Quest for the Golden Circle
The Four Corners and the Metropolitan West, 19451970
Arthur R. Gómez
With a new preface by the author
October 2000
288 pages, 24 photographs,
3 maps, 6 x 9
Development of Western Resources
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1065-5, $16.95
Until World War II, the Four Corners
Region--where New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Arizona meet--was
a collection of isolated rural towns. In the postwar baby boom
era, however, small communities like Farmington, New Mexico,
became bustling municipalities with rapidly expanding economies.
In Quest for the Golden Circle, Art Gómez traces
the development of the Four Corners' two industries, mining and
tourism, to discover how each contributed to the economic and
urban transformation of this region during the 1950s and 1960s.
Focusing on four cities--Durango, Colorado; Moab, Utah; Flagstaff,
Arizona; and Farmington, New Mexico--Gómez chronicles
how these towns played key roles in the West's dramatic postwar
expansion. Cities such as Denver, Albuquerque, Phoenix, Tucson,
El Paso, and Salt Lake City all grew through use of the abundant
petroleum, uranium, natural gas, timber, and other natural resources
extracted from the Four Corners region.
But the energy boom in these towns was not to last. With the
arrival of foreign oil bringing economic growth to a halt in
the early 1970s, town leaders turned again to the land to stimulate
their economy. This time, the resource was a seemingly inexhaustible
one--tourism. Gómez examines how business-minded citizens
marketed the area's scenic wonders and established the entire
region as a tourist destination. Their efforts were further assisted
by the selection of stunning federal lands--Mesa Verde, Grand
Canyon, and Arches National Parks--as treasures protected and
promoted by the National Park Service.
Both mining and tourism, however, were beset by complex new
problems and issues. Extensive highways, for instance, were planned
to bisect a Navajo reservation. As Gómez illustrates,
the growing cities in the Four Corners region felt tremendous
competing pressures between outside business powers and local
needs as their extractive economy boomed and busted and as they
then struggled to attract tourism dollars. In addition, he highlights
the prominent roles played by federal agencies like the Atomic
Energy Commission and the National Park Service in shaping regional
destiny.
An outstanding analysis of the complexities of postwar development,
Quest for the Golden Circle successfully illuminates the
history of one region within the larger story of the modern American
West.
"An important study and an inside look at how small-town
chambers of commerce and business leaders in the interior West
can wield potent political and economic power."--Andrew
Gulliford, Montana The Magazine of Western History
"Most interest in Gómez's book, and its primary
focus, is the explication of the shift toward a 'regional ethos'
of tourism. The 'golden circle' in the title refers to Stewart
Udall's concept of the Four Corners as a scenic wonderland, encompassing
parks and monuments from Mesa Verde to the Grand Canyon."--Michael
F. Logan, Journal of Arizona History
"An excellent addition to the history of the Southwest."--Charles
S. Peterson, Western Historical Quarterly
ARTHUR R. GOMEZ is a National Park Service historian
in the Intermountain Support Office, Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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