
Welcome!
... to the Basque Club of Utah's Web site!
Dinner Dance
This event is held every February at St. Ambrose as a Club fundraiser and to share our culture with the public...
Living Traditions
The Club participates in this event as another fundraiser and to share our culture with the community...
Carmelite Fair
The Club donates time and proceeds from sales of chorizos to the Carmelite Nuns. The dancers perform, as well...
History:
In the Beginning:
Nearly everyone who is native to the western United States has at one time
or another met an individual with a polysyllabic surname who is fiercely
proud to report that his or her heritage is Basque.
In
Utah, as in Idaho, Nevada, California, Wyoming, and Montana, these people
are likely to speak of pasts that include lonely months spent working as
shepherds for the large ranching operations of the West. In fact, "shepherd"
was at one time virtually synonymous with "Basque," as Basques earned a
reputation as the most diligent, conscientious, and capable ranch workers
available.
While
most Utahns of Basque descent no longer claim sheep herding as a profession,
the opportunity to earn money herding sheep is what brought most of them to
the United States. About fifty Basque families now call Utah home, and while
a few Basque men work as shepherds on Utah ranches, most were drawn away
from the Idaho and Wyoming sheep ranches where they first began their lives
in the United States to work in the Bingham Canyon copper mines and other
Utah industries.
Basques have no nation of their own, but are a staunchly tight-knit ethnic
group with a unique language and a culture that is unlike any other in
Europe. The Basque homeland, called "Euzkadi" in the Basque language, spans
both mountainous and coastal areas of northeastern Spain and southeastern
France in the Pyrenees Mountains regions. The Basque region includes seven
provinces - Gipuzkoa, Bizkaia, Araba, and Nafarroa in Spain, and Lapurdi,
Nafarroa Beherea, and Zuberoa in France.
Basques first appeared in the New World as members of Christopher Columbus's
crew, and may have made their first journeys to the Americas as fishermen
long before that. More recent migrations to North and South America,
however, were brought about by poor economic conditions in the Basque region
in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, during which time many
Basques experienced poverty working as fishermen, farmers, and miners. Some
Basques also left the region and migrated to the Americas as political
refugees following the Spanish Civil War.
As
Basque immigrants made their way to Utah and other Western states, a
mainstay of local Basque culture was the Basque hotel and boarding house.
Such residences run by recent immigrants for new arrivals once existed in
Salt Lake City, Ogden, Price, Bingham Canyon, and Park City.
Hogar Hotel
Among
the most well-known Basque boarding houses was the Hogar Hotel, owned by
John and Claudia Landa and located at 126 South 200 West in Salt Lake City.
The Landas, who immigrated from the Basque province of Bizkaia, are fondly
remembered in Utah's Basque community as grandparents to all.
The Hogar Hotel, built in 1927, became a stopping point and a haven for Basque immigrants making their way to ranches throughout the West. It also offered a familiar atmosphere for local Basque families, who used it as a restaurant, meeting place, and a cultural center of sorts.

Basque Club of Utah
The Hogar Hotel's closure in the early 1970s spawned the creation of the Utah Basque Club, which held its first annual picnic at Saratoga in Utah County in 1974. Since the founding of the club by Rose Camara Hoover and Robert Ithurralde, the Utah Basque Club has grown in size and now includes about 200 members of Basque descent.
The Utah Basque Club is a member of the North American
Basque Organization, and sponsors various cultural events throughout the
year.
Although migration of Basques to the United
States is now rather uncommon, the Basque culture in Utah and other western
states remains strong, having been built on a vital and important heritage.


Welcome!
... to the Basque Club of Utah's Web site...
Utahko' Triskalariak
Our dancers perform for various Basque and civic functions through the western states...
Mus
We conduct a tournament every year and the winners travel to the NABO tournament...
Cooking
Members prepare traditional and new dishes internally for other members of the Club and community...

















