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The community of Collinston is one of the oldest in Box
Elder County whose center has been located in several places and its history
closely linked to the development of transportation and industry in northern Utah.
Approximately five miles downstream from the mouth of the canyon where the
Bear River enters the Bear River Valley is located the historical fjord where
Indians, trappers, early explorers and wagons crossed the river. The deep,
wide and swift river resulted in several deaths each year, and in 1853 a
ferry was built as a safer means of moving emigrants and freighters across
the river. In 1859 a bridge was constructed just south of the ferry crossing.
A small log building with a thatched roof built near the bridge became a
stopping place for travelers.
The first permanent settlers to the area came in 1860. In
1864 Overland Mail and Stage Company made its first run from Salt
Lake into Montana
and Idaho. In 1866 another
bridge was built on the original piers of the first bridge and the Stage
Coach Hotel was erected south of the bridge, serving as the first stop main
center for the overland mail.
Between 1871 and 1874 the Utah Northern Railroad was
constructed to pass north of Brigham City,
through Deweyville, over the Mendon Divide and into Logan and Franklin,
Idaho. Hampton Station was built
northeast of present-day Collinston. According to tradition, local citizens
changed the name of their community to Collinston to honor Collins Fulmer, a
favorite conductor on the Utah Northern Railroad. With the building of the
railroad, the importance of stage coach transportation began to diminish. Hampton’s
Crossing at the river remained, but now activity centered around the railroad
east of the river. By 1887, because it was difficult to pull the steep
narrow-gauge trains through the deep snow during harsh winters, a decision
was made to change the train route about one half mile to the west. When the
railroad route east over the Wellsville
Mountains was abandoned, so was
the town of Collinston at that
location. However, this second location of Collinston did not survive long.
The new location was a poor choice because the train had to make a stop at
Collinston at a point when it should build up speed to make a climb through
the canyon. About 1892, it was decided to change the location of the station
further down the tracks to the present town site, and Collinston now became
an important shipping center for points to the north and west, as Hampton's
Crossing had been for the stage lines. Many businesses appeared as the
community prospered. In 1904 Collinston reached its peak as hogs and cattle
were shipped from the stockyards located by the tracks and wheat, beets and
other farm products were shipped from the town to outside markets. In 1905,
the Malad Branch of the Oregon Short Line was built on the west side of the
valley. This dealt a great blow to Collinston, and the importance of the town
as a shipping center began to wane. Collinston began to wither as nearby
Tremonton started to bloom. Since that time,
Collinston has become smaller and smaller.
For over 100 years the post office was an important
institution in Collinston, at one time
distributing all the mail for the northern part of Box Elder County. The post
office closed in 1982 when a rural route was set up from Brigham
City. Collinston had been maintained almost entirely
by freighting until 1900 when farming began to come into prominence. Between
1889 and 1907 the East Hammond
Canal was built to irrigate the Bear
River Valley,
and the area became a rich farming district. Around 1900 a one-room
schoolhouse was built and then a two-room grade school. In 1962 the school
closed and the children were sent to Fielding where they now attend. High
school students attend Bear River High, although for a period of time
before the enlargement, some youth from Collinston attended Box Elder High
via streetcar. The electric streetcar was built in 1914, coming from Ogden
to Preston, Idaho.
In 1916 electricity finally lit the homes and the telephone arrived.
Residents of the community get their drinking water from springs or wells
that they own themselves. Irrigation water comes from the East
Hammond Canal.
Many of the settlers in the area were members of the L.D.S.
Church. Much of the social life
and church activity was centered around Collinston Hall which was built and
used for a business. The L.D.S. Church
bought the hall in about 1927 and it was used extensively until completion of
the recreation hall at the Beaver Ward in Beaver Dam. In 1932-33 plans were
made for a state road through the Collinston area. It was built west of the
county road through about 200 acres of prime farm ground, straight through
the town of Collinston.
Collinston is not the metropolis it used to be. Most of
the old buildings have been taken down or destroyed by fire. The old school
house has been remodeled to serve as a private residence. It is interesting
to note that the first business (the old Hampton)
established in the area of Collinston is again being run as a business.
Collinston has a population of about one hundred people. Most of those who
now live in the area no longer farm entirely for a living. Employment is
found at Thiokol, La-Z-Boy, NuCor and various other places around the valley.
However, many new homes are being built by people who have come to work in
the Tremonton-Garland area or in Cache
Valley—but want to raise
their families in the rural atmosphere of the Collinston community.
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