Downey, Bannock County, Idaho Genealogy

Quick Facts
Geographic location: Google

Downey Chamber of Commerce

City Hall
City of Downey 15 S Main St Downey, ID (208) 897-9904

Cemeteries
The following are cemeteries in the vicinity of Downey. The principal cemetery for Downey is located within the city limits, but there are several small cemeteries in the rural area nearby.

Current
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints -- Downey Wards 310 East Center Street Downey, ID 83234

Historical
Many of the original records of church units are in the Church History Library in Salt Lake City. Many of the membership records covering these units from the date of their creation to about 1948 have been microfilmed and are available at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City or at its FamilySearch Centers. There are records of the (1907-1948) in this collection.

Directories
The Idaho State Archives has in its collections copies of city, county, state and regional directories.

Funeral Home
Marsh Valley Funeral Home 421 Center St McCammon, ID 83205 (208) 254-3786 Horsley Funeral Homes 132 W 300 N Malad City, ID 83250 (208) 766-4330

History
Downey is said to have been named for a Mr. Downey one of the directors of the Union Pacific Railroad, and the town dates back to the construction of the broad gauge railroad track through Marsh Valley. However, searches for any Mr. Downey, a director of the UPRR have had negative result. Some of the old settlers have been noted as saying that the Mr. Downey was a track worker. William Alonzo Hyde was the first settler at Downey; he had a farm and store. His brother George Tilton Hyde joined him in 1895. The Hyde brothers built a hotel and a blacksmith shop and did a good business from the beginning. Irrigated farming not being promising, dry farming was commenced in 1894. The townsite was surveyed in 1894, which was enlarged in 1910. The total population in the Downey Precinct was 1,485 in 1930.

Numerous small communities in the near vicinity were flourishing prior to the actual founding of Downey. Woodland, Cherry Creek, Cambridge (Nine Mile), Grant Ward, Zenda, Calvin, Chicken Flat, Virginia and Hog Holler were just a few which had their own local schools, churches and in some cases, mercantile and post office. Early settlers in these communities settled prior to 1870, some as early as 1864. The Woodland, Whitaker and Wakley families were known to have been in the area known as Woodland in April of 1864. Several stage stops were established prior to the advent of the UPRR and freight and stage service supplied many of the needs for these small communities. Downeys postal service now includes these outyling areas and the residents refer to themselves as "Downeyites". The total population of the "Downey" area (prior to the establishment of Downey proper) in 1880 was slightly over 200 persons. By 1900 the population had grown to 1100 with only a handful living within the city proper.

Additional history of Downey, Idaho and the early Latter-day Saint settlers there can be found in: Andrew Jenson. Encyclopedic History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Salt Lake City: Deseret News Publishing Company, 1941, p. 197.

Historical
Copies of several newspapers published in Downey are housed in the Idaho State Archives in Boise, Idaho. Among copies in that research facility are:

Downey comet -- 6 Jan. 1939 through 24 Nov. 1960 Downey comet and the Bancroft standard -- 22 Apr. 1938 through 29 Dec. 1939 Downey comet and the Bancroft standard -- 31 May 1945 through 12 Sep. 1946 Marsh Valley echo -- Dec. 1942 through Nov. 1945 Marsh Valley Junior echo -- 1945

School Records and Yearbooks
The Idaho State Archives in Boise has a copy of the 1957 school annual, the Marshopolitan, of North Marsh High School, which serves the cities of Arimo and Downey.

Societies, Libraries and Museums
Downey Public Library 18 N Main Downey, Idaho 83234 (208) 897-5270