Portage, Box Elder County, Utah
Click here for:
* Directions
* Facts - limited facts available
* History
*
Map of Cemetery
*
Burial Records
Listed alphabetically by surname
Thanks to Raejena Allred for providing these burial records and photos.
From I-15, take exit 402. Travel west to stop sign (2.5 miles). Continue west thru stop sign on 25800 North -- 4/10th's of a mile -- thru town. The cemetery gates are on the right (north) side.
map courtesy of MapQuest.
See www.MapQuest.com
| Owner | |
| Sexton | |
| Acreage | |
| Earliest Headstone | |
| Date of last recorded burial | current |
| Number of Burial Spaces | |
| Number of Burials to Date | Nearly 800 |
by Joyce Lamb John
There seems to be no known record of the first death in Portage. The first attempt to settle this valley was in 1855, when about 15 families came into the valley and settled on the east side of the Malad River, at that time it was known as Mound and Oregon Springs. Mound Springs was located about 6 miles south of the Idaho Border. These families tried to farm, having built an adobe fort and log houses. Their crops were destroyed by grasshoppers; they suffered Indian problems. The little settlement broke up in 1858.
The first white man permanently settled in the Malad Valley, served as a mail station at Mount Springs in 1863. In 1864, a log cabin and corral was built about a mile north of the old fort. Stock business and ranching started, and a lot of hay was farmed. In 1872 the settlers moved their log church and some of their homes across the Malad River to the west side where the town is at present. At one time it was known as Hay Town. Apostle Lorenzo Snow renamed it Portage after his birth place of Portage County, Ohio.
The years of 1872 to 1877 are spoken of as the grasshopper and cricket wars. On one occasion the men were making a wagon road, when they were called home to fight grasshoppers. As they arrived, they found the wheat flat on the ground. The grasshoppers had come like a dark cloud...
The first settlers and their families were:
| James John Thomas Green Thomas Parkinson Henry Wells Sarah Ann Ashton John Tims Thomas Davis |
James Greer William Anderson Isaac Allen Sr. & Jr. William Sinclair Sr. and Jr. Harrison L. Boothe John Wyatt William Leisham |
Shortly after, these families arrived:
| Miles Hall John D. Gibbs Joseph McKay John Nicholas David Hall Oliver Cromwell Hoskins Robert Harris |
Enoch Harris John Heaton Levi Thornton Lydia Conley & son John Conley Charles Scott Hall |
I dedicate these records to all families that have loved ones buried in the three cemeteries [Portage, private cemetery east of Washakie, burials listed in memoriam (possibly buried on family lots)] that are included in this research. I have tried to to the best of my ability to assure accurate records. I have cross referenced early library records, information extracted from existing headstones, Portage Ward microfilm, existing town records, and contacted at least one member of each family involved that could be located. I thank you for your cooperation and your time. Many of you shared your family histories so I could glean as accurately as possible, the data to complete the entries. I have them in a special book as my sources, should anyone contact me for further research. It has truly been a labor of love for me.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
You are visitor
to this page.