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First Utah Pioneer Cemetery Outside Salt Lake City

First Utah Pioneer Cemetery Outside Salt Lake City

In 1848, when the first pioneer death occurred in Holladay, the cemetery knoll southeast of here, overlooking lowland watery meadows of a then meandering Big Cottonwood Creek, was selected as a community cemetery.  Tradition has it that the first burial was a baby.

For 127 years, local LDS Church leadership oversaw this 13-acre cemetery in behalf of the entire community.  In 1975 the cemetery was sold.

In early pioneer Utah times, burial was generally 1 to 2 days after death.  Families themselves often dug the grave 5 to 6 feet deep.  The deceased person was dressed in regular clothing or in a burial shroud (a long nightgown-type of burial dress) and placed in a snug fitting wooden box or in blankets and cloth material.  Funerals were a community affair, most persons participating one way or another – attended the funeral at church, providing food for participants after the service, or helping the bereaved family do their chores.

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This historic marker is #9 of the Historical Walking Tour of Holladay on this page.

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