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1695 W 2000 S
13 Tuesday Jun 2023
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13 Tuesday Jun 2023
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22 Tuesday Feb 2022
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1870s, Cabins, Cache County, Cache Valley, DUP, Historic Markers, Lewiston, utah
Pioneer Home and Granary
This cabin was used as a family home from 1876 to 1956. It was the home of George and Hannah Wheeler and their ten children.
George Walton Wheeler headed west in 1854 with his father, Levi, bringing the first steam engine and sawmill west of the Missouri River. George was ten years old.
Hannah was born December 18, 1846, in Gloucester, England, daughter of George and Harriet Harding Humphries. The family came west with the Willie Handcard Company in 1856. Walking alongside the handcart were six children, ages eighteen, fourteen, twelve, nine, six and one. Hannah Humphries and George Walton Wheeler were married in 1862.
Logs were cut at the Wheeler Sawmill where they were floated miles down the Cub River. There the logs were taken from the river and hauled to the homestead. When Hannah and George moved into their little home in 1876, there was only enough flooring to go under the bed. A fresh water spring was near the cabin. A granary and a barn were also built. George Walton Wheeler made each building with full dovetail corners. Each square nail was made in his own blacksmith shop. From the cabin’s location, all of Cache Valley can be seen.
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Located at 2668 West 2000 South in Lewiston, Utah
21 Monday Feb 2022
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Cache County, Cache Valley, DUP, Historic Markers, Lewiston, utah
Lewiston Pioneers
In honor of the noble men and women who pioneered “Poverty Flat”, later named Lewiston, for its first bishop William H. Lewis. First settlers arrived July 8, 1870.
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Located at 65 West Center Street in Lewiston, Utah
09 Sunday Oct 2016
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From OnlineUtah: Lewiston, Utah, is located in the geographic center of Cache Valley, twenty miles northwest of Logan and ten miles south of Preston, Idaho. The town occupies a triangularly shaped land area of approximately 24 square miles, with a base along the Utah-Idaho state boundary in the north, and extends southward between the Bear River on the west and the Cub River on the east to a point where the two streams join in the south. The area is almost entirely flat and contains some of the most productive agricultural land in the state.
Lewiston has always been an agricultural community. The dairying and livestock industries are predominant, and most crops are grown to support them. Some acreage is devoted to supplying vegetables to canneries in the area, but wheat, barley, and alfalfa are the major crops produced. Sugar beets, an important crop for many years, declined in importance after the town’s sugar factory closed in 1972. Many residents supplement their farm incomes by working in local factories or through other non-farm occupations.
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13 Tuesday Jan 2015
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