Monday, May 11, 2026

Salt Lake City -- The World's biggest oddity in Settlements?

The original "This is the Place" monument, with the larger, modern monument in the distance. Both are near the mouth of Emigration Canyon, where the Mormon Pioneers entered the S.L. Valley, in 1847.

MOST cities in the United States (and the world) were settled in desirable locations. These places had abundant water, good soil, nearby trade routes, perhaps area mineral mines, etc.

A lone exception – Salt Lake City.

Mormon Pioneers in 1847 sought out the Great Salt Lake Valley specifically because it was basically, an undesirable and rather inhospitable place.

 The valley wasn’t totally barren, but trees were mostly along the banks of small streams and the Oregon trail was to the far north in what would become Idaho and the Santa Fe trail was far, far southward.

In other words, they sought isolation and no competition from outside sources, having been chased out of Illinois.

Even the Native Americans in Utah territory didn’t settle in substantial numbers in the Great Salt Lake Valley. Most were Utah Lake or southward, or in today’s Brigham City and northward. West of the salty Great Salt Lake very vast salt-laden flats and desert. To the east were the rugged Wasatch Mountains.

   But the Mormon Pioneers created irrigation systems and made the valley “blossom as a rose.” The rest is history.

 

                   A modern view of the Salt Lake Valley, from near Emigration Canyon, looking west.