The unique history that lies around and within
Wind Walker Learning Center
Wind Walker Learning Center lies in in the heart of
Utah, in the Sanpete Valley. This is the largest Valley in
the World surrounded by mountains on all four sides. Numerous
eras of history have graced this area from the times of ancient
ones, Native Americans that work and traded the vast resources,
Spanish in lue of hidden treasure,mormon pioneers that settled this
area, wild west robin hoods, and the present day farmers and ranchers.
Many have came to the Sanpete Valley looking for something more
than just rich's and solitude. They came to this valley because
of a unknown draw.
Those that have come, those that left and those that
still inhabit it, something always beckons for their return.
Could this be because of the 360 degrees of mountains that surround
this valley, the unparallel breath of wildlife, the simple life
that calms the soul, or is it that this valley holds a sacredness
to each individual that visits, that only the eye of the beholder
will know?
The earliest settlers that were thought to inhabit
Sanpete were Fremont-Sevier agriculturalists Native Americans who
disappeared around A.D. 1300. Mounds have yielded small stone- and
mud-walled structures, as well as pottery, points, and metates.
However due to discoveries that have been made and recent interpretations
it is believed that this valley may have been the home to Adam and
Eve or the departure place of Noah's Ark. A man by the name of
John Brewer, found several separate caves, one containing mummies
that were 7 and 9 feet tall. With these mummies were several
gold, lead, and brass plates and artifacts that were engraved with
strange characters. There has also been a large natural clearing
found just short of some historic relic caves that resembles a eagle
in flight, hence giving this valley the name of "the valley
of the eagle."
The San Pitch and Fremont natives that use to travel
this area had a rich knowledge of utilizing the lack of water to
create very elaborate irrigation systems to water their crops. Ute
chief Wakara enslaved local San Pitch Indians, who gathered and
hunted in the local marshes and canyons. The Utes had adopted the
horse and other trappings of Plains Indian Culture and ranged widely
from an apparent winter base in Sanpete County.
Wakara at first invited Mormon settlement, perhaps
for the resources it would bring, and then opposed it in a war of
1853-54, which caused a period of "forting up" and the
abandonment of area towns. The Black Hawk War of 1865-72, a more
serious and prolonged series of guerrilla raids, also disrupted
county settlement. It culminated in 1872 with the massacre of over
6,000 Native Americans. Why did everyone want this valley
so badly?
The first Mormon settlers arrived in the area in the
fall of 1849. They chose the Manti site because of a nearby warm
spring, the extensive limestone quarries (later exploited commercially),
and the fine farming and grazing lands nearby. The county's larger
towns were established in the first decade of settlement. Scandinavian
immigrants soon made up a sizable minority, and elements of their
culture and humor remain today. The towns peaked in population from
about 1900 to 1910, and then declined until the 1970s. The county
was created in 1850, enlarged, and then later reduced in size.
There has been many stories of the early wild west
robin hoods that passed through this area. They were mainly
know as the Wild Bunch or Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
This gang was known for stealing from the rich to give to the poor.
Many believe that Butch Cassidy and Sundance had been shot in a
shootout in Bolivia. Many of the locals feel strongly to prove that
the handsome, nearly six-foot Sundance Kid had returned to the United
States as the five-foot-three-inch Hiram BeBee, a homely drunk who
died in the Utah State Penitentiary in 1955, while serving a life
sentence for shooting the sheriff in Mt. Pleasant. They have since
resumed the remains of those that were shot in Bolivia and DNA tested.
The results... The remains of those buried in Bolivia had nothing
that could have even resembled Sundance or Butch Cassidy.
Did these outlaws escape a trial for a new beginning? One more draw
to the county to find out.
Ancient visitors aligned sacred centers around the
globe by using levy lines and intent. These sites also aligned with
different star systems in the universe. These advanced techniques
for awakening have been forgotten, but are now re-emerging. The
prophesied revolution of consciousness is upon us now. This is why
so many are drawn to visit sacred sites, such as the Sanpete Valley
and Wind Walker Learning Center. As these profound links between
Earth and the heavens help us to activate ourselves into a higher
form of consciousness. Is this why so many have been driven to explore
this valley that we call home? For the ancient knowledge that was
left behind, the knowledge we need to remember? The exploration
and greater understanding will we ever know? |