the small settlement, James Ellis and Ben Williams operated a whipsaw along what is now 100 South Street just west of Main Street, and kitty-corner from the soon-to-be-built Thatcher home. They dug a pit and logs laid across the pit. One man stood in the pit while the other stood above as they operated the large two-handled whipsaw. The following year, Hezekiah Thatcher, Joel Ricks, Sr. and Ezra T. Benson constructed a canal to supply water to a wooden wheel that powered a circular saw blade—Logan’s first sawmill. They called the canal the Mill Race.
The blooming community’s need for flour prompted Thatcher to add a small gristmill to the operation. The gristmill proved so successful they removed the saw and built a larger gristmill on the site in 1865.
In 1880 they replaced the gristmill with a roller mill, calling themselves Thatcher and Sons Union Roller Mill. By 1886 they added a two-story, 40,000 bushel elevator, becoming the Thatcher Milling and Elevator Company. They produced enough flour to sell not only in the Rocky Mountain region, but in Montana, Nebraska and Arizona as well.
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The weather has warmed, the ice in the canal thawed. It is a warm enough early February day for me to have my jacket tied around my waist. My son, Ben, grabs a chunk of snow and throws it into the water near what is now left of the old Thatcher Mill. Signs are tacked to portions of what remains of the mill wall:
WARNING!
NO TRESPASSING
THIS IS PRIVATE PROPERTY
Will Prosecute Under the Provision of Section 236
FORBIDDEN
CRIMINAL TRESPASS
We continue walking east toward Main Street and spook a dam and drake mallard. They take off careening past buildings, then cross Main Street.
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The first summer we moved to Logan I wandered the banks of the half-mile section of canal that made up my world. I was tempted, but never swam its four foot deep waters. During the spring, summer and fall, it ran at full depth, but in the winter it slowed to a trickle. That trickle puddled and froze. Behind the high school my father taught me how to ice skate beneath huge, leafless cottonwoods.
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Those same cottonwoods were possibly used as cover by Charlie Benson in 1873 while he tried to escape town after shooting David W. Crockett. Benson and Crockett were heading to the Valentine’s Ball when they began arguing. Words were exchanged and the gun-toting Benson shot Crockett, who, according to eyewitnesses, died instantly.
Charlie made his way to his house, told his mother what had happened, grabbed some bread, cheese and a buffalo robe, then hid under the hay in Moses Thatcher’s barn on 200 South Street. He hid there four days while searchers combed the town and guarded the streets heading out of Logan. No doubt while he waited he contemplated his quick temper that led to the death of another man four and a half years earlier in Idaho.
After four days in the barn without food, Charlie made his way to 100 South Street in the early morning light, then west and out of town. A patrolman saw him running and informed Marshall Crockett, David’s uncle. A posse of 100 men tracked Charlie who had few possibilities and was soon captured and put in the County Courthouse—after fourteen years as a city, they still didn’t have a jail.
The posse stayed, working themselves into a lather because of the four days of grief Charlie had given them and their families. Several men from the crowd made their way into Charlie’s cell in the courthouse. They took him out of the cell and to the waiting crowd outside. A noose was already made and quickly put around Charlie’s neck. Throwing the loose end over the “Cache County Courthouse” sign in front of the building, twelve men pulled. Six days after David Crockett’s murder, Charlie Benson was buried.
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Ben and I follow the reverse path of Charlie Benson and wander down to the canal, just behind the old city softball diamond. I point to a small opening in the stump of a large cottonwood. Ben peers in. “Hilary,” his little sister, “could fit in there!” he says.
“When I was a kid and we used to watch the softball games, we could fit in that hole. It was a full tree then, not a stump, and the hole wasn’t half-full of dirt like it is now.” He throws a stick into it. We continue up the bank and onto the old path next to the canal.
I tell him about skating on the ice as a kid, and how the ice we see looks almost ready to skate on. “It’s not very smooth—it has slush on the top,” he points out.
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Before moving to Logan, while living in Guam, I learned about fishing and spent hours with friends tossing a hand line into the ocean, pulling out small, colorful Picasso trigger fish just off the reef. We didn’t buy fishing licenses. We had never heard of limits. We just fished. I saved Christmas and birthday money and bought a blue fiberglass Garcia pole at the PX on the naval base. I fished with it several times before we left the island.
Our second summer in Logan I wandered the banks of the canal to the east of our house to Main Street, and two blocks further to Central Park, thinking about that Garcia pole. I asked some people who lived nearby about fishing in the canal. “There aren’t any fish in the canal, you’ll have to go to the river to fish,” was the typical reply. I never saw fish in the canal, so I figured they were right and the pole stayed at home. Instead I spent hours staring into the rippling canal water where it passed under Main Street.
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In 1879, Thomas Edison and Joseph Swan independently invented the incandescent light. The electrical systems used to power the lights was the hard-to-transport direct current (DC). In 1882, after successfully setting up a power plant in London, Edison built the Pearl Street Station in New York City to generate and distribute direct current to 59 customers. In that same year, Nikola Tesla, born in Austria-Hungary, invented the more reliably transferred alternating current (AC) system. Tesla moved to the United States in 1884, and in the same year invented the AC generator. By 1886, the AC systems were introduced for commercialization and later, in March of 1886, demonstrated to the public.
Christian Garff and Gustave Lundberg built a planing mill on the Mill Race on Logan’s Main Street in the early 1880’s. In January of 1886, two months before the public AC demonstrations, they used their hydropower at the mill to turn an AC generator, becoming the Logan Electric Light and Power Company—one of the earliest AC hydroelectric power plants in the United States.
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Ben and I wait at the traffic light on 100 South Street and Main Street—standing over the canal that passes under Main Street and under “Logan’s Heroes,” the sandwich shop on the corner, just behind us. We cross Main Street and pass the old woolen mill, one of the few mill buildings still standing. A concrete path dotted with new “old-fashioned” lamps follows the curves of the canal on the north. To the south the city created a small landscaped park consisting of a creek, pond, rose garden and gazebo.
Ben runs ahead. He throws sticks into the pond. Then runs ahead again.
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As a kid I found it easy to explore the canal behind the high school where it passed an old brick building—the remains of the Brigham Young College. Founded in the 1880’s, this one building was all that remained. At one time the college’s Mechanic Arts Building tapped the Mill Race, but by the time I moved to Logan, that building was gone.
I visited the late night softball games on the city diamond just west and south of the high school. The outfield fence bordered by the cottonwoods where I learned to skate always collected a crowd. I met a couple of kids there and asked about fishing in the canal, but the only reply I got was, “Nah, there’s no fish in the canal.”
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So I rode my bike along the path under the cottonwoods between the canal and outfield fence further west. At the western edge of the school grounds sapling cottonwoods clustered around a small field. Old cement work along the canal at 300 West Street and 200 South Street made for exciting bike jumps, and the Garcia pole was still left behind.
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In 1875 Charles O. Card built the Card and Sons Sawmill, Lath and Shingle Mill. In addition to operating his own business, Card was appointed by the Mormon leaders to oversee the construction of both the tabernacle and temple the Mormons built in Logan. As a prominent Mormon leader himself, and a practicing polygamist, Card worried about the roundup of polygamists conducted by the federally appointed state government in the late 1880’s and early 1890’s. He eventually fled to just north of the present-day Glacier National Park into southern Alberta in Canada, settling the area with other Mormons. The land he settled is named Cardston in his honor. He is the great-grandfather of author Orson Scott Card.
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Ben and I walk off the road and into the canal just off 400 South Street, between 300 West Street and 400 West Street. There is no water in the canal and Ben easily points out all of the garbage as we pass an apartment complex: a bicycle, broken glass, scraps of metal, an old jacket. Just beyond the apartments is a field and the canal is cleaner. We spot bird tracks in the fresh snow. A rooster pheasant lifts off twenty feet in front of us, startling me as they always do. We see the spot where he stood, then trace the spot with our fingers where his wings brushed the snow on takeoff.
We get out of the canal, cross 300 South Street and come to the old railroad spur. A fence blocks our way on the far side of the rails, so we hop into the canal between the road and the rails. We crawl on our hands and knees over ice until we pass under the fence. We near a hill where cottonwoods and willows line the canal. To our right is the fenced off yard of the old Anderson Mill. We stumble onto somebody’s tree fort and a lot of concrete, including stairs leading up from the canal. We walk along the concrete wall of the canal’s edge to the top of the old millrun.
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bottom of the millrun
At the spot where the old Mill Race came nearest our brick house, east of the V1 gas station, west of the site of the old Garff and Lundberg planing mill, were the remains of the old Thatcher Milling and Elevator Company after it burned down—a few crumbled stone walls, some giant fallen timbers and the millrun the only clues of what once stood. Fifteen feet below the millrun a small pool and back eddy formed. Although I didn’t see fish, it seemed the most likely place for them of any I visited.
With my blue fiberglass pole finally in hand and a boyish desire for fish, I made my way to the gas station. I might have stopped, as I often did, to talk with Bill about my plans. The old man was my friend and occasional employer. He taught me how to run an old press in the small back room of the gas station. And he trusted me, a teenager, to watch the till on slow days.
I worked my way behind the gas station then down the steep path to the plunge pool at the bottom of the millrun. A few minutes later some salmon eggs and a split shot or two plunked into the eddy.
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The only trout native to Utah’s waters is the Bonneville Cutthroat. By the 1900’s residents so heavily fished the Logan River that in 1917 they stocked the river, but native cutthroat were not use. Records for 1927 show the Logan River was stocked with 25,000 salmon, 86,000 brook trout, 95,000 rainbow trout and 210,000 grayling.
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I was told many times, “Fish don’t live in the canal.” But that day I saw no one. I spoke with no one. My line swirled and tugged below the lichen-covered concrete walls of the old mill. I reeled in an empty hook, put more salmon eggs on, and cast again. More swirling. A decisive tug. And I tugged back.
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Fewer gutters flow with water now than they did 30 years ago when I first moved to Logan. The drinking fountains dotting the corners on Main Street are gone. The red brick house we lived in is no longer flanked by two parking lots—it is part of the parking lot. A single mill is left standing. The last building of the Brigham Young College is being torn down while I write this. The softball games moved from along the canal to the fancy new four-field complex west of town. But summer’s heat is just as dry. Winter water still gathers into frozen puddles. The canal forms the same eddy at the bottom of the millrun.
In a photo album somewhere there is a faded picture of a boy in jeans and a green and yellow T-shirt, a blue fiberglass Garcia pole in one hand and two twelve inch German brown trout in the other. I never fished the canal again.
I point to the spot where I caught the fish. “Awwww, can I go fishing there?” Ben asks.
“There are no fish in the canals,” I say.







Very nice!
Thanks Dan!
Loved the post, keep it up!
Dave, Thanks for taking the time to read it!
wow. Lovely work. Subtle juxtaposition, clean and clear, and not overplayed–a beautiful evocation of place and time, with a fascinating foundation of history that means something. Fantastic. Can I put a teaser up at StoryArc?
ps I love “kitty-corner.” It derives from middle French for four–quattour–because of the four spots on a die. How people say it is a key to their origins (or, if they don’t say it, a key to the fact that they don’t read.) Southerners tend to say “catty-corner,” probably because they are a few increments closer to the French origin. A close friend who is an Appalachian used to say “catercornered” just like that–one word. And my Kentucky grandma said “cat-cornered.” She also said “catawampus”, which means askew or sideways, and comes from the same word, though some people insist that there’s a wampus cat of some sort.
Dave
Dave M,
Kitty- Catty- Cater- I have heard all of them before, but not cat-cornered. I frequently use “skiwampus,” but not “catawampus.” Thanks for the etymological lesson–although familiar with the words, I was unfamiliar with their lineage.
Sure, tease away. You can even throw a copy of it up there if you’d like. I’m always a little leery of how much history to throw in a piece like this. I did quite a it of local research for it when I first wrote it (about eight years ago now–I’m getting lazy with the blog in that I rarely do much in the way of revising for my posts, so it was nice to revisit this after letting it sit for so long). I also wasn’t sure if the three different time periods would get a little too confusing. I’m glad it seemed to work for you.
Scott – I really enjoyed this piece. The mix of personal and historical created a nice tension, that made me want to read on.
You created a nice mental picture – I feel like I’ve been to Logan.
I live in Pittsburgh, PA and I say “catty-corner” or maybe it’s more like “catta-corner”
Anthony,
Thanks for taking the time to read it (I know that sometimes we get a little reliant on the quick and easy when reading blogs, so I always appreciate it when someone is willing to slog through my longer ones). I really wanted to get some good “actual” pictures besides just the mental ones you could create, but I’ve been too lazy to do it. And I really need to find that picture of me with the fish.
“Catta”…you easterners are as bad as the Brits!
A good writer carefully crafts a series of pictures that readers can visualize….but, why am I telling you that? You understand it well. I walked along with you and Ben. I wasn’t a part of the story, but I was a spellbound observer. Thank you, Scott.
Granny,
As always, thank you for the kind words. You’re welcome to walk with Ben and me anytime.
Nice story Scott. Made for a nice read this morning. Makes me think back on some of my early experiences.
Harry,
I’m glad to see you swing by this way. I hope this winter isn’t taking too big of a toll on you (it’s been pretty bitter here with many days the highs not even in the 20′s, so I haven’t fished since the first part of December).
Thanks to global warming we have had 5-6 inches of snow the last week and temps have never gotten above 20 for a week. More snow tonight, but it is supposed to hit 25 or 30 sometime this week-heat wave!
Not much fishing going on currently here either. It’s funny though, 10-15 years ago I would be out fishing in a snow storm as long as the fish were biting and the line didn’t ice up in the guides. Now days a hot cup of coffee and the recliner look pretty good on days like that.
Getting old kind of sucks don’t it!
Uhhhhh…yeah…you hit that nail square on the head about old. The worst part, I don’t even feel very bad about not fishing in over five weeks. Lots of spare time sitting by the fireplace with a book or two (we have a little competition at our school this time of year where the kids try to read more pages than the teachers–I logged 7787 pages in 7 weeks, but only fished once).
No fish in the canals here either….. just don’t show up for the fish salvage on the great feeder canal on April 1st.
Nice writing, I liked.
Kevin,
“Fish salvage” either has an incredibly enticing sound to it, or rather worrisome–I can’t figure out which. I guess one look April 1 would tell me. I’m glad you liked the piece.
Just went up with a new story, so in about a week I’ll poach the whole thing, if you don’t mind. I need more essays. Every time I start one, I get pulled over to the story side.
Dave
Poach away! (Just let me know when it goes live.)
Scott…as good as a photographer as you are…you are making me believe you are a better artist.
Photos in this post just couldn’t compare with the mental images you painted into all the readers minds. “As Is” would suffice for this one.
Beautiful Scott.
It’s good to see your name grace my blog – thank you! How’s the Big Lost/Whitefish coming along? I really need to do another blog post on that.
No, thank you for your writings. It’s nice to actually read AND enjoy something. There’s so much garbage out there you know?
Things are slow right now. I haven’t been fishing since October. I’m in hopes that the whitefish goes on the endangered species list. It would save my home as well as that fish….double bonus, you know?
We should know more by summer.
Keep writing and shooting (pix that is)
Take care Scott!
Boone,
I’ll do a little write-up about the whitefish and the Big Lost. Is there a website (besides the Facebook petition) that has some good information about what’s going on?
This is the year we’re hooking up to fish!
You have mail.
Yes this is the year we need to fish together – Work be danged
Scott,
So enjoyed your reminiscing. Especially since I just discovered that Christian Garff is my Great Grandfather. We never got to know that side of the family because my Grandmother Vera (Christian’s daughter) died when my Dad was 13 months old of pneumonia. My griefstricken Grandfather moved back to Arizona to his family to help care for his three children. Any other info or pictures you could share would be much appreciated. I will make a trip to Logan one day soon. Any pointers you could give me to help find out further info on my ancestors would be helpful. Have tried the traditional internet route, and am looking for someone to share local history who might have know the family.
Happy Wanderings!