HISTORY of Wasatch County

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HISTORY of Wasatch County A HISTORY OF = 'Wasatch County Jessie L. Embry UTAH CENTENNIAL COUNTY HISTORY SERIES A HISTORY OF Wasatch County Jessie L. Embry Native Americans used Wasatch County for hunting and gathering activities, but prob­ ably no permanent settlers lived in the area until the Mormons arrived in 1859. They established communities following Joseph Smith's Plat of the City of Zion. Rather than living on isolated homesteads, they lived in towns and set up their farms surrounding the villages. The harsh weather and distant water sources of the region also encouraged coop­ eration. The area became known for its dair­ ies and cattle and sheep industries. But while the towns in Wasatch County started as typical Mormon villages, they have become more dependent on outside eco­ nomic forces. The state and federal govern­ ments have developed many of the county's natural resources, but they generally are used outside the area. The county includes much of the Uinta and parts of the Wasatch and Ashley national forests and boasts three res­ ervoirs: Strawberry (1910), Deer Creek (1946), and Jordanelle (1995); however, the stored water is used elsewhere. Wasatch County's history is the story of a transition from independent Mormon villages to de­ pendent colonies and bedroom communi­ ties of larger population centers. ISBN: 0-913738-08-5 A HISTORY OF 'Wasatch County A HISTORY OF Wasatch County Jessie L. Embry 1996 Utah State Historical Society Wasatch County Commission Copyright © 1996 by Wasatch County Commission All rights reserved ISBN 0-913738-08-5 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 96-60164 Map by Automated Geographic Reference Center—State of Utah Printed in the United States of America Utah State Historical Society 300 Rio Grande Salt Lake City, Utah 84101-1182 Dedicated to Ruth Grimshaw Witt Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix GENERAL INTRODUCTION xiu CHAPTER 1 Introduction 1 CHAPTER 2 The Land before Mormon Settlement 11 CHAPTER 3 Mormon Settlement of Wasatch County, 1859-1888 20 CHAPTER 4 Community Growth, 1889-1917 63 CHAPTER 5 War and the Roaring Twenties, 1917-1929 .. 114 CHAPTER 6 Depression, 1930-1941 166 CHAPTER 7 World War II 194 CHAPTER 8 Returning to Normalcy and Depression 1946-1975 220 CHAPTER 9 Years of Decision and Growth, 1975-1995 .. 273 CHAPTER 10 Conclusion 318 Vll viii CONTENTS 321 325 Acknowledgments W*he n the Utah State Historical Society hired me as a preser­ vation intern during the summer of 1977, my initial assignment was to research the buddings in Heber City and Wasatch County. I barely knew where Wasatch County was before I was hired, but for six months Heber became my home. I worked long hours photograph­ ing buildings, searching titles, and reading past issues of the Wasatch Wave. I lived with Ruth Witt, who became my historical consultant, booster club, and nurse. Years later when Kent Powell asked me if I would be wdling to write this centennial history of Wasatch County, I thought of Ruth. A citizen of Wasatch County by marriage, Ruth had adopted the area as her home wholeheartedly. She loved the land, the buildings, and the people. Because of her great devotion to the area and her support of my work, I have dedicated this volume to her. I sometimes tease Kent that I agreed to write this history because Ruth haunted me. Actually, I was delighted to be able to do something with all my research on Wasatch County. I never finished my work in Heber City because I was transferred to Salt Lake City. For nearly twenty years ACKNOWLEDGMENTS my research notes gathered dust. I started to write a book several times, but I never felt that I had enough material to complete a study. Receiving the contract for this history adowed me to complete my research and finady bring my study of Wasatch County to a close. There are almost too many people to thank, but I don't want to just list their names because each person provided special support. Kent Powed and Craig Fuller from the Historical Society listened to my concerns and complaints and gave me encouragement. When I was deciding if I really wanted to take the contract to write the his­ tory, Danny Jorgensen, a sociologist and friend from Florida, traveled through Heber and Round vadeys with me. His enthusiasm about the area was contagious. The staff at the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young Univeristy assisted in the research. Rebecca Vorimo was not only a research assistant but also a friend and "Mother Confessor." I am especiady thankful for Rebecca's hard work in read­ ing the Wasatch County census. Then she and her husband, Pasi Vorimo, developed the charts that are included in this volume. Kris Nelson went beyond her job description as a secretary. She not only read the manuscript several times but listened to ad my joys and complaints. Widiam A. "Bert" Wdson, the Redd Center director, encouraged the project and told me that it was valuable. Other employees, such as transcriber Rachel Nathan, helped in processing Rebecca's oral histories. I received valuable assistance from archives throughout the state of Utah. I enjoyed working with the staff at the Brigham Young University Library, the University of Utah Special Collections, the Utah State Historical Society, and the Utah State University Special Collections. I am especially indebted to my friends at the LDS Church Archives. Ron Watt and Mike Landon helped me locate records and discover information that I might have overlooked. Other archives which are not used as frequently also provided assis­ tance. Bernice Mooney graciously opened the Catholic archives in Salt Lake City. I visited the Heber City office of the Uinta National Forest and received assistance from the staff there and from members of the Provo office. The staff at the Bureau of Reclamation office in Provo gave me the opportunity to look through their files. These ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xi helped me understand the construction of Deer Creek Dam and Reservoir. Wasatch County residents—past and present—have also helped with the project. The Wasatch County Commissioners made sure that the Redd Center was paid. I spent several days reading the Wasatch County School Board minutes in the school district office. The staff provided excellent working conditions. People in the Wasatch County courthouse and the Heber City offices also helped me find material. I am especiady grateful for Bob Mathis's assistance. When I worked in Heber back in 1977, Bob had just started working for the county. He provided me with office space and discussions about historic preservation. When I returned to write this history, I interviewed him about his experiences watching the county grow and change. I enjoy discussing history with Bob. Finally Jerry Springer, Kenneth O. Kohler, and Barbara and Guy S. McDonald, Wasatch County residents, agreed to read the manuscript. Springer helped me understand the mining history better. Kohler explained the on-going research on Native American history. The McDonalds pointed out some embarrassing errors and gave valuable insights on Wasatch County history since 1940, especiady aviation history. Friends and famdy have also supported this project. Janet Embry, my sister, friend, and critic, agreed to edit the manuscript as my Christmas present one year. My father, Bertis L. Embry, who spent years developing irrigation projects throughout the world tried to explain water law to me. Ron Shook agreed to celebrate almost every completed task. And countless other friends listened to Wasatch County stories. In other words, this history has consumed much of my time and thoughts for several years. County residents frequently asked me how my study would be different from How Beautiful Upon the Mountains. I worked very hard to explain how events in Wasatch County related to Utah and United States history. I also developed theories that tied the events together. I think I came up with some workable ideas that I hope will help Wasatch County citizens and others understand the area. But as with any study, these are my ideas. While others have helped and encouraged me, I am responsible for the final project. General Introduction Whhe n Utah was granted statehood on 4 January 1896, twenty- seven counties composed the nation's new forty-fifth state. Subsequently two counties, Duchesne in 1914 and Daggett in 1917, were created. These twenty-nine counties have been the stage on which much of the history of Utah has been played. Recognizing the importance of Utah's counties, the Utah State Legislature established in 1991 a Centennial History Project to write and publish county histories as part of Utah's statehood centennial commemoration. The Division of State History was given the assign­ ment to administer the project. The county commissioners, or their designees, were responsible for selecting the author or authors for their individual histories, and funds were provided by the state legis­ lature to cover most research and writing costs as wed as to provide each public school and library with a copy of each history. Writers worked under general guidelines provided by the Division of State History and in cooperation with county history committees. The counties also established a Utah Centennial County History Councd xiv GENERAL INTRODUCTION to help develop policies for distribution of state-appropriated funds and plans for publication. Each volume in the series reflects the scholarship and interpreta­ tion of the individual author. The general guidelines provided by the Utah State Legislature included coverage of five broad themes encompassing the economic, religious, educational, social, and polit­ ical history of the county. Authors were encouraged to cover a vast period of time stretching from geologic and prehistoric times to the present.
Recommended publications
  • UMNP Mountains Manual 2017
    Mountain Adventures Manual utahmasternaturalist.org June 2017 UMN/Manual/2017-03pr Welcome to Utah Master Naturalist! Utah Master Naturalist was developed to help you initiate or continue your own personal journey to increase your understanding of, and appreciation for, Utah’s amazing natural world. We will explore and learn aBout the major ecosystems of Utah, the plant and animal communities that depend upon those systems, and our role in shaping our past, in determining our future, and as stewards of the land. Utah Master Naturalist is a certification program developed By Utah State University Extension with the partnership of more than 25 other organizations in Utah. The mission of Utah Master Naturalist is to develop well-informed volunteers and professionals who provide education, outreach, and service promoting stewardship of natural resources within their communities. Our goal, then, is to assist you in assisting others to develop a greater appreciation and respect for Utah’s Beautiful natural world. “When we see the land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.” - Aldo Leopold Participating in a Utah Master Naturalist course provides each of us opportunities to learn not only from the instructors and guest speaKers, But also from each other. We each arrive at a Utah Master Naturalist course with our own rich collection of knowledge and experiences, and we have a unique opportunity to share that Knowledge with each other. This helps us learn and grow not just as individuals, but together as a group with the understanding that there is always more to learn, and more to share.
    [Show full text]
  • The Secret Mormon Meetings of 1922
    University of Nevada, Reno THE SECRET MORMON MEETINGS OF 1922 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History By Shannon Caldwell Montez C. Elizabeth Raymond, Ph.D. / Thesis Advisor December 2019 Copyright by Shannon Caldwell Montez 2019 All Rights Reserved UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA RENO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL We recommend that the thesis prepared under our supervision by SHANNON CALDWELL MONTEZ entitled The Secret Mormon Meetings of 1922 be accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS C. Elizabeth Raymond, Ph.D., Advisor Cameron B. Strang, Ph.D., Committee Member Greta E. de Jong, Ph.D., Committee Member Erin E. Stiles, Ph.D., Graduate School Representative David W. Zeh, Ph.D., Dean, Graduate School December 2019 i Abstract B. H. Roberts presented information to the leadership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in January of 1922 that fundamentally challenged the entire premise of their religious beliefs. New research shows that in addition to church leadership, this information was also presented during the neXt few months to a select group of highly educated Mormon men and women outside of church hierarchy. This group represented many aspects of Mormon belief, different areas of eXpertise, and varying approaches to dealing with challenging information. Their stories create a beautiful tapestry of Mormon life in the transition years from polygamy, frontier life, and resistance to statehood, assimilation, and respectability. A study of the people involved illuminates an important, overlooked, underappreciated, and eXciting period of Mormon history.
    [Show full text]
  • Discover Denver Survey Report: Capitol Hill-West Cheesman Survey
    Discover Denver Know It. Love It. One Building at a Time. Survey Report: Capitol Hill-West Cheesman Survey Area Prepared by: Kathleen Corbett, Ph.D. Architectural Historian Corbett AHS, Inc. and Beth Glandon Director, Discover Denver Historic Denver, Inc. State Historical Fund Grant #16-01-021 December 2019 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Discover Denver Overview.................................................................................................................... 1 Project Purpose ..................................................................................................................................... 1 Project History ...................................................................................................................................... 1 1. Introduction: Capitol Hill-West Cheesman Survey ............................................................................... 3 2. Project Area .......................................................................................................................................... 4 3. Research Design and Methods ............................................................................................................. 6 Survey Objectives and Scope of Work .................................................................................................. 6 Survey Exclusions .................................................................................................................................. 7 Project Participants ..............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Rev Walter Skehan, Notes Vol 43 with QUIRKE Partial
    Title: Rev. Walter Skehan, Notes, Vol 43 –(partial) Ireland Genealogy Projects Archives Tipperary Index Copyright Contributed by: Mary Quirk-Thompson __________________________________ Rev. Walter Skehan Notes. Vol 43 pg 69 Pat Quirke married Ellen Stokes pg 112 same Pat Quirke married Catherine Fitzgerald Blue when Quirke listed Or go to http://fanningfamilyhistory.com/index.php/2014/08/27/walter-skehan- papers-vol-43/ “Rev Walter Skehan Papers Vol 43 The papers of Rev Father Walter G Skehan 1905- 1971 contain much genealogical information about various Irish families. He was parish priest of Loughmore and Castleiny Co Tipperary 1960 – 1971 and a keen family historian. He is buried in Loughmore Cemetery.”Kathleen Fanning C. 1786, Walter Skehan (a), of Coolbawn married firstly Mary O’Dea (w-a). Issue:- 3 Children:- (1). John (aa), born 1787 = Mary Ryan? 1824. Said to have been implicated in a faction fight in which a man was murdered: given Coolbawn to his step-brother, Darby, and fled to U.S.A. He is believed to have been married and that his eldest child was named Walter. John Skehan (aa) was baptised on 3rd May 1787. But it must be noted that there is a John Skehan who died 18th May, 1804, aged 77, and is buried at St. Johnstown with other members of the family: but he however would be too old to be same person as above John, and is perhaps the father of Walter (a). John Skehan (aa) was married in Coolbawn and had family who went to America with him. ?Married C. 1824-5 Mary Ryan….
    [Show full text]
  • Station: KALL 700 – AM + KOVO 960 AM Contest Name: JAZZ Vs CAVS On-Air Ticket Giveaway Promo Dates: 3/7/16 – 3/11/16
    Broadway Media, LLC Contest Rules As of 1/13/2016 Station: KALL 700 – AM + KOVO 960 AM Contest name: JAZZ Vs CAVS On-Air Ticket Giveaway Promo Dates: 3/7/16 – 3/11/16 General Rules for all contests 1. Each contest is open to all qualified persons 18 years or older except the following: a. Employees of Broadway Media, LLC and related companies; household members, siblings, and parents of said Broadway employees; b. Employees of all Salt Lake Metro area broadcasting companies, and their immediate family members; There is no purchase necessary. 2. A total of one prize may be won per household address, name, and or family residing in same, per contest, whether the prize be in cash, services, or merchandise. 3. Persons who have previously won a prize of either cash, services, or merchandise from any of the Broadway Media radio stations ( KXRK, KEGA, KYMV, KUUU, KUDD, KALL, KOVO), either from a contest or a station event, are subject to the following restrictions: Persons who have won a prize valued from $0 - $498 may are eligible to win again with no time restrictions. Persons who have won a prize valued above $499 are not eligible to win again until after 90 days from the date of the previous item won. Persons who have won a prize valued between $500 and $999 may not win again until after 6 months from the date of the previous item won. Persons who have won a prize valued at $1,000 or more may not win again until after 12 months from the date of the previous item won.
    [Show full text]
  • 1. About Us 2. Our Reach Market Share Graph Issue Graph 3. Why Solution-Focused Journalism Matters (More Than Ever) 4
    since 2012 2012 Map of Utah Media Outlet Pickup* *A full list of outlets that picked up UTNC can be found in section 8. “Public News Service has a proven track record effectively getting public interest messages and information out on issues that we care about. AARP-UT pledged support as a founding member of the UTNC and we look forward to the benefits of having a news service in Utah!” - Laura Polacheck, Communications Director, AARP-UT 1. About Us 2. Our Reach Market Share Graph Issue Graph 3. Why Solution-Focused Journalism Matters (More Than Ever) 4. Spanish News and Talk Show Bookings 5. Member Benefits 6. List of Issues 7. PR Needs (SBS) 8. Media Outlet List Utah News Connection • utnc.publicnewsservice.org page 2 1. About Us since 2012 What is the Utah News Connection? Launched in 2012, the Utah News Connection is part of a network of independent public interest state-based news services pioneered by Public News Service. Our mission is an informed and engaged citizenry making educated decisions in service to democracy; and our role is to inform, inspire, excite and sometimes reassure people in a constantly changing environment through reporting spans political, geographic and technical divides. Especially valuable in this turbulent climate for journalism, currently 77 news outlets in Utah and neighboring markets regularly pick up and redistribute our stories. Last year, an average of 15 media outlets used each Utah News Connection story. These include outlets like the KALL-AM Clear Channel News talk Salt Lake, KKAT-FM Clear Channel News talk Salt Lake, KUER-FM, KTVX-TV ABC Salt Lake City, KZMU-FM, Salt Lake Tribune and Ogden Standard-Examiner.
    [Show full text]
  • Merton Business Directory
    MERTON COUNCIL futureMerton From our easy to access offices, close to Wimbledon station, TWM Solicitors is an established law firm that has been advising people in the Wimbledon and Merton areas for generations. Wimbledon is one of six offices across South West London and Surrey that TWM has, making us one of the largest law firms in this area. We are accredited by the Merton Bu Law Society so you can be sure our service levels will be of the highest standard. s ine ss We provide a personal and professional service meeting people’s needs as individuals Directory as well as business law advice for companies and local organisations. Details about our full range of services can be found online at www.twmsolicitors.com. Alternatively, you can call and speak to a member of our team on a no cost, no obligation basis. Merton Business Directory www.merton.gov.uk/futureMerton www.twmsolicitors.com Businesses, get active! Working together for you and your Get the latest local business information direct to your desktop: family, in your everyday life. networking with your local businesses has never been easier or cheaper. Call now for your activation code and you can be up and marketing to a number of local businesses in as little as 10 minutes. 020 8773 3060 Want to get active? Level 1 activation allows you to: • Mail merge • Email merge • Print labels • Print reports Activate Level 1 for £150+VAT Want to keep up-to-date? Level 2 activation allows your data to be updated as businesses submit new Personal Injury | Immigration | Family Law | Employment Law information.
    [Show full text]
  • A DISTRIBUTIONAL ANALYSIS of RURAL COLORADO ENGLISH By
    A DISTRIBUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF RURAL COLORADO ENGLISH by LAMONT D. ANTIEAU (Under the Direction of William A. Kretzschmar, Jr.) ABSTRACT This dissertation describes a study in linguistic geography conducted in Colorado using the methodology of the Linguistic Atlas of the Western States. As such, the goals of this dissertation are threefold: 1) to provide a description of Colorado English with respect to select lexical, phonetic, and syntactic features; 2) to compare the results of work in Colorado with previous work conducted in the eastern states as well as in Colorado and other western states; and 3) to use inferential statistics to show correlation between the distribution of specific linguistic variants and the social characteristics of those informants who use these variants. The major findings of this study include the observation that linguistic variants are distributed according to a power law, that numerous variants have statistically significant social correlates at all levels of the grammar, and that the relative effect of social variables differ at each linguistic level. INDEX WORDS: Linguistic Geography, Dialectology, Sociolinguistics, Language Variation, American English, Western American English, Colorado English, Rural Speech, Kruskal-Wallis A DISTRIBUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF RURAL COLORADO ENGLISH by LAMONT D. ANTIEAU BA, Eastern Michigan University, 1996 MA, Eastern Michigan University, 1998 A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY ATHENS, GEORGIA 2006 © 2006 Lamont D. Antieau All Rights Reserved A DISTRIBUTIONAL ANALYSIS OF RURAL COLORADO ENGLISH by LAMONT D. ANTIEAU Major Professor: William A. Kretzschmar, Jr. Committee: Marlyse Baptista Lee Pederson Diane Ranson Electronic Version Approved: Maureen Grasso Dean of the Graduate School The University of Georgia August 2006 DEDICATION This work is dedicated to the good people of Colorado who welcomed me into their homes and into their lives.
    [Show full text]
  • Melvin L. Bashore and Linda L. Haslam Historical Department The
    t} MORMONS ON THE HIGH SEAS OCEAN VOYAGE NARRATIVES TO AMERICA (1840-1890) GUIDE TO SOURCES IN THE HISTORICAL DEPARTMENT OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS AND OTHER UTAH REPOSITORIES by Melvin L. Bashore and Linda L. Haslam Historical Department The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1990 3rd Revised Edition Copyright 1990 by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints All Rights Reserved rt.e.HUUJ B ~ !: L: Li HHid-!, • GniCfl/\!1;1 YULH'-JC UNlVERSiT'l PHC'"_~\/(). U I ,·\H INTRODUCTION During the nineteenth-century, almost 85,000 Mormon emigrants crossed the oceans to America. Motivated by the doctrine of gathering, they were drawn to the Great Basin in droves. The missionaries who converted them also accompanied them on their ocean voyages and across the continent. While compiling a source guide to Mormon pioneer companies crossing the plains, we realized that a source guide to ocean narratives might also be valued by family researchers and historians. Past experience in providing reference assistance to researchers and historians di eta ted the focus of this source guide. Na r ra ti ves of ocean travel and shipboard life of Mormon emigrants and missionaries found in published and unpublished letters, reports, and journals were included. These were further limited to primary accounts of voyages across the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean to America. Accounts of voyages in large organized companies, small groups, or single Mormon individuals were included. Accounts of the ocean travels of Mormons departing from American ports to other countries were not included in this guide.
    [Show full text]
  • Trains 2019 Index
    INDEX TO VOLUME 79 Reproduction of any part of this volume for commercial pur poses is not allowed without the specific permission of the publishers. All contents © 2018 and 2019 by Kalmbach Media Co., Wau kesha, Wis. JANUARY 2019 THROUGH DECEMBER 2019 – 862 PAGES HOW TO USE THIS INDEX: Feature material has been indexed three or more times—once by the title under which it was published, again under the author’s last name, and finally under one or more of the subject categories or railroads. Photographs standing alone are indexed (usually by railroad), but photo graphs within a feature article are not separately indexed. Brief news items are indexed under the appropriate railroad and/or category; news stories are indexed under the appro- priate railroad and/or category and under the author’s last name. Most references to people are indexed under the company with which they are easily identified; if there is no easy identification, they may be indexed under the person’s last name (for deaths, see “Obi t uaries”). Maps, museums, radio frequencies, railroad historical societies, rosters of locomotives and equipment, product reviews, and stations are indexed under these categories. Items from countries other than the U.S. and Canada are indexed under the appropriate country. A Amtrak's elephant style, Ask TRAINS, Mar 62 Aiken Railway: Amtrak’s lost transcons, Jul 22-31 Once upon a time: Seaboard and Southern, Apr 51 Amtrak’s money mystery, Jan 50-55 A tale of two South Carolina short lines, Apr 46-53 At fault: train or track? Passenger, Nov
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Beaver County, Utah Centennial County History Series
    A HISTORY OF 'Beaver County Martha Sonntag Bradley UTAH CENTENNIAL COUNTY HISTORY SERIES A HISTORY OF 'Beaver County Martha Sonntag Bradley The settlement of Beaver County began in February 1856 when fifteen families from Parowan moved by wagon thirty miles north to Beaver Valley. The county was created by the Utah legislature on 31 January 1856, a week before the Parowan group set out to make their new home. However, centuries before, prehistoric peoples lived in the area, obtaining obsidian for arrow and spear points from the Mineral Mountains. Later, the area became home to Paiute Indians. Franciscan Friars Dominguez and Escalante passed through the area in October 1776. The Mormon settlement of Beaver devel­ oped at the foot of the Tushar Mountains. In 1859 the community of Minersville was es­ tablished, and residents farmed, raised live­ stock, and mined the lead deposits there. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century the Mineral Mountains and other locations in the county saw extensive mining develop­ ment, particularly in the towns of Frisco and Newhouse. Mining activities were given a boost with the completion of the Utah South­ ern Railroad to Milford in 1880. The birth­ place of both famous western outlaw Butch Cassidy and inventor of television Philo T. Farnsworth, Beaver County is rich in history, historic buildings, and mineral treasures. ISBN: 0-913738-17-4 A HISTORY OF 'Beaver County A HISTORY OF Beaver County Martha Sonntag Bradley 1999 Utah State Historical Society Beaver County Commission Copyright © 1999 by Beaver County Commission All rights reserved ISBN 0-913738-17-4 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 98-61325 Map by Automated Geographic Reference Center—State of Utah Printed in the United States of America Utah State Historical Society 300 Rio Grande Salt Lake City, Utah 84101-1182 Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS vii GENERAL INTRODUCTION ix CHAPTER 1 Beaver County: The Places That Shape Us .
    [Show full text]
  • Lehi Historic Archive File Categories Achievements of Lehi Citizens
    Lehi Historic Archive File Categories Achievements of Lehi Citizens Adobe­Lehi Plant Airplane Flights in Lehi Alex Christofferson­Champion Wrestler Alex Loveridge Home All About Food and Fuel/Sinclair Allred Park Alma Peterson Construction/Kent Peterson Alpine Fireplaces Alpine School Board­Thomas Powers Alpine School District Alpine Soil/Water Conservation District Alpine Stake Alpine Stake Tabernacle Alpine, Utah American Dream Labs American Football League­Dick Felt (Titans/Patriots) American Fork Canyon American Fork Canyon Flour Mill American Fork Canyon Mining District American Fork Canyon Power Plant American Fork Cooperative Institution American Fork Hospital American Fork, Utah American Fork, Utah­Mayors American Fork, Utah­Steel Days American Legion/Veterans American Legion/Veterans­Boys State American Patriotic League American Red Cross Ancient Order of United Workmen (AOUW) Ancient Utah Fossils and Rock Art Andrew Fjeld Animal Life of Utah Annie Oakley Antiquities Act Arcade Dance Hall Arches National Park Arctic Circle Ashley and Virlie Nelson Home (153 West 200 North) Assembly Hall Athenian Club Auctus Club Aunt Libby’s Dog Cemetery Austin Brothers Companies Author­Fred Hardy Author­John Rockwell, Historian Author­Kay Cox Author­Linda Bethers: Christmas Orange Author­Linda Jefferies­Poet Author­Reg Christensen Author­Richard Van Wagoner Auto Repair Shop­2005 North Railroad Street Azer Southwick Home 90 South Center B&K Auto Parts Bank of American Fork Bates Service Station Bathhouses in Utah Beal Meat Packing Plant Bear
    [Show full text]