Celebrating Women’s History Month

We recognize Eva Ashton a Prominent Woman of the Uintah Basin from 1899-1962. It is all too seldom that tributes are paid to great women like Eva Ashton. She radiated happiness. Her whole life was built on a desire to pass on to others a bit of sunshine. In an address delivered at Utah’s Girls’ State in 1949 at Utah State University in Logan, Utah, she said, “Strive to live each day so there will be sunshine within; for if there’s sunshine within, there will be sunshine without.” But Eva truly earned for herself a place in the sun by rising from a remote part of the nation to one of the highest honors that could come to her. Another of Eva’s quotes was, “If right in your heart, you’ll build a lovely character, and from that, there will be within your home sweet harmony, happiness will radiate. Your children will appreciate the pleasant, wholesome happiness, and if you’ll teach them not to fear, to have faith in God, and pray, you’ll build a home that is beauty-filled. Eva spent time on her father’s Willow Creek ranch in the Book Cliff Mountains. She was one of the first lady stagecoach drivers in history. When she was seventeen years old, she drove stage from Myton to Wells Draw and sometimes from Wells Draw. Then she put herself through college because there was no family help available. One of the jobs she held was the first telegraph operator in Nine Mile. She graduated from Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, Utah. The first school in the Book Cliffs opened in 1916 in the home of Jerimiah “Jerry” Hatch. Later, a tiny dugout room was completed. The room measuring about twelve by fourteen feet, it was created by tunneling into a hill, then erecting a roof. Desks were roughly made benches. On very cold days the teacher gathered her pupils around the stove to recite their lessons. One of the first teachers in Willow Creek School was Eva Stewart. After attending BYU, she went to Willow Creek, to pass on to the youth in the remote area some of the knowledge she had gained.    Eva was a beautiful young lady and matured into a most striking, distinguished woman with raven black hair. She stood out, her presence dominating any crowded room.   Eva married Rae Ashton on 20, May 1919 in Roosevelt Utah. Eva and Rae had town children, Ralph and Stewart, both born while living in Roosevelt. A little of history of the Ashton Brothers and Ashton’s Department Store needs to be told since the store became a large part of Eva’s life, and she was the largest stockholder in the business.  When Eva and Rae’s son, Stewart “Stew,” graduated from Stanford University and returned from World War II, he took over as general manager of the store. After Ralph returned from the war, he also completed his education at Stanford, then returned to join his family in the business. When Rae died in 1952, Stewart became president of the company, Ralph became vice-president, and Eva, the major stockholder, became secretary-treasurer. The firm, which had started with two or three employees, grew to one hundred persons. Eva was proud of her two sons who had served their country Lt. Stewart Ashton served in the Navy Air Corps and was awarded six Air Medals and the Distinguished Flying Cross after fifty-two bombing missions against the Japanese in the South Pacific. Ralph Ashton had a less glamorous wartime mission, first as a lieutenant in a pack mule outfit, then as platoon commander of a machine gun and mortar company in the Philippine Islands, serving with the Field Artillery in World War II. Eva’s husband, Rae, had served his country in World War I. Eve also had two brothers who served in World War I, and a half-brother, Arden Stewart, of Vernal, who served in the Navy in World War II. He later became the Utah Department Commander of the American Legion.   Rae was also very active in the American Legion. With this family of war veterans, Eve had a natural interest in the American Legion Auxiliary. In 1935 Eva Ashton, an active officer of the American Legion Auxiliary won the state presidency by a sweeping majority at the state convention held in Richfield in August. She received 208 votes out of the 293 cast. At that time, she was district president of the Auxiliary, having been elected in April at Moab, and president of the Witbeck Post Auxiliary at Vernal in 1934-1935. In 1943 Eva Ashton was elected as the national vice-president of the western division of the American Legion Auxiliary, … [Read more...]

Online History Resources

We, at the Regional History Center, have a few favorites for researching local history online. These quality sites are listed below.  We find them very useful in answering many of the questions concerning our history. Online History Resources   Library of Congress The Library of Congress is the nation’s oldest federal cultural institution and serves as the research arm of Congress. It is also the largest library in the world, with millions of books, recordings, photographs, maps and manuscripts in its collections. Mountain West Digital Library The Mountain West Digital Library is a central search portal for digital collections about the Mountain West region.  It provides free access to over 650,000 resources from universities, colleges, public libraries, museums, historical societies, and government agencies, counties, and municipalities in Utah, Nevada, and other parts of the U.S. West. Smithsonian was founded in 1846.  The Smithsonian is the world’s largest museum and research complex, consisting of 19 museums and galleries, the National Zoological Park and nine research facilities. Uintah Basin Teaching American History  This site was originally a project funded by a Teaching American History Grant.   Scholar Antonio Arce (director of the Ute Tribe Education Department), compiled a vast amount of highly significant historic resources from historic markers, to websites that offer general overviews of the past. The web site focuses on Western American history and includes a variety of Native American Indian references. Utah American Indian Digital Archive   A joint project of The Utah Division of Indian Affairs, KUED, the University of Utah’s Marriott Library, and the American West Center.   This site contains completely digitized historically significant documents, photographs, books, and more relating to Utah’s recognized American Indian Tribes. Utah Digital Newspapers  Online access to historical newspapers throughout Utah including the Salt Lake Tribune, Deseret News, Vernal Express, Myton Free Press, and many other regional Utah newspapers. This s a great collection of primary source newspapers for avid historians and beginners.  Newspapers help us to find the context for photographs, documents and life activities.  They are also useful for those researching their own family roots--especially if you know which town your family lived. Utah Historical Society   The Utah Historical Society, in cooperation with the Utah Division of State History, publish the Utah Historical Quarterly, and has a vast collection of historic Utah sources including Pioneer era Letters, Diaries, Photographs and collections that document the history of the state. … [Read more...]