The Utah-Idaho Central Railroad: Northern Utah’s Interurban Experience: The Interurban in Providence
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The Interurban in Providence
An article from the Logan Republican titled “Electric Line to Providence” reporting that work would be completed on the line to Providence by the end of the week. The city expected to celebrate the completion of the line that next Tuesday evening. [Click image, scroll to second image, and click second image to view full document]
The Logan Republican’s article titled “All Aboard for Providence! Railroad Celebration Tonight” reports on the completion of the Logan Rapid Transit Lines to Providence and the planned celebration [Click image, scroll to second image, and click second image to view full document]
Providence, Utah, was connected to the interurban system before most cities in Cache Valley. In fact, it was one of the few areas that received service from the predecessor of both railway companies[1], the Logan Rapid Transit Company. On May 17, 1913, the Logan Republican reported that “the Logan Rapid Transit company has been rushing work on the south bound extension of the Interurban system and by the first of the week cars will be run to the strawberry town to the south of Logan.”[2]
Later, on May 20, a celebration was scheduled and advertised to all living nearby: “The city of Providence through its mayor and town board extends an invitation to all Logan citizens to join them this evening in a grand celebration of the entry of the Interurban railroad to their city. The sister city issues the word that it has prepared elaborately for the occasion and guarantees in advance that no one who attends will be disappointed.”[3] This celebration, while recognizing the new opportunities that would now be available for Providence citizens, was also meant to demonstrate the growth and development of the city itself, its accomplishments and achievements, and the ability for Providence to share those benefits with others in the valley with the new railroad.
As the same May 20 article states that “for years past the city of Providence has been forging to the front and now that she is given an additional opportunity to exploit her wealth and make known to valley residents her real standing it can be predicted that in so doing her leading lights will spare no effort.”[4] It was recognized from the very beginning that the railroad would change Providence and its relationship with Cache Valley forever.
The Providence Station used by the Logan Rapid Transit Company; Ogden, Logan and Idaho Railway Company; and the Utah-Idaho Central Railroad [Click image to view full-size photo]
(Providence Historic Preservation Commission)
Unlike the stations in most other communities on the route of the Utah-Idaho Central, Providence’s station no longer stands. However, a small collection of records kept in the station have survived and provide a limited image of the operations of the U.I.C. in Providence. An index of the contents held in Special Collections & Archives within Merrill-Cazier Library at Utah State University can be viewed by following the link on the summary page. Despite water and other damage that have affected the state of the collection, the surviving records tell the story of Providence’s relationship with the U.I.C. and how it likely influenced the lives of those who lived and worked in Providence from 1913 to 1947. The Providence Station collection comprises only a short, one-year period of time from 1918 to 1919. Nevertheless, the documents bring the station to life by documenting the travel locations of those leaving and arriving in Providence. They demonstrate the economic connection between businesses in Providence, such as Theurer Brothers General Merchandise Store, and the operations of the railroad, some showing business connections as far as Omaha, Nebraska.[5] They also show the role of Providence Station in following and maintaining the requirements and standards enforced by the United States Railroad Association as it implemented tariffs and as its station agent ensured the efficient and proper operation of the U.I.C. within the community of Providence. Though the records are limited, it is evident that Providence contributed to the growth and development of the U.I.C. during its existence in Cache Valley.
Theurer’s Grocery Store, a local customer of the U.I.C., in Providence, Utah [Click image to view full-size photo]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, A-Board Historical Photograph Collection photo no. A3338a)
A U.I.C. shipping order for twenty-five cases of eggs to be shipped from Theurer Bros. in Providence to Neilson & Ricks in Salt Lake City [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 1, Item 1)
Oral history interviews from Providence residents supplement the station documents and demonstrate the influence of the Utah-Idaho Central on the local community and the social functions of its people. All who were interviewed and lived during the time of the railroad’s operation recall riding or watching siblings ride the train to school.[6] In addition, the railroad also contributed to other aspects of society. Mail and package delivery was a key service provided by the U.I.C. for the growing rural towns of Cache Valley and their developing businesses. The people of Providence also benefited from this service as recalled by Seth Alder: “Providence used to have that railroad go through there. There was an old gentleman who used to go down to meet the train when it came in to pick up the mail. I forgot his name now. He used to drive a buggy with his horse and pick up the mail. The post office was part of the Theurer’s store.”[7]
A U.I.C. train in Providence, Utah [Click image to view full-size photo]
(Providence Historic Preservation Commission)
In addition to his memories of visiting Lagoon,[8] Hoyt Kelley mentioned the economic value of the Utah-Idaho Central and its relationship with the local Amalgamated Sugar Company in shipping sugar beets as well as shipping rock from the Providence Limestone Quarry, which was owned and operated by Amalgamated. Kelley’s views on the end of the railroad are similar to many who fondly remember its service and the benefits it provided: “It’s sad that they don’t have it. Those right of ways were sold and taken over by the farmers and they never established them again . . . all the people that wanted to go anywhere went [with the train] too. It was a great little asset to have, but apparently when they started to use the other railway more it was a bigger railroad and it had bigger cars and so on and then automobiles came in and buses and just didn’t make it as [practical] . . . You could get on that thing and go to Salt Lake. You’d have half a day doing it. It’s too bad they lose things like that.”[9]
A railroad worker inspects U.I.C. engine #506 in Providence [Click image to view full-size photo]
(Providence Historic Preservation Commission)
For those who were younger during the operation of the railroad, the U.I.C. was not as influential or emotionally connected as those who did ride the train. However, such individuals as Ivan Christensen also found a way to use the railroad, even being too young to ride it: “The experience I had with the Interurban Railroad, driving cows down there we’d flatten our pennies. We’d put them on the railroad track and then hide and then the train came by. My brothers rode it to school and I walked the tracks a number of times to go to picture shows but the train went out before I was big enough to ride it or use it. The older people would ride it to Logan or to high school but I never did. I just used it to mash pennies.”[10]
A U.I.C. engine and car stopped at Providence in the winter [Click image to view full-size photo]
(Providence Historic Preservation Commission)
A final story of the railroad from Marie Olsen perhaps demonstrates the greatest connection between the U.I.C.’s operations, the reality of everyday life, and the emotions of individuals using the train:
“We lived a half a block from the railroad station down here on this main street, Second West . . . The train station was over a block on this corner. I was about ten years of age. I would go every week to take my violin lesson to Logan. I would have ten cents to buy my ticket and ten cents to buy my ticket coming home. This time I went and took my violin lesson and then when I came back to the train station in Logan I bought my ticket. It was dark and it was cold and I was waiting in the train station and my ticket fell behind the heater. I didn’t have any more money, I couldn’t call anybody. I tried to get it out with some gum on a pencil. It wouldn’t come. Here came the train and I thought, ‘What am I going to do? I’ve got to get home.’ So I climbed on the train without a ticket and hid behind a big fat lady. I thought, ‘Wonderful! Now I’m Ok, now I’ll get home.’ This fat lady put her skirt around me because she could tell I was kind of cold. I just hid back there and I thought, ‘Oh, I’m safe.’ The trouble was that when we got to Providence, the train didn’t stop because nobody had bought a ticket. So I kept going through the train station. The tracks were right along here. So it kept going and I thought, ‘What am I going to do?’ Millville was the next town. I think we were about here and I think I told the conductor, ‘I’ve got to get off.’ He looked at me and he said, ‘Where are you going?’ and I jumped off the train. I had my violin and I had to walk all the way back home. It was dark and I was scared to death. Every time I would go a little bit faster, these footsteps would be behind me. Well, it was me. Then the dogs were barking and it took me forever to get home. When I got down there, the big Zollinger home is on the west side of the street, and I knew then I was getting close. Then I could smell the pea vinery. I knew if I go a half a block more there will be the train station. I dashed home and I thought, ‘I’m never going to play that stupid violin again.’ But I did, I kept playing.”[11]
U.I.C. engine #602 in Providence [Click image to view full-size photo]
(Providence Historic Preservation Commission)
Providence’s early connections to the U.I.C. brought permanent change to the community. Through its operation and service, the railroad contributed to the growth and development of the town, its businesses, and its individuals who worked for and dreamed of a better future for the city. On the other hand, the community of Providence also contributed to the expansion of the U.I.C. and its years of operation. The tracks, engines, whistles, and even the station itself may have disappeared, but the memory of the train and its impact continues to live on within the community of Providence, Utah.
A Selection of Records from Providence Station
O.L.I. baggage claim ticket No. A 40138 for a passenger traveling from Deweyville, Utah, to Providence, Utah [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 1, Folder 1, Item 1)
O.L.I. baggage claim ticket No. A 43489 for a passenger traveling from Ogden, Utah, to Providence, Utah [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 1, Folder 1, Item 3)
O.L.I. baggage claim ticket No. A 41538 for a passenger traveling from Brigham City, Utah, to Providence, Utah [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 1, Folder 1, Item 4)
O.L.I. passenger’s check No. 9446 for a passenger traveling from Logan, Utah, to Providence, Utah [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 1, Folder 1, Item 2)
A U.I.C. shipping order for twenty sacks of stock feed to be shipped from Hansen Livestock & Feed Co. in Providence, Utah, to Allen Bros. in Hyrum, Utah [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 1, Item 5)
A U.I.C. shipping order for one wheelbarrow, three bundles of farm tools, one blacksmith vice, and three sacks of farm tools to be shipped from Anton Kohler in Providence, Utah, to himself in Ogden, Utah [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 1, Item 6)
A U.I.C. shipping order for “Bulk Apples” to be shipped from the Utah Fruit Exchange in Providence, Utah, to the North American Fruit Exchange in Omaha, Nebraska [Click image to view full document; click again to view reverse side]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 1, Item 7)
March 1918 abstract of daily waybills received by the U.I.C. Providence Station from Smithfield, Utah [Click image, then click image again to view full document]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 4, Item 1)
April 22, 1918, abstract of daily waybills received by the U.I.C. Providence Station from Ogden, Utah [Click image, then click image again to view full document]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 4, Item 12)
April 27, 1918, abstract of daily waybills received by the U.I.C. Providence Station from Ogden, Utah [Click image, then click image again to view full document]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 4, Item 13)
April 27, 1918, abstract of daily waybills received by the U.I.C. Providence Station from Salt Lake City, Utah [Click image, then click image again to view full document]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 4, Item 14)
April 29, 1918, abstract of daily waybills received by the U.I.C. Providence Station from Salt Lake City, Utah [Click image, then click image again to view full document]
(Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives, Utah Idaho Central Railway Providence Station Records, 1918–1919 MSS 163, Box 2, Folder 4, Item 15)