Davis County Conference Center in Layton.
By Lynn Arave
DAVIS County is one of Utah’s oldest and most populated counties. It was named after a pioneer leader, Daniel C. Davis and the county was first established as a territory in 1850. The territorial legislature officially created Davis County in 1852 and designated Farmington as its county seat, sitting midway between boundaries at the Weber River on the north end and the mouth of the Jordan River on the south.
DAVIS County is one of Utah’s oldest and most populated counties. It was named after a pioneer leader, Daniel C. Davis and the county was first established as a territory in 1850. The territorial legislature officially created Davis County in 1852 and designated Farmington as its county seat, sitting midway between boundaries at the Weber River on the north end and the mouth of the Jordan River on the south.
Today, more
than 250,000 residents in 15 cities, plus various unincorporated areas, call
the county their home.
Davis County
also boasts a number of superlatives and firsts for the State of Utah – and
even some of national prominence.
Here are 10 such important facts and
accomplishments:
-Smallest county of the 29 counties in Utah:
Davis County comprises a narrow strip of land only 223 square miles in size,
but has the third largest county in population. (Davis County also comprises
about 329 square miles of the Great Salt Lake.)
A portion of the Fielding Garr Ranch today.
-First permanent house in Utah: The
adobe ranch house Fielding Garr built on the southwest end of Antelope Island
was the very first permanent residence ever to be built in Utah. It is also the
longest continuously-occupied house in the state, seamlessly sheltering a
variety of owners of the ranch from 1848, until it was purchased by the State
of Utah in 1981.
-The first reservoir in Utah: Elias
Adams started backing up the waters of the north fork of Holmes Creek, in
today’s Layton City, in 1852, to lengthen the irrigation season. The earthen
dam was enlarged in 1863, but washed out in 1864. Adams then reinforced his dam
and others imitated his work on other streams.
-Oldest operating amusement park west of the Mississippi: Any way you figure it, Lagoon was the first amusement park west of the Mississippi River. Having started up in 1886, it also be ranked as America’s second-oldest amusement Park (behind Dorey Park, Penn.), if you discount Lagoon having moved inland in 1896.
-Boasts the only surviving pioneer era “lake
park”: Lagoon, established in 1886, is the only remaining operational park
of eight total resorts established along the shores of the Great Salt Lake in
the 19th Century. Although Lagoon moved inland in 1896, it is the only such
historic resort left open today.
-Oldest summer “group parties” in Utah:
Lagoon was hosting “Stake Lagoon Days,” as well as Catholic Day and many other
special annual group visit days, starting by or before the year 1905.
-Utah’s single largest teenage employer:
Lagoon Park annually hires about 2,500 seasonal employees, most of them
teenagers.
Lagoon's old swimming pool. -From Lagoon's archives.
-Utah’s largest civil rights crusader:
It was in the late 1950s and into the early 1960s that Lagoon’s Management
excelled at civil rights. “Liberty and Justice for All. How Lagoon came to be
at the cutting edge of Civil Rights in Utah” was the title of a 2005 research
article, by Kristen Rogers, in “Currents," a quarterly publication of the
Utah Division of State History. It was Bob Freed, part-Lagoon owner, in
particular, who crusaded for civil rights - especially for Black families.
Prior to the 1960s, Blacks were not permitted to swim in the Lagoon pool, like
most of that day in America. Blacks could not dance either at Lagoon, or most
other public places. Lagoon just started letting blacks swim, dance or do
everything other races could. No one complained and Lagoon’s bold example
lessened race barriers at other places in Utah.
-One of the nation’s highest hanggliding
takeoff points you can drive to: In the Francis Peak area, there’s a
5,000-foot vertical drop for gliders, from about a 9,500-foot elevation.
Hanggliding enthusiasts can drive the “Scenic Backway” dirt road, some 12 miles
to various launch points. Very popular from the 1970s to 1990s, the restricted
airspace in the area then prohibited hanggliding for more than a decade. Now
airspace changes from the Salt Lake International Airport have opened it up
again.
-Two of the state’s oldest roads: Highway 89 through Davis County and the Bluff Road on the county’s west side were among the earliest paths in Utah, also used by Native Americans. Highway 89 (also known as “Mountain Road”) was also a popular Indian trail from north of Farmington to Weber Canyon and used by emigrants and settlers. The Bluff Road, also known as “Emigrant Road,” was used by California-bound Emigrants as early as the fall of 1848 and later Forty-niners.
SOURCES: "A History of Davis County," By Glen m. Leonard and digitalnewspapers.org
-NOTE: The author, Lynn Arave, is available to speak to groups, clubs, classes or other organizations about Utah history at no charge. He can be contacted by email at: lynnarave@comcast.net
ccccccccccccccccooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooolllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDelete