|

Photo Gallery
Request Form
Kids
Cities:
Bear River
Beaver Dam
Blue Creek
Bothwell
Brigham City
Collinston
Corinne
Deweyville
Elwood
Fielding
Garland
Grouse Creek
Harper Ward
Honeyville
Howell
Mantua
Park Valley
Penrose
Perry City
Plymouth
Portage
Promontory
Riverside
Snowville
Standrod
Thatcher
Tremonton
Willard
Yost
|
Willard, the southernmost community in Box
Elder County
along US 89, is nestled beneath majestic Willard peak in the mountains to the
east. Seven miles north is Brigham City,
and Ogden is thirteen miles to
the south. To the west are salt flats and the fresh water Willard
Bay, created in 1964.
Exceptionally beautiful are the sunsets reflecting off the water from the
Bay, seen from Willard. A trip to Willard
Peak is rewarded with a
breathtaking view of the valley below. Willard had its beginning in 1851,
when several companies of settlers were sent out from Salt
Lake City. Nineteen people located on North Willow
Creek, settled seven miles south of where Brigham would soon be. Two years
later, the settlement was moved to a better site, two miles farther south, and
the name North Willow Creek was given to the new settlement. A fort wall was
built to protect them from the threat of Indian attacks. In the fall of 1851,
North Willow Creek was surveyed by Henry G. Sherwood assisted by Cyril Call.
In 1859, it was renamed Willard in honor of Willard Richards, a
recently-deceased Apostle of the LDS church, and counselor to Brigham Young.
Willard received its charter as a city in 1870. The town site encompasses
seven square miles, being three and a half miles long and two miles wide.
Willard’s first settlers were mostly of Welsh,
English, Scottish and Dutch descent. Most were farmers, but some were
merchants, carpenters, blacksmiths and school teachers. Willard’s
inhabitants included an abundance of musicians. Willard has always been noted
for its music, claiming Evan Stephens, Mormon Tabernacle Choir Director, and
Robert J. Bird, hymn writer, among its “native sons”. Shadrack
Jones was an especially gifted stone mason, and Willard’s rock homes
reflect his handiwork. Over thirty pioneer rock homes are still standing,
many of which are on the National Register of Historic Places. A brickyard
and the first grist mill in Box Elder
County, as well as a number of
molasses mills, provided for the first citizens’ basic needs. Electric
power came to Willard in the early 1900's with completion of Willard’s
own powerhouse. A water system was completed in 1912, utilizing water from
Willard canyon. Willard was a station on the main line of the Utah-Idaho
Central Railroad. The community had a canning factory, a money order post
office, general stores, and an estimated
population of 800. It was a city of the third class. Its population in the
1950 census was 1,298.
Historically, the economy of Willard centered around
agriculture, with fruit crops being the major product. Colorful roadside
fruit stands gave Highway 89 as it winds through the area. Buyers travel far
to purchase the best fruit in the west along northern Utah’s
“fruitway”. Agriculture is now a secondary source of income. Some
businesses are located in Willard, but most people seek employment nearby.
Hill Air Force Base, the Internal Revenue Service, Thiokol Corporation and
Morton International are within commuting distance and employ many citizens.
Interstate Highway I-15, running north and south bordering the town on the
west, provides two convenient accesses and relieves much of the
“through” traffic on Highway 89 which splits the town. The rural
atmosphere and proximity to these facilities make Willard an ideal place to
live and raise a family.
Predominantly LDS, the three Willard Wards are housed in a
new meeting house built in 1973. Willard and Perry now comprise a stake of
their own, the Willard Stake having been created November 25, 1984. The new Willard
Elementary School, built in 1986,
is of modern-efficient design, and is on one level, better serving the needs
of the children and faculty. At that time,
the old school was demolished, its west wing, built in 1964, was left intact
to serve as Willard’s City Hall. It houses the police, courts and
offices. A modern post office was built in 1990. A large fire station was
built in 1992, to house the volunteer fire department.
Willard is located on an alluvial fan exposed as Lake
Bonneville receded and, as such,
is an ideal spot for gravel pits — a constant concern to the town. The
sheer rock cliffs that rise so majestically east of Willard have, on several
occasions, contributed to floods in the valley. The situation has been
addressed by the Willard City
/ Box Elder County Drainage and Flood Control District, which installed
reservoirs and pipelines, helping greatly to reduce the flood problem. Young
men in the Civilian Conservation Corps built the dike and spillway in the
1930's to alleviate some causes of the floods, including terracing Willard
basin in the upper canyon. With those measures, past concerns have been
alleviated. Willard claims the oldest continuous 4th of July
celebration in Utah; beginning
with a Fireman’s Ball the night before, races and booths that day, and
ending with fireworks in the Willow Creek park east of town. Willard
Bay State Park,
located west of I-15, is a major recreational area for boating and camping.
Year-round fishing and close proximity to the population of the Wasatch Front
makes it one of the most popular of Utah’s
State Parks. Between January and October 1992, 269,232 people used its
facilities.
|