- Thistle, Utah
Thistle is a
ghost town in Utah County,Utah ,United States . It was located southeast of Spanish Fork, at coord|39|59|29|N|111|29|54|W and had an elevation of 5,033 feet (1,534.06 meters) above sea level. The town was established in1883 and later became a stop on theDenver and Rio Grande Western Railroad ; the town's fortunes tended to rise and fall with the successes and failures of the railroad. Most of the early citizens made their living from farming and ranching. In later years members of theWasatch Academy climbed local mountains above the town to listen to the wind and watch the trains roaring up and down the canyon.On
April 14 ,1983 , a massivelandslide (known as aslump ) moved part of the mountain and blocked two creeks, forming an earthendam . The citizens were evacuated as nearly 65,000 acre-feet (80,000,000 m³) of water from the creeks backed up, flooding and destroying the town. Thistle was unable to recover from this natural disaster; to this day it remains a ghost town. Very little of the town is left; only a few structures with the upper portions of some buildings remain visible.The landslide closed the railroad for months. U.S. Route 6 was closed for almost a year. Both road and railroad were rerouted by blasting through Billies Mountain to the north. Mitigation infrastructure was also put in place to redirect water flow past the landslide area, though a small pond remains. Two adjacent
rest area s pay tribute to the town and the residents who lost everything.The Thistle landslide has so far been the only federal disaster area declared in Utah and is considered the costliest single landslide in U.S. history.cite web
url = http://geology.utah.gov/surveynotes/geosights/thistle.htm
author = Mark Milligan
title = Thistle Landslide Revisited, Utah County, Utah
publisher = Utah Geological Survey] In addition to destroying the town, the landslide was devastating to the economy of southern and eastern Utah. With the major transportation arteries cut, it was infeasible to transport goods into or out of the area. Many coal miners, farmers, tourism, and transportation workers lost their jobs. Estimates placed the damage to Utah's economy at $200+ million U.S..cite web
url = http://www.media.utah.edu/UHE/t/THISTLE.html
author = Genevieve Atwood
title = Utah History Encyclopedia - Thistle
publisher = University of Utah Press]Notes
External links
* [http://eesc.columbia.edu/courses/v1012/masswasting/sld014.html Photograph of the Thistle landslide] Columbia University
* [http://www.geocities.com/usend7079/Thistle/index.htm Historic U.S. Highways at Thistle] Mapguy's U.S. Highway End project page
* [http://www.ghosttowns.com/states/ut/thistle.html Thistle] from ghosttown.com
* [http://www.waterrights.utah.gov/cgi-bin/damview.exe?Modinfo=Viewdam&DAM_NUMBER=UT00713 Dam safety information] from Utah Division of Water Rights
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.