Mosida is a ghost town located on the southwestern shore of
Utah
Lake
, in Utah County, Utah
, USA. The nearest inhabited town is Elberta
, some to the south. A heavily promoted
planned community in the 1910s,
Mosida was ultimately a failure.
History
The land was purchased from the Utah State Land Board in 1909 by a
group of three men: R. E. Morrison, Joseph Simpson, and J. E.
Davis. They planned to divide the land and sell it in tracts for
peach
orchards. They named their project
Mosida, an
acronym formed from the
first two letters of each of their surnames.
Within months they
sold out to a group of promoters from Denver, Colorado
who incorporated as the Mosida Fruit
Lands Company.
The company began to improve the property and advertise to
prospective investors and buyers. Since the land west of Utah Lake
lacks any major streams, they built a pumphouse at the lake's edge,
dug
irrigation ditches, and installed a
series of pumps to water the farmland. A large
boarding house was constructed to house up to
250 workers. In 1911 the boarding house filled with workmen from
surrounding towns, recruited to clear and plow the land and plant
apple and peach seedlings. A
steam
tractor pulling a massive
gang plow was
used to break up the soil.
By 1912, of land had been plowed, 50,000 fruit trees planted, and
of grain harvested. The company built a 25-room luxury hotel which
became the town landmark, used to house tourists and prospective
investors. Those who came to consider purchasing tracts of land or
shares of stock were given a grand tour and a powerful sales pitch
about Mosida's natural advantages and bright future.
No expense was spared
to impress the guests; a fine passenger boat ferried them across
the lake to and from Provo
.
Locals sometimes used the boat as a dance floor for parties. The
Mosida Fruit Lands Company soon added more houses, a store, a post
office, and even a school. They imported two French cooks to
provide their workers the best of meals at the boarding house. The
company's salesmanship was effective; by 1913 some 400 people had
moved to Mosida and were working the farms and orchards.
The new residents quickly found that life in Mosida did not live up
to the promotional literature's glowing descriptions. The fruit
trees began to die; it transpired that the soil was too salty and
mineralized for them. Other crops such as wheat and peanuts did
better, but swarms of
grasshoppers
damaged the surviving crops, especially the
alfalfa. Transportation to and from the isolated
site was a challenge, and became even harder when the Mosida boat
was destroyed in a fire on
April 17,
1913. The pumping and irrigation operations
also proved more expensive than planned, despite a second pumping
plant installed in 1914. The lake level fluctuated widely from year
to year, dropping so low in 1915 that the water could no longer be
pumped. Individual landowners and the company itself found
themselves increasingly in debt, and in 1915 the Mosida Fruit Lands
Company was placed under court-ordered
receivership. Creditors tried to keep the
project going for a few more years, but by 1917 most people had
left. The population dropped to 67 by 1920, and with no more water
or power available Mosida died.
Some ruins of Mosida still stand, including the foundations of the
hotel and schoolhouse, and the concrete pumphouse walls.
References