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The Territory Prospers
The Railroad Revolutionizes Transportation• After the Civil War the U.S. decide to build a transcontinental
railroad as a way to unite the country even further• The Union Pacific Railroad began building west from Nebraska• They mostly employed Irish immigrants and newly freed slaves
for cheap labor• The Central Pacific Railroad began building east from California• They mostly employed Chinese immigrants
• The path on the Union Pacific was very easy in the beginning because they had to lay their tracks on flat prairie land
• The Central Pacific had a lot more difficult time because they had to cut through tough granite of the Sierra Nevadas
Utah and the Railroad• As the Union Pacific approached Utah, it got help from
Brigham Young and the Mormons• Young said that he would collect money to help the railroad if it
passed through Ogden• Young then wanted the railroad to head down to Salt Lake City,
but President Grant decided it should head north around the Great Salt Lake
• Both railroads were in a sort of race to see who could get the most land• The railroad would get more money with the more land that it
had• The railroads eventually met at Promontory Summit north of
the Great Salt Lake on May 10, 1869
Life of Railroad Workers• Most workers for the Central Pacific were from China• About 11,000 were hired and about 2000 were killed or seriously
injured• Some of the dangers they faced were blasting accidents,
avalanches, cholera, and harsh weather condition• The ones who worked for the Union Pacific were mostly Irish
immigrants• Many other European immigrants and newly freed slaves worked
on it• They mostly faced severe weather, and poor living and working
conditions
Railroad Changes Utah• Railroads started to pop up all over the territory of Utah• Railroads connected towns and were used in mining towns to get
materials to the cities to sell• Agriculture got a boost because it made it easier and faster for
farmers to get their crops to market• Businesses thrived because they were able to get more
manufactured goods to their stores• The railroads also brought a huge boost of new settlers and
tourists into the territory• Many actors came to perform at the Salt Lake Theatre and Mark
Twain even road a train through Utah• In 1847, it took the Advance company 100 days to make it to
the Salt Lake Valley from Nebraska. With the railroad it only took 2 days
Connecting Towns• After the Transcontinental Railroad was complete Utah began
to build other railroads to connect the major towns• There was the Utah Central track to connect Ogden with Salt
Lake City• There was the Utah Northern that began in Ogden and went
north to Brigham City, Logan, and other town in Idaho• Then there was the Utah Southern which went south from Salt
Lake City to Sandy, American Fork, Provo, and even further south
Railroad Towns
• The town of Corinne quickly grew around Promontory Point• The people who lived in Corinne were hoping that their city
would be chosen as a junction for the North/South railroads• But another city will be chosen for this junction
• The town of Ogden drastically changed with the introduction of the railroad• Many businesses began to move into the town• Utah’s first black population grew around the train yards in
Ogden• Ogden’s 25th street, also known as “Two Bit Street,” became a
“red light” district where railroad workers could satisfy their vices• Gangster Al Capone said that the city was too rough for him
Settlements Spread Out• With the railroad and new businesses coming into the
territory, settlers began to spread to the eastern part of the territory
• Captain Pardon Dodds was in charge of the Ute Indian Reservation, but when he retired he started the town of Vernal in 1877• Vernal is a very dry and desolate place, but other settlers
followed him• The town of Moab began as a trading post for people crossing
the Colorado River on the Old Spanish Trail, 1878• Some settlers were called to settle in southeastern Utah• To cross the Colorado River they had to cut holes down the wall
of the steep gorges and climbed down, wagons and all• This place was then known as Hole-in-the-Rock. It is now under
Lake Powell
Religious Congregations Prosper• More and more different
religions began to move into the territory after the railroads
• Utah gained healthy Methodist, Evangelical, and Baptist populations
Territorial Schools• The first schools in Utah were organized
by the LDS Church and were held in their buildings
• Later, private schools were opened• In 1890, the Utah legislature passed the
Free Public School Act, which guaranteed free public elementary schools for children in the state
• University of Deseret was the first university in the territory in 1850• It was funded by the Utah government• It is now known as University of Utah
Territorial Schools cont.• Timpanogas University opened in Provo in
1874• This was later bought by the LDS Church and
named Brigham Young University• The Agricultural Academy of Utah was
opened in Logan in 1888• It was later named Utah State University
• Weber Academy was opened in Ogden in 1889 by the LDS Church• It later became Weber State University
Electricity• Before electricity, life stopped after sundown• Electricity changed that and created a night life never seen before
• The first public display of electricity in Utah was in 1880 when a circus came to town
• By the early 1890s only Salt Lake, Ogden, Logan, Provo, and Park City had working reliable electricity
• Better electricity motors made factories and mines improve their production speeds
• Electric streetcars made traveling within cities much easier• There were street cars in Salt Lake, Ogden, Provo, and Logan
Night Life
Amusement Parks• Streetcars were able to carry passengers from Salt Lake City to
Saltair, a popular amusement park on the shore of Great Salt Lake• People could ride the rollercoaster, watch touring big jazz bands,
float in the Great Salt Lake, then take the train back home• This was a popular dating destination as well
• The other popular amusement park was Lagoon• Promoters advertised “Bowling, Elegant Dancing Pavilion, Fine
Music, A Shady Bowery, and Good Restaurants”
Then and Now
Telephones• The first demonstration of a telephone in
Utah went from a private residence on South Temple to Fort Douglas
• The popularity of the telephone grew rapidly• In 1890 there were only 500 subscribers, but by
1900 there more than 1200• By the early 1890s, phone lines reached as far
south as Nephi and as far north as Preston, ID• Most sometimes only the general store in
town had a telephone• And those who had a telephone didn’t know
anybody else who did• It will take about 30 years before most people
have a telephone