Zion National Park, Bryce Canyon, Cedar Breaks, Kaibab Forest, North Rim of Grand Canyon
Copyright 1925 by W. H. Murray GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT Union Pacific System OMAHA, NEB.
ISSUED BY THE Union Pacific System
The Great White Throne from West Rim Trail, Zion National Park
Panorama of Zion Canyon
Touched by a light that hath no name,
A glory never sung,
Aloft on sky and mountain wall,
Are God’s great pictures hung.
— Whittier
Southward from the thirty-eighth parallel of latitude the surface of Western Utah descends in magnificent “Cyclopean steps” from the flattened summits of the Wasatch Mountains, 11,000 feet high, to 3,000 feet at the Rio Virgen , then ascends gently in Arizona to the colossal arch of the Kaibab Plateau, 9,000 feet in elevation and overlooking the Grand Canyon. These Titanic terraces and palisaded plateaus, more particularly the flaming canyons and jeweled amphitheatres cut from their color-saturated rock layers, form scenic spectacles without peer or rival on the globe. Nothing else is comparable to these wonderlands. To see them is both a thrilling adventure and an artistic delight.
Measured by civilization’s yardstick, the unknown land in which they lie is a frontier, still in the pioneer stage of existence. It is not so long since the forts along the way actually repelled Indian attacks; it is not so far to fastnesses where cougars come forth to prey on deer, or to desert valleys where wild mustangs range. On the edge of the plains are ruins of primitive dwellings of which the modern Indian knows nothing; in many a secluded canyon are the more inscrutable habitations of the cliff dwellers. The indomitable ranchers have built quaint, poplar-shaded villages with homes of adobe, and their farms are often fenced with stone.
The Watchman, Zion National Park
Union Pacific Railroad Company
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The Land of Flaming Canyons and Jeweled Amphitheatres
Cedar City to Zion National Park
Zion National Park
Legend and History
Description
Cedar City to Cedar Breaks
Cedar Breaks
Cedar Breaks to Bryce Canyon
Bryce Canyon National Monument
Zion Canyon to Kaibab Forest and North Rim of Grand Canyon
Kaibab National Forest
The North Rim of the Grand Canyon
From the North Rim of Grand Canyon to Bryce Canyon
Now Easy To Get There
Season and Climate
Cedar City
Gateway to Zion National Park, Bryce Canyon National Monument, Cedar Breaks, Kaibab Forest, North Rim Grand Canyon National Park
All-Expense Escorted Tours
General Information
Saddle Horses and Guides
Elevations
Footnotes
Representatives of the Union Pacific System
Transcriber’s Notes