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Reel 1 Volume 0.09 - Page 24

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Title Reel 1 Volume 0.09 Hearings
Subject Mines and mineral resources -- Environmental aspects -- Utah; United States -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Utah -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Utah -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Utah -- Trials, litigation, etc.; Colorado River (Colo.-Mexico); Colorado River (Colo.-Mexico) -- Environmental aspects
Description Transcripts of the Colorado Riverbed Case
Publisher Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
Date 1929
Type Text
Format application/pdf
Format Creation Scans of microfilm taken from the originals were used to transcribe the text, pdf's generated from transcriptions.
Identifier Reel1-Vol0.09.pdf
Language eng
Relation is part of Colorado Riverbed Case
Spatial Coverage Colorado; Utah; Mexico
Rights Management Digital image Copyright 2009, University of Utah. All Rights Reserved.
Bit Depth 8 bit grayscale
ARK ark:/87278/s6w95bvx
Setname usa_crc
ID 119037
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6w95bvx

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Title Reel 1 Volume 0.09 - Page 24
Format application/pdf
OCR Text 648 deal of research work as to the historic matters they contained, particularly those books that dealt with the Colorado River, as there had never been very much written about the river before that. He, therefore, examined a great many original sources such as Government Reports, the early Pacific Railway reports and books like Patti's Famous Story, and a lot of books of that kind with more recent books like Chittenden and Manly's book, " Death Valley in 1849", which nobody knew about, " and Manly went down the Green River as far as the Uintah Valley in 1849, thinking he could go to California that way." R. 1559- 1560. He also studied Castanada's Manuscript of 1598, and running down through almost everything that has been published on the southwest. He couldn't recall them all. He knew that the purpose of the Escalante Expedition was to get to Monterey, California, and to connect up the Rio Grande with the Missions of Southern California, and the map that appears in the fore part of " The Romance of the Colorado River" [ Exhibit No. 13] is the approximate location of the " Escalante Trail". R. 1560. This information was obtained largely from Escalante's diary of that trip, a copy of which is in the Congressional Library in Washington. He had a translation made himself. R. 1561. " Q. In your investigation of Escalante's expedition did you find at any place that Escalante used boats? " A. No." R. 1561. He made an investigation from many different sources, of the highway that is known as the " Spanish Trail" and
Setname usa_crc
ID 118939
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6w95bvx/118939