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St. George City Council minutes

 Collection
Identifier: WAGOV-003-01-1994-003

Scope and Contents

This collection contains a hardbound, original handwritten minute book. It documents the St. George City council minutes in St. George, Utah from April 9, 1862 to March 25, 1872. It contains 335 handwritten pages. The minutes describe city ordinances, electing of public officials, water and street projects undertaken by the leadership in an attempt to solve problems and develop a pleasant town environment.

In April-May 1862 a City Marshall, City Recorder, Water Master, City Street Supervisor, Auditor, Treasurer, and City Attorney were elected and ordinances were passed by the City Council defining their duties. An ordinance was also passed relating to the tenure of certain officers.

In the year 1862 the City Mayor was authorized to sell all city lots surveyed. Among many other duties, the Mayor was also in charge of organizing a “Cemetery Locating Committee” which were in charge of locating property for the city cemetery, giving instructions to the surveyor relative to the surveying of the cemetery, size of lots, streets etc. On May 17, 1862, the Mayor suggested that: “measures be adopted to prevent the rapid riding of horses in the streets of the city; and also to prevent swearing, also care and disposition of stock.”

On May 24, 1862, it was proposed and passed that $50.00 be appropriated for the purchase of a beef to assist in entertaining President Brigham Young and suite during their upcoming visit to St. George.

Dates

  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1862 - 1872

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open and freely available to researchers during Special Collections hours or by appointment. Researchers must complete an Application for Use and show a photo ID prior to accessing materials.

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright restrictions may apply. Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be obtained from the Special Collections and Archives

Biographical / Historical

St. George, the county seat of Washington County, is the largest of all the towns founded during the LDS Church's Cotton Mission of 1861. Located in the southwest section of Utah at an elevation of 2,880 feet above sea level, St. George has an average annual temperature of 59.9° with summer temperatures well into the 100s and the average maximum winter temperature around 55°. The average annual rainfall is 8.30 inches, and the normal growing season is 196 days. All these factors made the area a suitable location for the early settlement. Earlier Native American inhabitants of the St. George area included the Virgin River Anasazi, who left evidence of their presence in the rock art and archaeological sites that remain. The first recorded Euro-Americans to visit the area were the Dominguez-Escalante Party in 1776; they were followed by fur trappers, including Jedediah Smith, and still later by government survey parties. By 1854 the LDS Church had established an Indian mission at Santa Clara, two miles north of the St. George Valley. In 1857 and 1858 experimental farms were set up to the east and west of where St. George was to be built. While touring the experimental desert farms in May 1861, Brigham Young predicted the settling of the area. Five months later, in October 1861, 309 families were called by church authorities to what was called the Cotton Mission. Most of those sent had abilities that were deemed essential to establishing a successful community. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Brigham Young thought it would be necessary to raise cotton, if possible. Many of the early settlers of St. George originally came from the southern states. They came to the "Cotton Mission" to grow cotton, but they also brought with them a phrase for the area which has become widely adopted--they called the St. George area "Utah's Dixie." St. George itself was named in honor of George A. Smith, who, although he did not participate in the town's settlement, had personally selected most of the company of the pioneers of 1861. The first years in the new outpost were difficult. Great rainstorms almost destroyed the farmlands, and intense summer heat and lack of culinary water made life far from pleasant. In 1863 St. George became the county seat for Washington County. That same year the construction of the St. George LDS Tabernacle began. It was completed in 1875. Before the tabernacle was completed, on 9 November 1871 work commenced on the St. George LDS Temple. Construction of the temple was a cooperative effort of many communities in southern Utah. The area was suffering from a monetary depression, and a work project was needed in which employment would mean food for families. The building cost $800,000 and was dedicated on 6 April 1877. Other important area buildings from the pioneer era include the historic courthouse (1870) and the social hall and opera house (1875). Silk was produced in the area as early as 1874 but did not add to the material prosperity of the city. Nevertheless, the mulberry trees, which were planted to feed the worms, have continued to provide shade to the city's residents. Other early pioneer endeavors included producing molasses, dried fruit, and wine. Bart C. Anderson https://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/s/ST_GEORGE.shtml

Full Extent

1.0 Linear Feet (1 gray medium oversized box.)

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

  • License: This record is made available under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Creative Commons license.

Abstract

This collection consists of a minute book maintained by the St. George City Council in St. George, Utah from 1862-1872.

Arrangement

The St. George City Council Minutes are arranged in one legal size flat document case, 1862-1872.

Status
Completed
Author
Tammy Gentry, Special Collections Paraprofessional
Date
September 2020
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2022-07-01: Finding aid has been updated to reflect the Utah Tech University name change, basic grammatical changes, and a container summary added by Tammy Gentry, Special Collections Paraprofessional.
  • 2025-10-13: Formerly WASH 068, collection changed to WAGOV 003-01

Repository Details

Part of the Utah Tech University Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
330 Holland Centennial Commons
225 South 700 East
Saint George 84770 United States
(435) 634-2087