Pages in Apache County History
Chronicle of volunteer projects & historical research concerning the history of Apache County, Arizona
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Report of Committee on Flood Situation-April 29, 1915
"Of adversity we of St. Johns have had more than our share, but no one is giving up."
I have been going through more of my research files and came across this follow-up article to the Lyman Dam break in 1915. It was a very devastating time.
St. Johns Herald and Apache News
Thursday, April 29, 1915
Report of Committee on Flood Situation
It is now two weeks since the breaking of the Lyman
reservoir, the financial losses have been pretty accurately computer, the
people are busy repairing the lower ditches and dams, riddle fences are being
reconstructed, preparations to put in as much crop as possible are in progress,
plans are being formulated to put water into the higher Lyman canal for
irrigation of the bench land, six of the eight bodies of the drowned have been
recovered and buried, so that the town is somewhat normal again.
The direct losses total up about as follows:
- Lyman dam and injuries to canal….$90,000.00
- Houses washed down at St. Johns…$7,000.00
- St. Johns irrigation company…$3,000.00
- Bridge at St. Johns…$2,500.00
- Bridge at Hunt…$2,600.00
- Crops & Fences ruined at St. Johns and Meadows…$10,000.00
- Meadows dam…$3,000.00
- Udall dam…$18,000.00
- Crops, fences, and ditches at Hunt…$8,000.00
- Woodruff dam…$17,000.00
- Crops and other injuries at Woodruff…$13,000.00
- Three-Mile steel bridge…$4,500.00
- Holbrook bridge…$3,000.00
- Other damage as livestock, etc….$5,000.00
- Total Direct Loss…$186,600.00
- Crop loss at St. Johns…$60,000.00
- Crop loss at Meadows…$5,000.00
- Crop loss at Hunt…$12,000.00
- Crop loss at Woodruff or extra cost if pumping is resorted to…$10,000.00
Yet it is safe to say that other direct losses will make the total up to a full hundred thousand, though in event that the Lyman dam were never again built it would reach over half a million.
George H. Crosby, Jr.
A.V. Gibbons
F.W. Nelson,
Committee.
Little "snippet" underneath this article:
"The Little Colorado is some creek when there is nothing to obstruct it. There wasn't much need of the bridge before it went out, but now it is hardly safe to try to cross in a boat. The water is deep and muddy."
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| Image from Cameron Udall's book - "Images Across America, St. Johns, Arizona" |
I also had a file I had saved entitled: Dam Failures, Dam Incidents (near failures) Association of State Dam Safety Officials www.damsafety.org. That gives this little bit of information about the failure:
Sunday, February 14, 2021
Stories From the Files: Juan Trujillo Baca First Settler of Round Valley
Juan Trujillo Baca, First Settler of Round Valley
Juan liked Round Valley (Valle Redondo) and later brought his brothers Dionicio and Francisco to it. Then, after his father’s death, he brought his mother, Maria Trujillo Baca, and his brother Benino.
To Round Valley in the fall of 1875 came Harry Springer, who established a store on the west side of Omer (later Springerville). Springer made the sad mistake of trusting outlaws with feed and seed and as a result soon went broke. In the area less than a year he left, but later when it came to select a name for the post office, the name Springerville was chosen.
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| From Ancestry.com, first uploaded there by Kimberly Espinoza |
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| From the Arizona Republic, 6 July 1952 |
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| From Ancestry.com, first uploaded by Joe Pena |
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| From the Arizona Republic 6 July 1952 |
Sunday, February 7, 2021
Stories From The Files
Tragedy in the Ray Family When the Dam Went Out
by Jennie Jensen Hancock
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| The Ray Family Back Row: Dewey & Mrs. Ray 3 girls: Hazel, in front of her mother, Ethel, and Lily. The dog, Bobbie. |
Violet Willden Ray was born 29 November 1874 in Beaver, Utah to John and Margaret McEwen Willden. The Willdens had 11 children--two born at Fort Willden (now Cove Fort) the others in Beaver. All grew to maturity.
In the early spring of 1887, when Violet was 12 years old, her parents decided to move to Mancos, Colorado to join other relatives who were already there. In the company were the Willdens and their 8 younger children; Margaret's sister, Elizabeth McEwen, her husband Henry Walters and their 7 children; their brother Joe McEwen; Lavina Ellicker, Joe Armstrong, and a boy names Merrimore or Merriweather. The trip was made in covered wagons.
Regardless of which route they went out of Beaver, the trip was not easy. There were miles of desert waste, rocky mesas, and canyons. There were few tracks to follow. Once they became lost and wandered around for about a week. The children's Uncle Joe wouldn't let them out of the wagons for fear of scorpions and centipedes.
They crossed the Colorado River at Hite, then known as the Dandy Crossing because it was so much better than the other river crossings. The group reached Mancos on 10 May that same year.
Violet married Reece James Ray on 31 December 1893. He was born in Peoria, Illinois. Seven children were born to them: Olga, Olive, Dewey, Girland (died in infancy), Hazel, Ethel and Lily. Mr. Ray died of Cancer in August of 1914 leaving Violet with 4 children still at home to support.
Dewey had had typhoid fever which affected his heart. The doctor advised his mother to take him to a lower altitude in Arizona. She purchased a wagon and team and she, Dewey 17, Hazel 8, Ethel 6, and Lily 4 prepared to leave Mancos. The morning they left, our family went to bid the goodbye. I was only 11 but a friend of my folks had given me a camera. I took their picture just before they climbed into the wagon. Two childless couples traveled with them in another wagon.
When they reached St. Johns, Arizona help was badly needed to repair a leak in the Lyman dam. Jennie Palmer and her husband kindly let them stay at their house which was about a quarter of a mile below the dam. Dewey worked with the team a a scraper the day the dam broke. The Palmers had gone to St. Johns to buy some things for the last day of school (Mrs. Palmer was a school teacher) and attend a dance in the town. They left their 3 small children with Mrs. Ray.
Mrs. Ray and her 3 little girls were sleeping in a bed. When the dam broke Hazel awakened her mother saying she could feel water in her hair. Her mother immediately carried Ethel and Lily out. Before she could reach the house for more children the water was too deep and she was swept away. Panic-stricken, Dewey jumped in the water and he was also drowned. The three Palmer children were drowned, as was also Mrs. Ray, Hazel, [along with Dewey]. Hazel's body was never found. Those who found Dewey's body said every bone in it was broken. Mrs. Ray's hair was so full of cockle-burs it had to be cute close to her head.
As soon as word reached Mancos, Mrs. Ray's brother Elliot and her older daughter Olive, went immediately by car to St. Johns to make funeral arrangements and take the two little girls back with them.
Lily live a few years with my parents (my mother being Mrs. Ray's sister), and Ethel stayed with another sister, Martha Kernan. When Elliot married, he took the two little girls until they married. Both are living near Los Angeles.
Hazel was a happy child. It is ironic that all that day she sand "Good-bye I Hate to Leave You", and "On the Next Rainbow I'll be Home"--both popular songs at that time.
All of the Ray family's loved ones and relatives who remember them will be forever grateful to the people of St. Johns who searched for the bodies, and to the Relief Society women who made Mrs. Ray's burial clothes and all the other kindness they showed at this time.
The [picture included above] is a copy of the one I took of the family. The enlarged and colored one hanging in the museum is one my mother, Celiea W. Jensen, had made from the original.
My father's father, Soren Jensen, built the first [LDS] meeting house in St. Johns, also the tithing granary and office with the help of other men.
--Jennie Jensen Hancock
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Historic Fort Defiance Indian Hospital
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| Ft. Defiance Hospital Arizona 1937 |
Secondly, it also marked a significant step in the articulation of a distinct institutional building style on the Navajo Reservation. Using the plans provided by Office of Indian Affairs architect Hans Stamm, local craftsman using local stone developed a local, Navajo-inspired elaboration of the Pueblo Revival Style, one that fulfilled Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier's policy that government buildings should reflect a style sensitive to the architectural heritage of the people they would serve. The complex is historically significant for bringing modern health practices and medicine to the Navajo Tribe and as evidence of the Commissioner's efforts to recognize tribal ethnic heritage through the style given to the building.
The old hospital opened in 1938 with 153 patients already checked in since construction finished at that time. It was used continuously as a hospital until 2005. The Fort Defiance Indian Hospital served as the main hospital on the Navajo Reservation until a new 200-bed medical center opened at Gallup in 1961. The Fort Defiance Indian Hospital gradually became outdated by the late 1990s. It was replaced by a new hospital in Fort Defiance which opened in 2002 and the 1938 building was vacant from 2005 until its unfortunate demolition sometime between 2011 and 2015. By January of 2017 it was gone.
The site, directly across from the then-existing hospital along Bonito Drive and within easy walking distance staff quarters and other support facilities, was chosen as an efficient, cost-effective alternative to several other sites favored by the architect. Lying within the valley formed by Bonito Creek, at the foot of a sandstone mesa, the site also provided some protection from wind and dust storms.
The three-story, roughly H-shaped floor plan fitted neatly onto the relatively narrow site, stretching along a north-south axis, between the base of the mesa to the east and Bonito Drive to the west. Public entrances were on the west, or street-side of the building, and utility uses were relegated to the rear, mesa side and were accessed via a driveway encircling the building.
The exterior walls, comprised of large, irregular red sandstone blocks, quarried locally and artfully shaped and fitted by Navajo stonemasons, were intended to evoke the surrounding landscape and traditional building techniques. Regularly spaced, rectangular openings with massive sandstone headers, provided most of the exterior detail. The building had a solid, timeless and utilitarian appearance that remained largely unchanged over the decades.
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| Beginning of erection of steel on Ft. Defiance Hospital |
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| View of Ft. Defiance Hospital from atop mountain at rear. 1938 |
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| Ft. Defiance Hospital 1937 |
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| Mr. & Mrs. Garrett's home. Ft. Defiance. 1938 |
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| Edward Money & Jim Beasley cooks at Mess Hall in Ft. Defiance. 1937 |
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| Photo from following: https://www.fdihb.org/history |
Information about the hospital was gleaned from the following sources:
Historic American Building Survey
Work underway to tear down Fort Defiance Hospital
Old Fort Defiance hospital to live on in memories of elders
Demolished Ft. Defiance Indian Hospital
Saturday, September 21, 2019
Jose Saavedra: First Settler of St. Johns
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| Jose Saavedra and his mother Anastacia (Anna) Saavedra |
One of my biggest pet peeves, as soon as I started becoming more familiar with St. Johns history, is the continued declaration of Solomon Barth as the 'founder' of St. Johns. Although Mr. Barth was a key citizen in the early history of St. Johns, there were quite a few people to populate this area before the Barths.
In December 1872, Jose Saavedra arrived in the area from Cubero, New Mexico, and laid out a farm on the west side of the river. About 12 miles upstream from where the Little Colorado and the Rio Zuni met, the road from Fort Wingate to the newly established Fort Apache crossed the river. Within two years Jose and his father had built a bridge across the river and charged .25 cents per wagon to cross. They originally built the bridge for a wealthy sheep man, Mr. Antonio Luna who was running several bands of sheep in the area at the time.
They built the first house in St. Johns. It was a common kind made in early days, a cedar picket house. Cedar posts were tamped into the ground about 18 in. side by side. Others were added across the roof. All were bound by strips of rawhide. The roof was covered with brush and tramped and packed, a foot of dirt added, sides and cracks filled with mud. A fireplace built, but not a nail, brick or piece of sawed wood in it. An axe was the only tool they needed. They lived in this house for two years.
In the Spring of 1875, Mr. Saavedra moved in to where St. Johns now stands and filed on a homestead laying northwest of the grist mill. He cleared off a small part of this land and took the first ditch out of the Little Colorado river for irrigation. He also built a small grist mill and supplied the early settlers with flour and corn mill.
In the fall of 1875 other settlers began moving into the area, including Solomon Barth who brought in sheep and cattle. Mr Saavedra worked his farm until 1879 at which time Morris Barth bought all of the early Spanish settlers land and sold it to the Mormon settlers who were entering the area. Jose then moved to El Tule, some ten miles above St. Johns, and filed on a new piece of land. He farmed there until 1915 when the Lyman dam broke and practically washed his farm away. His daughter-in-law and her child were drowned in that flood. Mr. Saavedra moved up to higher ground beneath the Lyman canal, and when the dam was rebuilt cleared another farm and planted it. This was the third farm he had cleared and leveled in the valley.
I found a couple of articles in the early St. Johns newspapers that make mention of Mr. Saavedra.
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| April 11, 1907 Spanish Section of the St. Johns Herald-News |
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| July 1911 Spanish Section of the St. Johns Herald News |
Mr. Don Jose and his wife Isabelita,
they took part in this week, they came
to bring their mother Anastacia T.
Vda de Saavedra that in the company of
her daughter the Mrs Modesta D. de Duran
were in El Tule, since last week.
Mr. Don Jose M. Saavedra, El Tule, his
wife Isabelita and his children, Ms.
Amalia Los Joyenes Pedro and Jose were
in this Monday from San Antonio where
they went to witness the
wedding Montoya.
Don Jose Saavedra passed away January 30, 1930 at Williams, Arizona where he was visiting his daughter, Mrs. Amalia Bustamente. He was 80 years old and had lived in St. Johns for 59 years.
His wife having died some years earlier he usually spent the summer months with his niece,
Mrs. Modesta Duran of St. Johns.
Jose was born born in Cubero, New Mexico in 1851.
Mr. Saavedra's Obituary.
An excerpt from Chapter 13, page, 406 of "A Civil War History of the New Mexico
Volunteers and Militia", by Jerry D. Thompson.
A short article by Mr. Jim Shreeve



















