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Monthly Archives: December 2017

Provost Park

12 Tuesday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Parks, Provo, utah, utah county

2017-10-07 13.44.50

Provost Park is located next to Provost Elementary in Provo and is used mostly for Recreation league games. There is a small pavilion that can be used for intimate family gatherings, but be aware that there are no restroom facilities or water taps available. The elementary playground can be used during non-school hours.

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2017-10-07 13.44.34

Neighborhood Park

12 Tuesday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Parks, Provo, utah, utah county

2017-10-07 13.47.55

Neighborhood Park in Provo, just a simple neighborhood park.

Temple Square Christmas Lights

12 Tuesday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Christmas, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Temple Square, utah

2017-12-11 18.48.01

The Christmas Lights at Temple SquareĀ in Salt Lake are a popular site that many travel to experience.Ā  They’re up from Thanksgiving to New Years every year.Ā  Ā Here are some pictures I took this year (2017).

Related posts:

  • Temple Square
  • Temple Square Christmas Lights 2016
  • Temple Square Christmas Lights 2017
  • Temple Square Christmas Lights 2018

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Artesian Well Park

11 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Geology, historic, Parks, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, utah, Wells

  • 2017-12-09 15.34.19

Artesian Well Park in Salt Lake City is a small urban park that contains a natural artesian spring fed by an underground aquifer. It occupies a quarter acre on the southwest corner of the intersection between 800 South and 500 East. People from all over the surrounding area have been coming to get water for free from this spring for over 100 years.

Related posts:

  • Salt Lake Parks
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April 2020 – They are renovating the park.

While pulling granite from a quarry in Little Cottonwood Canyon, early Mormon settlers and their oxen stopped on this site to imbibe the refreshing water.

The settlers have long since passed, but the temple still stands, the water still runs, and the settlers’ offspring – and many others – still linger here to rest and refresh themselves.

This is an artesian well. Artesian water is water held in a porous rock layer, under a small amount of pressure, between two solid rock layers. An artesian well is different from an artesian spring in that its water doesn’t surface through a natural opening; instead, a pipe must be put into the ground. The fact that the water flows through the pipe, under natural pressure, without pumping, makes artesian well different from other wells.

This artesian well taps into an aquifer whose recharge area extends from Red Butte Creek underneath the University of Utah. Much of the allure of this site is its natural water with high mineral content and few chemicals.

Photos from a 2021 visit:

First Religious & Educational Building Outside Salt Lake City

11 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

Historic Markers, Murray, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, SUP, UPTLA, utah

2017-12-09 15.13.05

First Building Outside Salt Lake City for Religious & Education Instruction.

Located at the intersection of 300 East and Gordon Lane (about 4200 South) in Salt Lake.

Inscription reads: To commemorate the first building in the valley outside of Salt Lake City erected for the purpose of religious & education instruction.

This monument is #223 in this series of S.U.P. Markers.

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Old Brickyard Chimney

11 Monday Dec 2017

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Tags

Bricks, Brickyards, Historic Buildings, Historic Markers, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, SUP, utah

  • 2017-12-09 14.53.11

Old Brickyard Chimney

  • 2017-12-09 14.54.02

  • 2017-12-09 14.53.42

Edward Potter Hemsley (First Property Owner)

Edward Potter Hemsley was born April 23, 1839, at Ditchling, Sussex, England. On May 5, 1862, Edward and his sister, Ellen Potter Hemsley, emigrated to America where their older brother, Richard was already situated in Salt Lake City. Their father, stepmother, and a younger brother, Job, remained in England until some few years later, when they also emigrated.

Edward and Ellen joined a pioneer company led by Captain Miller for the trek to the West. Edward was only twenty-three years of age and he enjoyed the adventure, enduring the hardships and conditions that killed his stepmother a few years later as she traveled to Utah. She was buried along the trail with canvas for a coffin and weeds for memory flowers.

Some time after his arrival in Salt Lake City, Edward married Miriam Simonds who as a young girl had also been in Captain Miller’s pioneer company. The couple settled in Sugar House, where they purchased ground and built a substantial home at 1923 South 1200 East.

Because Miriam suffered from chronically poor health, a neighbor girl named Margaret Brown was employed to help nurse her. Miriam ultimately invited Margaret to marry her husband, which she did in the Salt Lake Endowment House on March 17, 1866. Miriam lived for twelve more years, dying February 24, 1878. Miriam had three children and Margaret had twenty-three.

Edward Hemsley farmed his land and also served as a doctor in the Sugar House area. He was known as Dr. Hemsley, and he treated mental as well as physical ailments and even pulled teeth as required. He compounded a ā€œmarvelousā€ salve that was widely used in treating a diversity of ailments. He was in the early Sunday School superintendency of the Sugar House Ward and used a horse and wagon to transport little children from the district to the house where Sunday School was conducted. He was active in sponsoring dancing and amusements, and was a popular accordionist. In his later years he was appointed warden of the state prison.

Edward Hemsley purchased a tract of land in Mill Creek which he called ā€œTHE BRICKYARD.ā€ With his brother Job they manufactured bricks used in construction of early homes, businesses, and church meetinghouses. Bricks from their operations were used to build the first school house in Sugar House. Their business was so vital that Brigham Young rescinded Edward’s mission call so that he might stay home and continue to make bricks. The color of the bricks was obtained from the various levels of clay. For deep red bricks, they would plow two rows of deeply laid yellow clay and one row of black top soil. White brick came from the clay near the top of the pit.

Edward Hemsley died July 22, 1910, at the age of seventy-one.ā€

  • 2017-12-09 14.54.23
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History of the Brickyard

In 1878, John P. Cahoon began manufacturing bricks on the old homestead on 4th West and 53rd South in Murray, Utah. As demand increased, he found it necessary to move his plant to a better location. As a result, on January 6, 1891, the SALT LAKE PRESSED BRICK CO., founded by John P. Cahoon, purchased land from Edward Potter Hemsley. This purchase allowed the company to be closer to larger clay deposits, the railroad line and their market. Through the years it became the largest brick manufacturing company in the west. This was the beginning of the BRICKYARD which we know today as the BRICKYARD PLAZA.

In the early days, the bricks were dry pressed by Boyd Presses and removed by hand. Over the years the process was mechanized and automated. The clay was processed in mixing and pulverizing sheds, moved by conveyor belts to ā€œbinsā€ where moisture was added, and then kneaded in ā€œpug mills.ā€ This damp mixture was then extruded from dies and cut into shapes by wire cutters that worked much as egg slicers do. The brick was then ā€œfiredā€ in coal-burning kilns. Through improvements and expansion programs, the plant reached productions of 60,000 bricks per day.

Operations on this site ended on November 28, 1972, when the plant was shut down and dismantled. The company moved its operation to West Jordan, Utah, where it is now located. The chimney was built in 1902 and was called the SMITH KILN CHIMNEY.

For other S.U.P. Markers click here.

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Related:

  • Benchmark: LO0864 “SALT LAKE CITY INTST BRICK STK”

Legacy of the Black Pioneer

11 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Markers, LDS Church, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, SUP, utah

2017-12-09 14.42.32

Legacy of the Black Pioneer

In 1824-26 the first black man came into Utah Territory. He was a trapper for the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. His name was James Beckworth. In succeeding years many black people would follow to contribute to the development of Utah, socially and economically.

In July of 1847, three (3) black men, slaves, were selected to journey with Orson Pratt, Mormon apostle, into the Salt Lake Valley. They were: Green Flake (see his grave here), Oscar Crosby, and Hark Lay, each in turn provided by their owners, James Flake, William Crosby, and William Lay, members of the pioneer groups of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Utah was a slave state (territory) and remained so until the Emancipation Proclamation was effected.

Many black pioneers followed in pioneer groups. They assisted their owners as directed. When they were freed, the owners assisted them in acquiring lands of their own in the Cottonwood, and Fort Union areas. They cultivated the land, built homes and raised families and in every way contributed to the socio-economic growth of the Salt Lake area.

In this, the Mill Creek Area, land was secured by Sylvester James, Samuel Chambers, and Sylvester Perkins. Each proved to be successful farmers who would market their produce to leaders of the community.

In 1888 Paul C. Howell and his family established their home in the 12th-14th Ward in Salt Lake City. He became the first black policeman in Salt Lake City.

Don Bankhead Freeman was the first black child born in Utah.

The black pioneers of Utah have left a great and lasting contribution that is remembered and appreciated. Their descendants have excelled in the arts, athletics, and education.

Descendants of these pioneers reside in the East Mill Creek area at this time. They are respected and appreciated neighbors.ā€

Note: In 2011, this monument was to have been removed by Salt Lake County to make way for a new County Building – Millcreek Community Center, 2266 E. Evergreen Ave., Millcreek Township, UT 84109. It included a new Senior Center. Their announced intention was to replace the monument. Due to some questions concerning the historical accuracy of the original narrative and an attempt by someone to change the original wording by scratching an incorrect change to the plaque, new wording was proposed. Due to fiscal restraints, the county built around the monument without making any changes.

This monument is #16 in the series of S.U.P. Markers, located in Evergreen Park in Salt Lake.

Related:

  • Green Flake
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Evergreen Park

11 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Parks, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, utah

2017-12-09 14.42.22

Evergreen Park in Salt Lake, next to the Millcreek Library.

Related posts:

  • Legacy of the Black Pioneer
  • Salt Lake Parks

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Olympus Pines Park

11 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Holladay, Parks, Salt Lake County, utah

2017-12-09 14.01.49

Olympus Pines Park, one of Holladay’s Parks in Holladay, Utah.

Related posts:

  • Gold Medal Mile – Holladay Civic Center
  • Holladay’s Parks
  • Largest Austrian Pines in United States

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2017-12-09 14.00.22

Parks in Holladay

11 Monday Dec 2017

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Holladay, Parks, Salt Lake County, utah

2017-12-09 14.01.49

Parks inĀ Holladay, Utah.

  • Olympus Pines Park
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