• About JacobBarlow.com
  • Cemeteries in Utah
  • D.U.P. Markers
  • Doors
  • Exploring Utah Email List
  • Geocaching
  • Historic Marker Map
  • Links
  • Movie/TV Show Filming Locations
  • Oldest in Utah
  • Other Travels
  • Photos Then and Now
  • S.U.P. Markers
  • U.P.T.L.A. Markers
  • Utah Cities and Places.
  • Utah Homes for Sale
  • Utah Treasure Hunt

JacobBarlow.com

~ Exploring with Jacob Barlow

JacobBarlow.com

Tag Archives: Cache County

Logan, Utah

07 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 47 Comments

Tags

Cache County, Logan, utah

logan

The town of Logan was founded in 1859 by settlers sent by Brigham Young to survey for the site of a fort near the banks of the Logan River. They named their new community “Logan” for Ephraim Logan, an early fur trapper in the area. Logan was incorporated on 17 January 1866.  Brigham Young College was founded here in 1878 (but later closed), and Utah State University – then called the Agricultural College of Utah – was founded in 1888.

Historic Logan Buildings:

  • Borden Company Plant
  • Cache County Relic Hall
  • Logan Tabernacle – Cache Stake Tabernacle
  • Logan Utah Temple
  • Old Main

Historic Logan Homes:

Other Logan related posts:

  • Birthplace of Russell L. Maughan – First Dawn to Dusk Flight Across America
  • Cache Valley
  • Central Milling
  • Dale’s Sinclair Service Station
  • First Community Center
  • The First Settlers of Logan
  • Historic Buildings on Main Street
  • Logan Center Street Historic District
  • Logan’s Hydro-Electric Plant
  • Major Irrigation Canals Constructed in Cache Valley
  • Marindale Ave (Logan’s first subdivision)
  • Parks in Logan
  • Pioneer Memories of 1866
  • Pioneer Mills of Cache Valley
  • River Heights
  • St. John’s Episcopal Church
  • Unknown Pioneers of Logan
  • Utah State University
  • Logan Posts sorted by Address

Petersboro, Utah

15 Thursday Sep 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cache County, Petersboro, utah

Peter (or Petersboro) is in Cache County.

picture16aug07-080

Sylvanus Collett became the first settler in Petersboro in 1867. In 1876 Petersboro was designated District Six within the Mendon LDS Ward. Petersboro became a separate ward in 1887.

Smithfield, Utah

15 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Cache County, Hyde Park, Logan, Smithfield, utah

SMITHFIELD

The town of Smithfield (originally known as “Summit Creek” )in Cache Valley, Utah, was tied to the early Mormon colonization of Utah. Part of what has been labeled “the inner cordon of settlements,” Cache Valley was itself settled in 1856, and Smithfield in 1859. As an agricultural region in northern Utah, Cache Valley aided in the supplying of goods not only to northern Utah, but also to mining regions in Idaho and Montana. Smithfield, which began as a settlement of dugouts and wagons, in 1860 became a village with houses arranged in “fort style” (forming a square where the rear portions of the buildings constituted the walls of the fort). It had been named Smithfield in 1859 for John Glover Smith, the first Mormon bishop, who exercised power in both church and civic affairs.

Related:

  • Douglas General Mercantile
  • Heritage Park
  • Ira Elias Merrill Memorial
  • Main Theater
  • The Morgan Canning Company
  • Original Settlement of Smithfield (D.U.P. Marker #550)
  • Parks in Smithfield
  • Smithfield Bank
  • Smithfield Carnegie Library
  • Smithfield Fire Station
  • Smithfield History Museum
  • Smithfield Implement Co
  • Smithfield Tabernacle
  • Smithfield Veterans Memorial
  • Summit Creek Fort
  • The SV above Smithfield
  • Walking Trail with Plaques
  • Yellow Brick Homes of Smithfield
  • Smithfield posts sorted by address

Nibley, Utah

16 Monday May 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cache County, Cache Valley, Hyrum, Logan, Nibley, utah

picture01june08-011

Nibley was named after Charles W. Nibley, a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Wellsville, Utah

19 Friday Jun 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Cache County, Logan, utah, Wellsville

picture01june08-012

Related: 

  • City Square Park
  • George Bradshaw House & Joshua Salisbury/George Bradshaw Barn
  • Maughan’s Fort
  • Tabernacle Park
  • Wellsville Founders Monument
  • Wellsville Relief Society Meetinghouse
  • Wellsville Tabernacle
  • Wellsville posts sorted by address
wellsville

Mendon, Utah

10 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cache County, Mendon, utah

Mendon City, in Cache County.

Related:

  • The Family, an Everlasting Heritage, sculpture by Mendon artist Bill Hill.
  • Mendon Fort
  • Mendon Settlers Monument
  • Ole Peder Sorensen Pioneer Cabin
  • Pioneer Park
  • James G. Willie House
  • Mendon posts sorted by address
  • picture01june08-010

Providence, Utah

10 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Cache County, Logan, Providence, utah

2018-04-20 12.25.36
picture01june08-016

Providence, Utah

  • The Old Rock Church
  • Providence Church
  • Providence Pioneers
  • The Providence Players
  • Providence posts sorted by address

Cornish, Utah

13 Tuesday Jan 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cache County, Cornish, Lewiston, Trenton, utah

cornish

Cornish is four miles north of Trenton and Lewiston. Early names were Ransom, Trenton, and Cannon. In 1907, the railroad changed the name from Cannon to Cornish in honor of William D. Cornish, vice president of the Union Pacific Railroad at that time.

College Ward, Utah

12 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cache County, College Ward, utah

collegeward

199819_4311914233_9911_n

College Ward is a community located in Cache County along U.S. Route 91, about midway between Wellsville and Logan, the county seat. The city of Nibley borders College Ward to the east. This area was part of a tract of more than 9,000 acres that Brigham Young donated in 1877 for the endowment of Brigham Young College. The first settlers leased plots of land and moved here in 1879.

Related posts:

  • The Womans Tonic. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription

Click here for more history.

North Logan, Utah

04 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cache County, Logan, North Logan, utah

Founded in 1859, Logan, a city of approximately 33,000, is located on the east side of Cache Valley in northern Utah at the mouth of Logan Canyon.

On 6 June 1859 a small group of Mormon settlers sent to Cache Valley by Brigham Young surveyed a fort site near the banks of the Logan River and began harvesting logs for houses. By the middle of the month, the first drawing for parcels of land took place. A second group plowed land and planted three acres of wheat on 10 June on an area called “the island.” They constructed two rows of cabins facing each other, patterning the settlement after Salt Lake City, including streets wide enough for several vehicles to pass each other. By March 1860 there were 100 houses in the settlement, which was named Logan after an early trapper, Ephraim Logan. The city was incorporated on 17 January 1866 and Alvin Crockett was elected Logan’s first mayor.

Though not the first white settlement in Cache Valley, Logan became the principal city because of its central location and its abundant water supply for mills and irrigation. Farmers and their families gathered there to buy and sell; industries grew to service the community. Eventually, Logan became the county seat for Cache County.

  • a27cecc4-f921-4a94-ba72-a4a7e91234cd

See the other places in Utah here.

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Follow Jacob

Follow Jacob

Blog Stats

  • 2,049,427 hits

Social and Other Links

BarlowLinks.com

Recent Posts

  • Louis & Eugenia Terry House
  • Red Canyon Arch
  • Dairy Cafe
  • 88 W 100 S
  • Trail of the Whispering Giants

Archives

 

Loading Comments...