Cove Fort
Is Located One Mile North of Exit 1 I-70 and Two miles South of exit 135 off I-15
Between Fillmore and Beaver Utah

Pictures by Randy W. Lewis
This Fort the walls 100 feet long and 18 feet high was built between April to November in 1867. It has 12 rooms 6 on the north side and 6 on the south side each room has it's own fireplace some have beds, one was for cooking one was for the Telegraph office & Post Office

Mr & Mrs. Ira Hinckley
April 12, 1867 Ira Hinckley was asked to build Cove Fort by Brigham Young

Pictures by Randy W. Lewis

Elder Larry Anderson
Ira Hinckley's Home was built in Coalville, Utah which was later moved to Cove Fort where it is today.

Pictures by Randy W. Lewis
Looking North

Pictures by Randy W. Lewis
Looking West

Pictures by Randy W. Lewis
Looking East

Pictures by Randy W. Lewis
Telegraph Office
Gene Hiromasa and Elder Gale are entering the Telegraph Office.


Pictures by Randy W. Lewis
Dining Room
http://www.infowest.com/covefort
For more Information

Charles
William Willden (1806-1883)
A
Baptist minister and steel refiner from
Eleanor
Turner Willden (1810-1893)
The
daughter of Thomas Turner and Ann Whitman, Eleanor Turner married Charles
William Willden in 1833, was baptized a member of the
In
the fall of 1849 Charles and his family boarded the ship Zetland sailing
with other church members to
Called
by Brigham Young to
Upon
hearing of Charles Willden̓s
arrival to the valley, President Brigham Young (president of the
In
1853 a cloudburst washed out the roads and many buildings at the iron works.
Indian hostilities escalated into the Walker Indian War. In 1856 the settlers
took heavy losses of cattle which were stolen by Indians. 1856 was also the year
of bread scarcity. By 1859 the iron works had become a failure, due in part to
poor ore. Many settlers, including the Willdens left in search of better lands.
The Willdens settled in the sinks area southeast of Beaver. The land proved to
be poor for farming. Charles often thought of Cove Creek and finally bought 160
acres from Matthew McEwen who had sheep there. In the Fall of
1860,
with no manpower or financial aid from the church, Charles and his son Ellot
built an adobe house on the south bank of Cove Creek and eventually enclosed it
with a cedar post stockade of about 150 feet square. The posts were 8 to 10 feet
high, placed so close together that they formed a solid wall. Doors and windows
were not yet in place when they had to cache wheat for next spring̓s
planting and head back home to Beaver for the winter.
Occupation
of
The
following spring, Charles̓
recently married daughter Ann and her husband Neils Johnson were returning from
Cove
Creek in the adobe house built by Charles. They hung blankets and quilts in the
windows and built a roaring fire in an effort to keep warm. This was inadequate,
so they made a dugout. They soon ran out of food and were forced to find Charles̓
‘cached̓ wheat
intended for next spring̓s
planting and
boil the wheat to eat it. Other wheat was ground between two stones and sifted
through Anne̓s veil. Travelers passing
through to Beaver took note of their plight and told her parents, Charles and Eleanor
Willden, loaded up their wagon with windows, doors and other necessary
provisions and moved to Cove Creek.
Early
Pioneer Campsite and Refuge
Cove
Creek and
Evacuation
of
By
1865 Indian depredations were becoming more prevalent and dangerous with
tensions heightened by the Black Hawk Indian War. Eleanor Wiliden narrowly
escaped death at the fort when Indians attacked. The Wiliden̓s sheep got the scab and many died as a result. Many calves
died in the severe winter of 1864-65. These, combined with other concerns made
for a discouraging year, and Charles resolved to return to Beaver,
ConstructIon
of Cove Fort
In
1867 realizing the need for a permanent fortification, safe way station and
refuge for travelers, Ira N. Hinckley was called by Brigham Young to oversee the
construction of a new fort at Cove Creek. Catapulting this determination to
erect a network of forts into a reality, was no doubt the Walker War, 185 3-54
and the Black Hawk War, 1865-68. Brigham Young̓s
emphasis was ‘safety in numbers̓
and removing ‘temptation̓
from the path of the Native Americans which would spare bloodshed. By such
bloodshed were many wars started, and he felt that in preventing it, the
resulting wars could be avoided as well.
Cove
Creek was a natural spot for overnight camping, being the mid-point between
principal communities. It afforded water, plentiful firewood nearby and ample
food for livestock in season. Carriers of the U.S. Mail, agents of the
stagecoach line, operators of the Deseret Telegraph, and freighters sought the
refuge and convenience afforded by Cove Fort as it came to be known. The
location of Cove Fort was 25 miles north of Beaver and 33 miles southwest of
Fillmore. In 1867 the
Epilogue
In
1903 WH. Kesler leased the property from the L.D.S. church and in 1904 moved his
family in. His son Otto lived there since he was a lad of eight. By 1905 there
was nothing left of
This
brief summary of Fort Willden is to give credit to the Charles & Eleanor
Willden family who truly pioneered the area and were the builders of Fort
Willden —Forerunner to Cove Fort. Their participation and efforts also in the
building of Cove Fort are added to those of other pioneers who gave of their
time and talents in establishing a foot hold in the
The Cove Creek area was settled in the 1860's by Charles Willden and two other families. The Willden Fort, as it became known, included two houses, a dugout and a corral, in 1861, accommodating three families. Nine acres of grain and many fruit trees were planted. The Willden’s moved south to Beaver and finally abandoned the Fort in 1865 due to Indian attacks and the death of his sheep and many calves.