Item Detail
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26138
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1
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6
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English
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Segregating Sanitation in Salt Lake City, 1870-1915
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Spring 2014
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82
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2
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Salt Lake City, UT
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Utah Historical Society
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92-113
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The article discusses public health and sanitation in Salt Lake City, Utah from 1870 to 1915 in light of the city's cultural geography and ethnic segregation. Topics include the creation of a city waterworks, racial discrimination against Chinese residents, and poor treatment of the Westside neighborhood of the city. Also addressed are the role of the Jordan River in sewage disposal, conflict between Mormon (LDS) and non-Mormon residents, and press coverage of public health projects.
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Mormon Town Planning : Physical and Social Relevance
Pioneer, Polygamist, Politician : The Life of Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon
Proclamation to the People : Nineteenth-Century Mormonism and the Pacific Basin Frontier
Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce
The Salt Lake Sanitarian : Medical Adviser to the Saints
Utah's Chinatowns : The Development and Decline of Extinct Ethnic Enclaves