The
passing of time slowly erodes one’s recollections of
the past. Therefore much of our oral history is
lost. Some of our history is lost among the dusty
old newspaper files at the state archives. Several
years ago I was perusing stories from the Phoenix
Daily Herald and Tempe News from 1885-1895. I came
across a very interesting article in one of these
newspapers.
“The Raging White-Water of the Salt River Claims A
Life.” This headline does not sound much like the
Salt River we know today between Roosevelt Dam and
Granite Reef Dam. Prior to the construction of
Roosevelt Dam the Lower Box of the Salt River was a
raging torrent according to early Arizona pioneers
who navigated its course.
The Salt River had always be a challenge to Arizona
pioneers. The search for fording sites along the
river created small Arizona hamlets such as
Marysville. The soldiers at Fort McDowell used the
fording site at Marysville to pursue the Yavapais
along the upper Salt River and into the Superstition
Mountains.
The
challenge to run this river was first answered in
1875, by two daring Arizona pioneers. This was just
eleven years after the founding of Camp McDowell
along the Verde River. These brave men’s names have
been lost in the pages of Arizona History, however
their heroic deed has not been forgotten. Ten years
after their sojourn down the Salt River four other
men accomplished this challenge.
William Burch and his three companions formed an
expedition in June of 1885 to explore the Salt River
from Tonto Creek to Phoenix. Burch’s companions also
included John Meadows and Lew Robinson, They didn’t
run the river for its recreational benefit, but to
conduct a feasibility survey as to whether or not
logs could be floated down the Salt River to Phoenix
from the Sierra Anchas.
A Mesa City boat builder by the name Logan
constructed Burch’s river-running cataract boat. The
boat constructed by Logan was eighteen feet long and
five feet wide. This well-designed boat survived the
trip down the Salt River with little or no damage.
The Phoenix Daily Herald headlined the
accomplishment of William Burch and his three
companions on June 3, 1885. Burch and his companions
reported it was feasible to float logs down the
river to Phoenix. The log transporting company on
the river never became reality. Burch’s run down the
Salt River started at the Eddy’s Ranch above the
mouth of Tonto Creek. The distance down the river
was estimated to be 60 miles. The trip required four
days. Burch and his party thought they were the
first to make the trip, but later found out another
group made the river run in 1875.
Today the lower Salt River from Stewart Mountain Dam
(c. 1930) to Granite Reef Dam is one of the busiest
rivers in the world for recreationist from late May
until Labor Day. As we look at the lower Salt River
today, it is difficult to visualize a raging river
through narrow canyons filled with huge rapids.
These early river runners reported the narrow boxes
of the Salt River as ideal sites for dam
construction. These early reports and the
information contained within them provided the
ground work that eventually led to the construction
of Roosevelt Dam, Horse Mesa Dam, Mormon Flat Dam
and Stewart Mountain Dam.
These structures totally tamed the mighty Rio
Salinas as it was know in those days.