Item Detail
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6166
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7
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14
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English
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Grazing in Utah : A Historical Perspective
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Fall 1989
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57
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300-319
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The history of livestock in Utah is notably different from the grazing system common in other regions of the U.S. Rather than developing a ranch country, early Mormon settlers established a village-based grazing system characterized by cooperative livestock pools. However, after 1880, ranching patterns were superimposed on this well-established pioneer grazing system. The developmental history of the sheep and cattle industry in Utah are generally described.
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A Frontier Life : Jacob Hamblin, Explorer and Indian Missionary
A History of Wayne County
Becoming a "Messenger of Peace" : Jacob Hamblin in Tooele|Tooele, Utah
Before the Boom: Mormons, Livestock, and Stewardship, 1847-1870
Centennial Utah : The Beehive State on the Eve of the Twenty-first Century
Folklore in Utah
The Awkward State of Utah : Coming of Age in the Nation 1896-1945 -
A Historical Analysis of Territorial Government in Utah under Alfred Cumming, 1857-1861
Emery County : Reflections on its Past and Future
History of Lehi
History of Sanpete and Emery Counties, Utah
History of Utah, 1847-1869
Look to the Mountains : Southeastern Utah and the La Sal National Forest
On the Mormon Frontier : The Diary of Hosea Stout [1844-1861]
San Juan County, Utah : People, Resources, and History
San Juan in Controversy : American Livestock Frontier vs. Mormon Cattle Pool
Take Up Your Mission : Mormon Colonizing Along the Little Colorado River, 1870-1900
The History of a Valley : Cache Valley, Utah-Idaho
The Mormon Conflict, 1850-1859
The Mormon Culture Region : Strategies and Patterns in the Geography of the American West, 1847-1964
The Mormon Role in the Settlement of the West