Cane Beds, Arizona Explained

Official Name:Cane Beds, Arizona
Settlement Type:Census-designated place
Pushpin Map:USA Arizona#USA
Pushpin Label:Cane Beds
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Mohave
Established Date:1868
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:21.46
Area Total Sq Mi:8.29
Area Land Km2:21.46
Area Land Sq Mi:8.29
Area Water Km2:0.00
Area Water Sq Mi:0.00
Elevation Ft:5046
Elevation M:1538
Population As Of:2020
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Total:466
Population Density Km2:21.72
Population Density Sq Mi:56.25
Timezone:MST
Utc Offset:-7
Coordinates:36.9342°N -112.9117°W
Postal Code Type:ZIP Code
Postal Code:86022
Blank Name:FIPS code
Blank Info:04-09900
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID
Blank1 Info:2582747
Unit Pref:Imperial

Cane Beds is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Mohave County, Arizona, United States. It lies 4miles south of the border with Utah in the Arizona Strip, and is supported by services in Utah as well as some in Nevada.

The population was 466 at the 2020 census.[2] The community is historically Mormon, and presently also includes several families from breakaway Mormon groups. It has a small tourism industry because of nearby scenic hiking trails.

Etymology

The name of the town refers to cane that grows natively in the area. In Will C. Barnes' book of Arizona place names, Barnes quoted a letter received from a resident, Annie W. Wilkinson, in his explanation of the name of Cane Beds: "When settlers first came here they found beds of wild cane growing in the district. Some can still be found, hence the name."[3] The name has historically been recorded as "Cain Patch".[4] Cane Patch Creek/Cane Beds Spring has the same etymology.[3] [4]

The Southern Paiute name, Paɣáŋq`ʷton<sup>Ɛ</sup>nįnto`, translates to "cane valley".[4] Edward Sapir identified a Paiute location romanized as "Paganktonic" as likely being Cane Beds.[5]

History

Until the 20th century, the land was occupied by Southern Paiute people; it is seen within Paiute territory on maps from 1934, which had receded north and was completely absent in Arizona by 1986.[4] There are Paiute, Archaic, and Anasazi sites in the area.

As the Arizona Strip was largely ignored by the government, the Cane Beds land was first explored by settlers during early pioneering expeditions of Mormons in northern Arizona, by John D. Lee, J. C. L. (John Calvin Lazelle) Smith, and Jesse Pierce Steele in June 1852. In 1858, a similar expedition also landed the pioneers in Cane Beds. Lee's party may have known Cane Beds as "Virgin Bottoms", being a valley near the Virgin River. The town was established in 1868 and was fully settled by Mormons by 1876, shortly before the first Mormon temple in Utah was finished. It lay along the trail from Lees Ferry to the new temple, traversed by Mormon settlers.[6] The post office was established on June 15, 1917, with Cora H. Cox as postmistress.[3] Cox was born Cora Haight, and had married into the Cox Mormon family. She had moved to Cane Beds with her young family on March 11, 1917.[7]

A group of the Church of the Firstborn (a form of Mormonism), led by Ross LeBaron Jr., is based in Cane Beds. When the nearby Short Creek Community of fundamentalist Mormons broke up following the imprisonment of leader Warren Jeffs, several families moved to Cane Beds; others had been exiled there by Jeffs for not following his doctrine.[8] [9] [10] [11] Benjamin Bistline, Short Creek historian, moved to Cane Beds in his later years after renouncing fundamentalism.[12] Polygamy persisted in the area in the 20th century due to its isolation, despite the practice being discontinued by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[13] By 2009, most residents of Cane Beds were non-polygamous, though some still had connections with Colorado City.[14] [10] [15] [11]

Geography

Cane Beds is located in northeastern Mohave County at 36.9342°N -112.9117°W (36.934154, −112.911788). According to the United States Geological Survey, the CDP has a total area of 8.28sqmi, all land. It is in the Arizona Strip,[16] 4miles south of the Arizona–Utah border, 7miles southeast of Colorado City,[17] just south and west of the Vermilion Cliffs and Kaibab Indian Reservation,[4] and about an hour and a half northwest of the Grand Canyon. It is close to the St. George, Utah metropolitan area and borders Cottonwood Point Wilderness.[18] The Vermilion Cliffs at Cane Beds rise more than over above the community, to elevations of 6210and above sea level.[19]

Land in Cane Beds includes that which is suitable for agriculture. Native fauna includes pronghorns and mule deer.[20]

There are a variety of rock types in the strata at Cane Beds, including the Moenkopi Formation, Chinle Formation, and Shinarump Conglomerate. The town was studied in the Wheeler Survey.[21]

Demographics

As of the 2010 census, there were 448 people living in the CDP: 231 male and 217 female. 171 were 19 years old or younger, 78 were ages 20–34, 65 were between the ages of 35 and 49, 66 were between 50 and 64, and the remaining 68 were aged 65 and above. The median age was 29.2 years.

The racial makeup of the CDP was 94.4% White, 2.2% Native American, 0.7% Black or African American, 0.2% from Asian, and 1.3% from two or more races. 2% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 142 households in the CDP, 106 family households (74.6%) and 36 non-family households (25.4%), with an average household size of 3.15. Of the family households, there were 84 married couples living together, 13 single fathers, and 9 single mothers. Of the non-family households, 31 were a single person living alone, 16 male and 15 female.

The CDP contained 168 housing units, of which 142 were occupied and 26 were vacant.[22]

Tourism

It is a popular hiking spot, with nearby scenic border trails.[23] [24] In 2016, a nurse who was hiking alone in Cane Beds fell 100feet and was not rescued for over a day, having landed in a canyon. Mountain and air rescue teams found her after the owners of her hotel noticed her absence and called the county sheriff,[16] and she recovered in three months.[25] She was initially treated at a regional medical center in Utah, before being transferred to the Mayo Clinic, where she worked.[26] In 2014, a teenager from St. George fell 100feet into a canyon on a hike with family, and died.[27]

The Cane Beds Corral is a glamping and log cabin rental service in the town.[28] [29]

Education

It is divided between Fredonia-Moccasin Unified School District, in nearby Coconino County, and Colorado City Unified School District, principally serving the former Short Creek Community.[30] For four years in the 2000s, the Colorado City Unified School District was placed under state intervention because of the high rates of polygamy practiced in Colorado City and Hildale, Utah, the other towns in the district.[14] Cane Beds students originally began to be educated in the Short Creek school district as there were only five students from the town, and districts needed eight students to justify a school, so the districts had been merged.[31]

Infrastructure

Transport

The nearest airport is Colorado City Municipal Airport;[32] the nearest airport in regular service is St. George Regional Airport in St. George, Utah, approximately an hour away.[33] The nearest international airport is Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas.[32]

A two-mile stretch of Yellowstone Road in the Cane Beds area was renamed for LaVoy Finicum in 2017; while residents supported the motion, believing local man Finicum died defending his beliefs, the Mohave County Planning and Zoning Department only passed it 3–2, with the two opposing votes citing Finicum's lawlessness.[34] Those who voted in favor said the move would celebrate the long history of Finicum's family in the area, not his armed activism.[35] Reportedly, Finicum had previously requested that the stretch of road be named for him. It goes from Arizona State Route 389 (SR 389) to Cane Beds.[10]

In 1950, there were efforts in the area to promote improvement of roads and infrastructure, and on March 14 that year a town hall-style meeting was held and an organization formed to better the community of Cane Beds and others nearby.[36] Cane Beds Road is a stretch of county road 91 (former U.S. Route 91), and has a confluence with Interstate 15 (I-15) for about a mile. I-15 connects the town to Utah and Nevada.[37] A railroad used to follow U.S. Route 89/89A where it passes by the town.[38] SR 389 also passes close to Cane Beds.[39]

Services

Cane Beds is supported by the Mohave County Sheriff's Office, as well as the Kane County Sheriff's Office in southern Utah.[40]

Major hospitals serving Cane Beds residents are in Salt Lake City and Las Vegas.[41] Local medical facilities are at the Creek Valley Health Clinic in Colorado City[42] and Dixie Regional Medical Center in St. George.[43]

The Cox Family Cemetery, also known as the Cane Beds Cemetery, is in the town.[44] The town receives most of its local television from translators of Utah stations serving Hildale, with the exception of one Mohave County-owned translator of KSAZ-TV, the Fox station in Phoenix.[45] [46]

Notable residents

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2021 U.S. Gazetteer Files: Arizona . United States Census Bureau . May 19, 2022.
  2. Web site: Cane Beds CDP, Arizona: 2020 DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171). U.S. Census Bureau. May 19, 2022.
  3. Book: Barnes, Will C. . 73 . Arizona Place Names . 1988 . University of Arizona Press . 0-8165-1074-1 . Tucson. 17300876 .
  4. Book: Bright, William . Southern Paiute and Ute Linguistics and Ethnography . December 14, 2010 . Walter de Gruyter . 978-3-11-088660-3 . 627, 789, 842, 889–890, 904, 911.
  5. Ethnographic Assessment of Kaibab Paiute Cultural Resources in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Utah . 82 . Richard W. Stoffle . Alex K. Carroll . Amy Eisenberg . John Amato . 2004 . University of Arizona . 10150/271234 . free.
  6. Book: Altschul, Jeffrey H. . Man, Models and Management: An Overview of the Archaeology of the Arizona Strip and the Management of Its Cultural Resources . 1989 . The Service . 162–163, 174.
  7. Book: Arthur Delano Cox & Cora Haight Ancestors . Wilcock, Lenna Cox . 2011 . Idaho, Cox Family Organization.
  8. Web site: Tiny Tombstones: Inside the FLDS Graveyard for Babies Born from Incest . February 23, 2022 . Vice. March 9, 2016 .
  9. Web site: May 13, 2017 . Exodus of the FLDS . February 23, 2022 . The Salt Lake Tribune.
  10. Web site: July 17, 2019 . Bundyville: The Remnant, Chapter Three: The Widow's Tale . February 23, 2022 . Longreads.
  11. Web site: Polygamy tug-of-war: Hildale man criminally charged for playing Christmas music, battles child custody nightmare . February 23, 2022 . St. George, Utah News.
  12. Web site: Self-taught historian offers in-depth views of FLDS . February 23, 2022 . The Salt Lake Tribune.
  13. News: Polygamy Still Proves Popular in Proud Pocket of Arizona . A8, columns 1–4 . Desert Sun . Morgan . Neil . Palm Springs, CA . Copley News Service . September 2, 1975.
  14. Web site: October 10, 2009 . Arizona may end takeover of polygamist area school district . February 23, 2022 . Deseret News.
  15. Web site: Here is what polygamous sect member Ross LeBaron Jr. wrote in support of the Bundy family . February 23, 2022 . The Salt Lake Tribune.
  16. Web site: May 24, 2016 . Hiker recovering after northwest Arizona fall . February 23, 2022 . KTNV.
  17. Web site: Valencia . Peter . July 26, 2020 . One charged in officer-involved shooting in Cane Beds, south of Utah/Arizona border . February 23, 2022 . KSNV.
  18. Book: United States Bureau of Land Management Arizona State Office. Arizona Wilderness: Land Tenure Adjustment Plan. 1992. 20.
  19. Web site: USGS 1:24,000 Topographic Map Series: Cane Beds AZ. mapper.acme.com. May 19, 2022.
  20. Book: United States Bureau of Land Management Arizona State Office . Department of the Interior draft environmental statement, Vermillion grazing . 1979.
  21. Book: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper . 1949 . U.S. Government Printing Office . 19, 25, 42, 147, 156, 197–198.
  22. Web site: American FactFinder: Cane Beds CDP, Arizona . . October 31, 2016 . https://archive.today/20200213053930/http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_DP/DPDP1/1600000US0409900 . February 13, 2020 .
  23. Web site: Near Cane Beds. All Trails. 2022.
  24. Book: Warren, Scott S.. Exploring Arizona's Wild Areas: A Guide for Hikers, Backpackers, Climbers, Cross-Country Skiers and Paddlers. 1996. The Mountaineers. 978-0-89886-470-0. 41–46.
  25. Web site: May 24, 2016. Rochester Woman Survives 100-Foot Fall On Hike In Arizona. February 23, 2022.
  26. Web site: After Surviving 100-Foot Fall, Nurse is Moving Forward and Looking Up » In the Loop. February 23, 2022. Mayo Clinic.
  27. Web site: St. George teen falls to his death in Cane Beds. February 23, 2022. KSL.
  28. Web site: Cane Beds Corral. February 23, 2022. Cane Beds Corral.
  29. Web site: Liles. Maryn. July 29, 2021. Glamping Spots Near Me: The Most Amazing, Unusual Insta-Worthy Glamping Spots Across the US. February 23, 2022. Parade.
  30. Web site: 2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Mohave County, AZ. U.S. Census Bureau. January 17, 2022.
  31. Book: Bistline, Benjamin G.. The Polygamists: A History of Colorado City, Arizona. 2004. Agreka Books. 978-1-888106-74-9.
  32. Web site: Cane Beds (Mohave County, AZ) - Airports. February 23, 2022. Roadside Thoughts.
  33. Web site: Ltd. rome2rio Pty. Cane Beds to St George Airport (SGU) - 3 ways to travel via taxi, and car. February 23, 2022. Rome2rio.
  34. Web site: Anglen. Robert. Mohave County renames road after LaVoy Finicum, militia member killed by officers. February 23, 2022. The Arizona Republic.
  35. Web site: November 8, 2017. Arizona roadway to be named for man killed during Oregon protest. February 23, 2022. Las Vegas Review-Journal.
  36. Book: McKoy, Kathleen L.. Cultures at a Crossroads: An Administrative History of Pipe Spring National Monument. 2000. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Intermountain Region. 379–380.
  37. Web site: Interstate 15 South - AARoads - Arizona. February 24, 2022. AARoads.
  38. Anderson. O. L.. February 1, 1979. Rocky Mountain coal for southern California's coal-fired electric power generation. 91–92. 6171938.
  39. Book: Mineral Resources of the Canaan Mountain and the Watchman Wilderness Study Areas, Washington and Kane Counties, Utah, Issue 1746. Richard E. Van Loenen. United States Geological Survey. 1988. A2, A5.
  40. Web site: Escaped inmate caught in Mohave County after K-9 finds him hiding in chicken coop. February 23, 2022. St. George, Utah News.
  41. Web site: Cane Beds explosion victims still hospitalized; benefit concert planned. February 23, 2022. St. George, Utah.
  42. Web site: New Colorado City medical facility begins construction, hiring processes. February 23, 2022. St. George, Utah News.
  43. Web site: Garcia. Tony. May 23, 2016. Rochester, Minn., tourist rescued after falling from Arizona hiking trail. February 23, 2022. KSNV.
  44. Web site: Cox Family Cemetery (Mohave County, AZ). February 24, 2022. Roadside Thoughts.
  45. Book: Television & Cable Factbook: Cable. World Radio History. 1997. Warren Publishing Company. 978-1-57696-004-2. B-173, B-275.
  46. Web site: July 23, 2021. List of TV Translator Input Channels. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20211209195336/https://www.fcc.gov/sites/default/files/tv-translator-input-channels-07232021.xlsx. December 9, 2021. December 17, 2021. Federal Communications Commission.