Item Detail
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3102
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0
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0
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English
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Landmarks Saved by The Daughters of Utah Pioneers
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Our Pioneer Heritage
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1967
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10
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Salt Lake City, Utah
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Daughters of Utah Pioneers
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497-548
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“On October 7, 1907, President Susa Young Gates, in speaking of the purposes of the [Daughters of Utah Pioneers] organization, said: I believe we still have a greater work to do in preserving landmarks not only in Utah, but in all places connected with early western history. Little did President Gates realize that her words would start a campaign that through the years would reach great proportions. But, as with many campaigns, beginnings were slow, and sometimes heartbreaking failures occurred; yet a glance back through the minute books of the organization leads one to realize that the idea took hold with tenacity.” [Author]
This article reviews a collection of some such landmarks that the Daughters of Utah Pioneers have made efforts to preserve in the 19th--20th centuries. -
Emery County, Utah
Museums
Las Vegas, Nev.
Sevier County, Utah
Rockland, Idaho
Chesterfield, Idaho
Montpelier, Idaho
Orderville, Utah
Material culture, cemeteries and gravestones
Museum Memories
Pleasant Grove, Utah
Tooele, Utah
Cache County, Utah
Redmond, Utah
Colorado
Fort Bridger, Wyo.
Elsinore, Utah
Chase, Isaac
Chase Mill
Cedar City, Utah
Gates, Susa Young
Holidays and celebrations, Pioneer Day
Architecture, civic and community buildings
Salt Lake City, Utah, Liberty Park
Museums, Pioneer Memorial Museum
Fillmore, Utah
Richfield, Utah
Enterprise, Utah
Architecture, meeting places
Card, Zina Young Williams
Salt Lake City, Utah, Pioneer Park
Idaho
Mona, Utah
Plain City, Utah
Payson, Utah
Millard County, Utah
Box Elder County, Utah
Manti, Utah
Horne, Alice Merrill
Biographies, male, 19th century (articles or chapters)
Midvale, Utah
Kanosh, Utah
Woodruff, Fanny C.
Architecture, residential
Bountiful, Utah
West Jordan, Utah
Teasdale, Utah
Daughters of Utah Pioneers
Historic sites, Utah