Description: The Other 49ers Sanpete County Utah History 1849 - 1983 Hardcover Manti LDS Mormon__________________________________ The Other 49ers: a Topical History of Sanpete County Utah 1849 to 1983by AC AntreiPublished by Western Epics Pub Co (1983) Condition:Excellent 1st Edition Hardcover Book! The binding is tight and all 517 pages within are bright white with no writing, underlining, high-lighting, rips, tears, bends, or folds. The covers look perfect with some fading on the spine, as can be seen in my photos. You will be happy with this one! Always handled carefully and packaged securely! Buy with confidence from a seller who takes the time to show you the details and not use just stock photos. Please check out all my pictures and email with any questions! Thanks for looking! Some Facts About Sanpete County:County Seat: Manti Origin of County Name: a corruption of San Pitch, the name of the local Indian tribe Main cities and towns: Ephraim, Mount Pleasant, Manti, Gunnison Interesting places: Manti LDS Temple, Spring City Historic District, Fairview Museum, Wasatch Plateau, Maple and Box canyons, Snow College In the spring of 1850, the first settlers to Manti learned they had been living near a rattlesnake den. They killed 300 snakes the first day. The county was a gathering place for Scandinavian immigrants: Danes, Swedes, and a few Norwegians. Jewish settlers tried to establish a farming community at Clarion, 3 miles west of Gunnison, in 1911. It only lasted until 1917. In the 1940s, Fountain Green had so many sheep it was called Wool City of the West. Wasatch Academy, opened in 1875, is a boarding school that now has students from around the world. Sanpete County straddles the Colorado Plateau and the Great Basin. On the east, creeks on the eastern slopes of the high Wasatch Plateau drain into the Colorado River system. The streams in Sanpete Valley itself flow south to the Sevier River, which dead-ends in the Great Basin at Sevier “Lake.” This beautiful green valley bordered by mountains and hills attracted many people over the centuries. Sanpete's prehistoric inhabitants include Fremont farmers. Curious settlers and others have dug into mounds they found on the land. As they dug they discovered small stone and mud-walled structures and pottery, points, and metates. However, Sanpete has not been systematically studied like its neighbors south and east. The Utes replaced the Fremont people. The San Pitch Utes gathered and hunted in local marshes and canyons. Other Utes acquired horses from the Spanish. These, often led by Ute chief Wakara, captured and sold San Pitch Indians into slavery. They also adopted parts of the Plains Indians culture, and they rode throughout the West. Some of these had a winter base camp in Sanpete. Wakara invited the Mormons to settle in Sanpete. Perhaps he thought they would help his people gain more resources or be good trading partners. So the first Mormon settlers arrived in fall 1849. They chose the Manti site because of a nearby warm spring, the large limestone quarries where they could cut stone for buildings, and the fine farming and grazing lands nearby. A few years later, Wakara was fighting the settlers in the Walker War of 1853-54. During this time, the settlers abandoned their new homes, or built forts for protection. Sanpete was also hit hard by the Black Hawk War of 1865-68, which brought a more serious and prolonged period of guerrilla raids. The larger towns were established during the first decade of settlement. Scandinavian immigrants soon made up a lot of the population, and elements of their culture and humor remain today. A Presbyterian missionary established the Wasatch Academy in the 1870s; today it still thrives as a college prep school. The towns peaked in population about 1900-1910 and declined until the 1970s. Sanpete's location at Utah's geographical heart masks its isolation. Much interstate and recreational traffic bypass it. None of the small, scattered towns has developed as a center of economic development. Since settlement, Sanpete's economy has been agriculturally based. In its first few decades it served as Utah's granary. Cattle have always been important, but currently only a few large dairies survive. New beef breeds from Switzerland and France have joined the traditional Hereford and Angus to produce lower-fat, faster-growing animals. Sheep dominated the local economy from the 1880s through the 1920s, and Sanpete played a prominent part in world markets for a time. Turkeys, grown casually as a farmyard fowl, became a cooperative, integrated industry in response to the 1930s depression. Today they rule the roost in Sanpete, which ranks among the top ten turkey-producing counties in the country. Snow College, a two-year institution in Ephraim, plays an important role in the local economy. Sanpete County has worked on developing heritage tourism to complement its rural nature. It collaborated with other counties to gain a federal designation as the National Mormon Pioneer Heritage Area. Copyright © 2018-2021 TDM Inc. The photos and text in this listing are copyrighted. I spend lots of time writing up my descriptions and despise it when un-original losers cut and paste my descriptions in as their own. It is against ebay policy and if you are caught, you will be reported to ebay and could be sued for copyright infringement and damages.
Price: 34.99 USD
Location: Orem, Utah
End Time: 2023-12-26T10:02:38.000Z
Shipping Cost: 6.83 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Features: 1st Edition
Format: Hardcover
Personalize: No
Number of Pages: 517
Topic: Sanpete County Utah History, Chief Wakara, Mormons, Manti Utah, Ephraim, Utah
Book Series: Historical
Vintage: No
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Ex Libris: No
Edition: First Edition
Language: English
Publication Year: 1983
Book Title: The Other 49ers: a Topical History of Sanpete Coun
Intended Audience: Young Adults, Adults
Author: AC Antrei
Original Language: English
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Publisher: Western Epics Pub Co
Inscribed: No
Signed: No
Genre: Biographies & True Stories, Historical, Religious & Spiritual
Type: Picture Book