
Washington Posts:
- Adair Spring
- Covington Mansion
- Nisson Park
- Relief Society Hall
- Washington Cotton Factory (historic marker)
- Washington Cotton Factory (building)
- Washington by address

02 Saturday Apr 2016
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02 Saturday Apr 2016
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Wellington is a city in Carbon County, Utah, United States. The population was 1,676 at the 2010 census. The community was settled in 1878 by a band of thirteen Mormons led by Jefferson Tidwell. The town was named for Justus Wellington Seeley, Jr., of the Emery County Court. Many residents commute to nearby Price for their jobs, or work in one of the various coal mines in the area.
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02 Saturday Apr 2016
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Syracuse was incorporated on September 3, 1935.
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01 Friday Apr 2016
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Henefer is located between Echo and Morgan. It was first settled by two brothers, James and Richard (William) Hennefer. They established a blacksmith shop there in 1859 on the old Overland Stage Road. It was originally called Henneferville.
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26 Friday Feb 2016
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Devil’s Slide is an unusual geological formation located in Weber Canyon, Morgan County, Utah.
The sides of the slide are hard, weather-resistant limestone layers about 40 feet high, 25 feet apart, and several hundred feet in length. In between these two hard layers is a softer limestone that is slightly different in composition from the outer limestone layers. This middle layer is softer, which makes it more susceptible to weathering and erosion, thus forming the chute of the slide. Looking like a large playground slide fit only for the Devil, this site is a tilted remnant of sediments deposited in a sea that occupied Utah’s distant geologic past. Approximately 170 to 180 million years ago, a shallow sea originating from the north spread south and east over areas of what are now Montana, Wyoming, and Utah. This sea extended as far east as the present-day Colorado River and south into northern Arizona. Over millions of years, massive amounts of sediment accumulated and eventually formed layers of limestone and sandstone. In northern Utah, these rocks are known as the Twin Creek Formation and are approximately 2700 feet thick. About 75 million years ago, folding and faulting during a mountain- building episode tilted the Twin Creek rock layers to a near-vertical position. Subsequent erosion has exposed the near-vertical rock layers and created Devils Slide.*
18 Thursday Feb 2016
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Frisco Posts:
Silver ore was discovered here in 1875. The town of Frisco soon followed and was named Frisco after the San Francisco mountains where the mine is located. A smelter was built here and charcoal ovens were built to make fuel for it. The town had 23 saloons. Gun fights and killings were common. Water was scarce here and had to be hauled in. In 1880 the railroad built to the town. The population of Frisco was around 6000 people. There was a hospital, hotels, churches, school, news paper and many stores. In 1885 the mine caved in and the town soon all but died. (No one was killed in the cave in). Up to the time of the cave in the mine had produced 54 million dollars worth of ore. A few people stayed and dug new shafts after the cave in but most was gone and only a couple stores stayed open. The mine made another 20 million dollars by 1913. By 1920 everyone had moved away and the town was dead.(*)
18 Thursday Feb 2016
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Hardy, Lindon, Orem, utah, utah county
Hardy is a “railroad siding” or a “map dot,” not really a place anymore now that it has been swallowed up by Orem and Lindon.


18 Thursday Feb 2016
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18 Thursday Feb 2016
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In the spring of 1882 Ebenezer Hanks, Ebenezer McDougall, Joseph Sylvester, Charles Gould, and Samuel Gould moved with their families from Washington County to what would become Hanksville, Utah.
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08 Monday Feb 2016
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Bloomington is just south of St George, just north of the Utah/Arizona line.
See the Bloomington DUP Marker for some history of the area.
