Item Detail
-
5825
-
16
-
0
-
English
-
Mormon Perception and Settlement
-
Annals of the Association of American Geographers
-
1978
-
68
-
no.3
-
317-34
-
Reactions to land in the Salt Lake Valley were favorable, but Mormon leaders maintained that the area originally was as arid and desertlike as areas to the south in order to convince wary migrants that those lands warranted settlement as well; covers 1830-61.
-
Before the Boom: Mormons, Livestock, and Stewardship, 1847-1870
Geography and Mormon Identity
Great Salt Lake and Great Salt Lake City : American Curiosities
Heber C. Kimball : Mormon Patriarch and Pioneer
History, Nature, and Mormon Historiography
Honoring Juanita Brooks : A Compilation of 30 Annual Presentations from the Juanita Brooks Lecture Series
Mormon History
Nature's Second Course : Water Culture in the Mormon Communities of Cache Valley, Utah, 1860-1916
Rocky Mountain Divide
The Cities of Zion? Mormon and non-Mormon town plans in the U.S. Mountain West, 1847-1930
The Mormon Experience : The Plains as Sinai, the Great Salt Lake as the Dead Sea, and the Great Basin as Desert-cum-Promised Land
The Mormon Influence on the Political Geography of The West
The Oxford Handbook of Mormonism
The Pilgrimage Phenomenon : An Analysis of the Motivations of Visitors to Temple Square
Transformation of the Mormon Culture Region
Utah's Harsh Lands, Hearth of Greatness