appaloosa's photos with the keyword: Ute

4 Corners Monument

17 Oct 2016 418
DAY 8 THUR 4 OCT 2012 Drive: from Cortez/Mesa Verde, CO to Chinle, AZ During our drive, we stop at the four corners monument; so named because of where four state boundary lines meet and intersect. The Colorado corner lies in the Ute Mountain reservation, while the Utah, Arizona and New Mexico corners lie in the Navajo Nation. This information plaque bears the insignia's of the U.S. Dept. of the Interior, 1848 (top left), U.S. Public Land Survey System (bottom left), U.S. Dept. of the Interior,/Bureau of Land Management (top right), and the Great Seals of the Navajo Nation, and Ute Mountain Ute Tribe (Towaoc, Colorado). Above the Great Seals of the Navajo & Ute, the words read: Indian Lands The four corners area is surrounded by Indian Lands. The Navajo Nation lies in New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. The Ute Mountain Ute Nation is located in Colorado. Respect the culture and traditions of the four corners area. " The plaque (middle section) reads: Four Corners -- A Common Bond This is the only place in the United States marking the common corner of four states -- Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. Who established this corner? The four corners monument was established and perpetuated by U.S. Government Surveyors and Astronomers beginning in 1868. Surveyors Ehud Darling (1868), Chandler Robbins (1875), Rollin Reeves (1878) and Howard Carpenter (1901) surveyed the boundary lines between the states. In 1899, U.S. Surveyors Hubert Page and James Lentz found the four corners monument disturbed and broken. They marked and set a new stone at the original location. Everett Kimmell, General Land Office, remonumented the Page-Lentz stone with a concrete and brass monument in 1931. The Bureau of Land Management and the Bureau of Indian Affairs poured a concrete paving block around the Kimmell monument in 1962. In 1992, Cadastral Surveyors Darryl Wilson and Jack Eaves officially remonumented the deteriorating Kimmell marker with an aluminum bronze disc. The structure that you see today was rebuilt by the Bureau of Land Management.