Saint Joseph, Nevada – Clark County Ghost Town

Saint Joseph, Nevada, is a historic ghost town located in Clark County in the Moapa Valley along the east bank of the Muddy River. It played a brief but notable role in the mid-19th-century Mormon colonization efforts in southern Nevada. Today, little physical evidence remains of the original settlement, though its legacy connects to the modern community of Logandale.

Founding and Early Settlement (1865)

Mormon settlers, directed by Brigham Young as part of the broader Muddy Mission (or Moapa Mission), established Saint Joseph in May 1865. A group led by Thomas Smith initially founded the nearby community of St. Thomas at the confluence of the Muddy and Virgin Rivers earlier that year. In June 1865, a second group moved about nine miles north and built a fort on a bluff overlooking the east side of the Muddy River, roughly five miles north of present-day Overton.

The settlement was named Saint Joseph, reportedly after Joseph Young, a colonizer and son of Brigham Young. Like other Muddy Mission outposts, its purpose was agricultural: to grow crops such as cotton, wheat, and corn in the fertile river valley, while also securing the area against non-Mormon (“Gentile”) travelers and supporting the broader Latter-day Saints expansion in the American West.

Settlers constructed adobe buildings, a wooden gristmill (sometimes associated with the nearby Simonsville or Mill Point area), and other infrastructure. The mill processed salt, corn, and wheat. By 1867, the community had grown enough to receive its own post office (established August 26, 1867). It briefly served as the county seat when the Utah Territory created Rio Virgen County, even as the Arizona Territory claimed parts of the valley under Pah-Ute County.

The 1868 Fire and Relocation

In 1868, a fire—reportedly started by young boys attempting to roast potatoes—swept through the town and destroyed most of the structures, sparing at least one adobe building. Residents attempted to rebuild, but many relocated a few miles northwest to a new site along the Muddy River (sometimes described as on the west side or a short distance upstream). This new location also took the name Saint Joseph and grew to several hundred residents. The original post office transferred there.

Abandonment Due to Boundary Issues (1870–1871)

A major turning point came with the 1870 boundary survey, which determined that the Moapa Valley, including Saint Joseph, lay within Nevada rather than the Utah or Arizona territories as previously assumed. Nevada authorities demanded that the Mormon settlers pay substantial back taxes in gold coin—a burden the community found unsustainable. With permission from Brigham Young, most residents abandoned the settlement in 1871. Only one family reportedly remained initially.

This abandonment mirrored the fate of other Muddy Mission towns like St. Thomas. Non-Mormon settlers (“Gentiles”) soon moved in to claim the farmlands and remaining structures.

Later History and Connection to Logandale

Mormon pioneers began returning to the Moapa Valley around 1880, repurchasing land and re-establishing communities such as Overton and parts of the former Saint Joseph area. The relocated Saint Joseph site was renamed Logan (after an early pioneer or to avoid confusion) and later Logandale in 1917. Logandale incorporated the post office and became a lasting agricultural community in Clark County.

A Saint Joseph Cemetery in the area dates back to the 1860s, with initial use around 1864–1869 and additional burials in the 1890s. Some remnants, such as foundations or the occasional adobe structure, have been noted by historians and local explorers, though the original townsite is largely gone. Nearby historic buildings in the Logandale area, like the Gubler House (built 1909), reflect the continued settlement history.

Geographic and Modern Context

Saint Joseph (historical) is situated in Clark County, Nevada, with coordinates approximately 36°34′22″N 114°26′59″W. It lies in the Moapa Valley, part of the broader region that includes Overton and Logandale, north of Las Vegas. Clark County itself was not organized until 1909 (carved from Lincoln County), long after the town’s abandonment.

Today, Saint Joseph is classified as a ghost town, with minimal visible ruins compared to better-preserved sites like St. Thomas (partially submerged and later exposed due to Lake Mead fluctuations). The area’s history is preserved through local historical societies, the Clark County Museum, and accounts of the Muddy Mission.

Significance in Nevada History

Saint Joseph exemplifies the challenges faced by early Mormon settlements in the arid West: ambitious agricultural missions, conflicts over territorial boundaries, and tensions with state taxation. The Muddy Mission towns, including Saint Joseph, St. Thomas, and others, represented Brigham Young’s vision of a self-sustaining “Zion” corridor stretching from Utah southward. Their short-lived nature highlights how federal boundary decisions and economic pressures shaped settlement patterns in southern Nevada during the post-Civil War era.

The story of Saint Joseph underscores the resilience of the Moapa Valley’s communities, which transitioned from short-term missionary outposts to enduring agricultural towns like Logandale and Overton that still thrive today on farming and ties to Las Vegas.

Sources for further reading include local histories such as Pearson Starr Corbett’s work on the Muddy Mission, Nevada historical society publications, and sites documenting Clark County ghost towns. Remnants and related sites can sometimes be viewed in the Moapa Valley area, though visitors should respect private property and protected lands.

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