Ajax, Utah

Ajax, Utah

Ajax is a ghost town located in the Rush Valley area of southeastern Tooele County, Utah, USA. The town grew up around a unique department store started in 1869cite book | last = Carr | first = Stephen L. | title = The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns | edition = 3rd edition | origyear = 1972 | origmonth = June | year = 1986 | publisher = Western Epics | location = Salt Lake City, Utah | pages = pp.29–30 | isbn = 0-914740-30-X ] by a Welsh immigrant named William Ajax. He operated the Ajax Underground Store until his death in 1899, and the settlement came to an end as the other residents left by 1900. All that remains today is a hole in the ground, with a historical marker standing nearby.

History

The area was first settled in 1863 by a group of Welsh farmers, who called their little settlement "Centre". As numerous mines were being developed in eastern Tooele County in the 1860s, small towns began to dot the region.

In 1869, William Ajax, whose department store business in Salt Lake City was failing, moved his family to a dugout in the Centre area.cite web | last = Sharp | first = William H. | title = The Ajax Store | url = http://www.nw-utah-heritage.com/year03/fall03/articles/ajax_artl01.html | work = Northwest Utah Heritage | accessdate = 2008-02-20] He had learned of the growing market and started growing hay to sell to the mines. He built a two-room adobe house as a permanent shelter close to the hay crop. More accustomed to keeping a shop than raising a crop, Ajax soon began stocking the kitchen shelf with dry goods and supplies to sell to passing travelers. Business boomed; by 1870 a post office was set up in his store,cite book | last = Thompson | first = George A. | title = Some Dreams Die: Utah's Ghost Towns and Lost Treasures | year = 1982 | month = November | publisher = Dream Garden Press | location = Salt Lake City | isbn = 0-942688-01-5 | pages = pp.19–20] which had outgrown the Ajax home and needed its own location.

Underground department store

Having lived in an underground home, William Ajax chose to construct an underground store. He began digging into the desert soil and lining the hole with cedar timbers. When he had a chamber around 1800 square feet (160 m²) in area and 10–15 feet (3–4.5 m) deep, he added roof beams and an earthen roof, with a south-facing skylight. The Ajax Underground Store was open for business.

From the beginning the store operated as much more than a mere general store, offering expensive textiles and fine imported tableware in addition to the necessities of frontier life. Local miners and ranchers could buy supplies to last through the winter, while their wives browsed through elegant cut crystal glassware and ornate figurines in comfort, protected from the harsh elements of the desert. The store became a gathering place for residents of such nearby communities as Mercur, Stockton, and Ophir, and an important stopping point for overland travelers. An above-ground hotel was soon added, with stables and corrals that could hold 100 horses, 300 cattle, and 6,000 sheep. As it began to grow into a town in its own right, the settlement was named Puckerville, but the name didn't stick. Although the post office kept the name of Centre, people called the place Ajax.

William soon found need for further expansion; he kept digging until the store's main room stretched 80 feet (24 m) long and 100 feet (30 m) wide. Additional branching rooms eventually brought the Ajax Underground Store to a total area of 11,000 square feet (1000 m²), with over $75,000 worth of merchandise in stock. It was reported that the "Big Store", as locals called it, did more business than any similar Salt Lake City emporium.

Decline

The store began to lose business when the railroad was built nearby and people could easily travel to Salt Lake for a variety of errands. When William Ajax died in 1899 he left the store to his sons, but the town of Ajax quickly dissolved. By 1900 only the Ajax family remained, continuing to run the store in the face of increasing competition. The rise of mail order catalogs was especially bad for business. The closure of Mercur in 1913 was the final blow; [cite book | last = Blanthorn | first = Ouida | title = A History of Tooele County | series = Utah Centennial County History Series | year = 1998 | month = January | publisher = Utah State Historical Society | location = Salt Lake City, Utah | pages = p.305 | isbn = 0-913738-44-1 ] the Ajax Underground Store was finally forced to close in 1914. Most of the above-ground buildings were moved to other locations, but the underground store had to stay in place. In the 1920s it became a popular refuge for passing hoboes, but one of their fires burned it completely, leaving only a depression in the ground to mark the site of Ajax.

References

External links

* [http://www.co.tooele.ut.us/ht37_wmajaxstore.html William Ajax Underground Store] at Tooele County "Guide to Historical Attractions"


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Ibapah, Utah — Ibapah   Unincorporated community   The roadway through Ibapah, September 2007 …   Wikipedia

  • List of ghost towns in Utah — This is an incomplete list of ghost towns in Utah, a state of the United States.Ghost towns are listed by name, and also by county.Listed by name* Ajax * Alunite * Argyle * Asay * Bingham Canyon * Black Rock (Millard County) * Blacks Fork *… …   Wikipedia

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Tooele County, Utah — Location of Tooele County in Utah This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Tooele County, Utah. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in… …   Wikipedia

  • Mercur, Utah — Mercur in 1903. Mercur Mine in background …   Wikipedia

  • Ophir, Utah —   Town   Ophir in winter …   Wikipedia

  • Dugway, Utah —   CDP   Location of Dugway, Utah Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Rush Valley, Utah —   Town   Location of Rush Valley, Utah Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • football — /foot bawl /, n. 1. a game in which two opposing teams of 11 players each defend goals at opposite ends of a field having goal posts at each end, with points being scored chiefly by carrying the ball across the opponent s goal line and by place… …   Universalium

  • May 2010 in sports — << May 2010 >> S M T W T F …   Wikipedia

  • November 2010 in sports — << November 2010 >> S M T W …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”