Open Year Round
Welcome to Bluff Fort Historic Site
and The Hole in the Rock Foundation
Promotional video
"If we have plenty of stickie-ta-tudy, we cannot fail."
-- Jens Nielson (Nielsen), 1879
"There was something more than human power associated with it."
-- Kumen Jones
"The unity among the people, coming out with no conveniences, and yet they were just as happy as they could be."
-- Sarah Williams
In 1879-80, Mormon pioneers built a wagon road between established
communities in southwestern Utah and the Four Corners area. They were
fulfilling an assignment from their church, The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, to establish a settlement in the area. Their
journey turned into an ordeal of unparalleled difficulty as they blazed
a route across some of the most broken and rugged terrain in North
America.
Our
online collection of biographies, journals, and histories convey the
story of early pioneer life and the sacrifices, conviction, and
determination of the pioneers who established a community in one of the
most remote regions of the West.
The Hole-in-the-Rock Foundation was organized to facilitate the ongoing
development of the Bluff Fort Historic Site and interpretive projects throughout
the Hole-in-the-Rock Trail.
The Hole-in-the-Rock Foundation publishes a newsletter at least annually. Not much remains of the original Bluff City, established in 1880. Organizing themselves for protection into a "fort" made of inward facing cabins, they began this isolated community. In one corner of the fort, the Bluff pioneers established a cooperative trading post.
Kumen Jones home
Old Bluff School and Meetinghouse
Modern Co-op and Visitor Center
A replica of that co-op, housing the Fort gift shop and visitor center, is open. The grounds include actual wagons and other artifacts from the Hole in the Rock journey. the rebuilt old log meetinghouse, replicas of cabins Ute and Navajo dwellings, the a partially rebuilt Kumen Jones home, and the original Bluff Relief Society building.