tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4532599901631262632.post565832296243686899..comments2023-06-19T07:45:18.320-07:00Comments on Daily Bread for Ragamuffins: We stopped at the junction and it as GrandDaily Bread for Ragamuffinshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05609887993740748517noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4532599901631262632.post-71461405475811998482016-07-18T13:29:45.427-07:002016-07-18T13:29:45.427-07:00Early Explorers: Two Franciscan Friars named Silve...Early Explorers: Two Franciscan Friars named Silvestre Valez de Escalante and Francisco Atanasio de Dominguez were some of the first explorers to pass through the Spanish Fork area. These priests were in quest of a direct route from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to Monterey, California. After traveling down Spanish Fork Canyon, they camped somewhere near the present day city limits on September 23, 1776. <br /><br />Origin of the Name: Many years later the name "Spanish Fork" appeared on John C. Fremont's map of the area published in 1845. This was two years before the Mormons settled in Utah, and five years before there were any settlers in Palmyra. In all likelihood, the name "Spanish Fork" was derived from the fact that the route of the Taos trappers during the early part of the 1800's followed the canyon and the river. The indigenous population of Spanish Fork was composed of members of the Ute Indian tribe. They had no permanent villages due to their nomadic nature. Because these Indians ate so many fish, they were also known as the "water Indians". Esmereldahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02227070956647952721noreply@blogger.com