Item Detail
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17825
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5
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12
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English
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Cattle, Cotton, and Conflict : The Possession and Dispossion of Hebron, Utah
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Spring 1999
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67
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no.2
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148-175
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Settled in 1868, Hebron was a ranching community in southwestern Utah. Over the course of its history, community unity eluded the Mormon residents. Nearby mines in Nevada pulled some of the people away. There were also incidents when townspeople were afflicted with demons and evil spirits. Following a disastrous earthquake in 1902, the town disintegrated and was largely abandoned by 1905.
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A Frontier Life : Jacob Hamblin, Explorer and Indian Missionary
"As Ugly as Evil" and "As Wicked as Hell" : Gadianton Robbers and the Legend Process among the Mormons
Between Pulpit and Pew : The Supernatural World in Mormon History and Folklore
'Grit Enough to Stick with It' : Stories from Blue Valley
"Places That Can Be Easily Defended" : A Case Study in the Economics of Abandonment During Utah's Black Hawk War -
A Mormon Town : One Man's West
Building the City of God : Community and Cooperation among the Mormons
Early Colonization Patterns
From Isolation to Destination : The History of Washington County
History of Enterprise and its Surroundings
History of Pioneering on Shoal Creek
Lore of Faith and Folly
On the Ragged Edge : The Life and Times of Dudley Leavitt
The Making of Saints : The Mormon Town as a Setting for the Study of Cultural Change
The Mormon Village : A Pattern and Technique of Land Settlement
Three Frontiers : Family, Land, and Society in the American West, 1850-1900
Utah's History