The History of Salt Lake City and its Founders, Volume 1

The History of Salt Lake City and its Founders, Volume 1
Author: Edward William Tullidge
Publisher: Jazzybee Verlag
Total Pages: 750
Release:
Genre: History
ISBN: 3849653323

Tullidge’s monumental work on the beautiful desert metropolis, its history and growth, its evolution and its most significant troubles is obviously also a history of Mormonism and its growth and development in Utah, written by “authority of the Council and under supervision of its Committee on Revision,” and therefore giving a picture of Mormonism in the most favorable light in which it is possible to present the institution to the public. There are too many outside evidences of material prosperity and thrift everywhere to be seen in the resourceful valley where the Mormon emigrants from Illinois and Missouri began to make their home in July, 1847, and the vitality of the community has been too plainly manifested on many occasions, for any one easily to escape the conclusion that the “Mormon question,” as it is called, is still one of no insignificant importance. Why and how it has become of such material significance is probably more fully explained in thus volume than in any other one work published. This is volume one out of two.

The History of Salt Lake City and its Founders, Volume 2

The History of Salt Lake City and its Founders, Volume 2
Author: Edward William Tullidge
Publisher: Jazzybee Verlag
Total Pages: 714
Release: 2019
Genre: History
ISBN: 3849653331

Tullidge’s monumental work on the beautiful desert metropolis, its history and growth, its evolution and its most significant troubles is obviously also a history of Mormonism and its growth and development in Utah, written by “authority of the Council and under supervision of its Committee on Revision,” and therefore giving a picture of Mormonism in the most favorable light in which it is possible to present the institution to the public. There are too many outside evidences of material prosperity and thrift everywhere to be seen in the resourceful valley where the Mormon emigrants from Illinois and Missouri began to make their home in July, 1847, and the vitality of the community has been too plainly manifested on many occasions, for any one easily to escape the conclusion that the “Mormon question,” as it is called, is still one of no insignificant importance. Why and how it has become of such material significance is probably more fully explained in thus volume than in any other one work published. This is volume two out of two.

The Avenues of Salt Lake City

The Avenues of Salt Lake City
Author: Karl T. Haglund
Publisher:
Total Pages: 166
Release: 1980
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780913738313

This book deals with both the history and architecture of the Avenues Historic District -- primarily a residential district -- of Salt Lake City.