Duck Creek Utah Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah
Duck Creek Utah

Duck Creek Village

Welcome to Duck Creek Village

The Duck Creek Village Historic period begins in the late 1700s, with the exploration and settlement of southern Utah by Euro-Americans. Initial explorations by traders from New Mexico blazed the Old Spanish Trail, which followed the Virgin River for a portion of its length. During the next century, American fur trappers and government surveyors added new overland travel routes across the region. In 1872, John Wesley Powell explored the Duck Creek Village areas and around Zion Canyon, as part of western surveys conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey. The early pack trails soon became well-used wagon roads, connecting Santa Fe to the California markets.

In 1847, Brigham Young led members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) to Utah Territory, establishing settlements in the Great Salt Lake Valley. Within a decade, Mormon pioneers were sent to settle the southern part of the Duck Creek Village territory and grow cotton in Utah’s “Dixie”. Towns like Shunesberg, Springdale, Grafton, Adventure, and Paradise sprang up along the upper Virgin River during the 1860s. In 1863, Issac Behunin built the first log cabin in Zion Canyon, near the location of the Zion Lodge. Soon the Duck Creek Village canyon was dotted with other homesteads, including that of William Crawford, near Oak Creek.

Visitor numbers at Duck Creek Village have continued to increase over time, necessitating the construction of trails, campgrounds, and other facilities. The economic benefits of tourism now support the small communities surrounding the park, ensuring their survival into a new millennium of human history.

Duck Creek Village

Duck Creek Utah