chapters 10 & 11 utah studies. chapter 10-the territory prospers

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Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies The Territory Prospers & The Struggle for Statehood

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Page 1: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Chapters 10 & 11

Utah Studies

The Territory Prospers & The Struggle for Statehood

Page 2: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Page 3: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Trains were important for moving raw materials from mines to manufacturing centers.

They also carried raw material to smelters.

The finished product was then shipped to manufacturing places in Utah and other states.

Utah could now export and import materials from all over much easier.

The Railroad Changes Utah

Page 4: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Union Station in Ogden

Ogden Corrine

Corrine today and in the past

Page 5: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Powell Expedition-1869 Just ten days after the completion of the

transcontinental railroad, A Civil War Veteran named John Wesley Powell came west to explore the last part of the unexplored west.

They lowered their boats into the Green River in Wyoming.

They went through a tall, red-rock canyon that they named Flaming Gorge.

The men braved rapids and climbed 2000 foot tall canyon walls to collect rock samples.

Page 6: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

They were running out of food, so three members of the expedition left to find a trail to Salt Lake City.

They were never heard from again. As they went further down the

Colorado River they ran into rapids that broke their oars and boats.

They floated into the hugest, most mysterious canyon ever.

Powell Expedition-1869

Page 7: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

John Wesley Powell

John Wesley Powell with the Paiutes (notice his

arm)

Powell’s Boat The Emma Dean

The Expedition as it entered the Grand Canyon

Page 8: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Schools in Utah Schools were held by Mormons in their

churches. Sometimes they built separate school houses

as well. Those who had enough money hired a teacher

to come to their home to teach children. Presbyterians started 36 schools and 4

academies in Utah. Two schools that were started then-Rowland

Hall and Wasatch Academy are still working schools.

Page 9: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Wasatch Academy The University of Deseret

Oneida Stake Academy

Rowland Hall

Page 10: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Electricity comes to Utah In 1879 in Menlo Park, New Jersey Thomas

Edison invented the first practical light bulb. The first display of electric light in Utah was

when the circus came to Utah in 1880. By the early 1890’s only Salt Lake, Ogden,

Logan, Provo and Park City had electrical service. As technology improved electric service improved.

Mines were the first industry to use electricity. Electric streetcars, trains and telephones

made life more convenient for Utahns.

Page 11: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

What an early telephone looked like

Electric Street Cars in SLC

An early electric light bulb

A gas light-predecessor to the electric light

bulb

Page 12: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch

Robert Parker, now known as Butch Cassidy was born in Beaver, Utah.

He left home as a young teen and lived a life of robbing trains, banks and hiding out from the law.

He and his gang known as the Wild Bunch robbed many banks and trains in Utah, Idaho and Wyoming.

It is rumored they later fled to Argentina and Bolivia.

Page 13: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Robbers Roost

Butch Cassidy

Page 14: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Chapter 11-Utah’s Struggle for Statehood

Page 15: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

The Struggle for Statehood The people of the Utah Territory asked the

U.S. Congress to become a state in 1849, 1856, 1862, 1872, 1882 and 1887.

Utah kept trying all of those times because there were many benefits to statehood. There were 8 reasons why.

#1-Utah citizens would not be inferior. #2-They could vote in Presidential Elections. #3-Represenatives in Congress could vote on

laws.

Page 16: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

#4-Utah could send two Senators to the U.S. Senate.

#5-Utah could elect judges instead of having them chosen by the government.

#6-Utah could write their own constitution and make their own laws.

#7-Utah would have power over education.

#8-Utah would receive government services in return for paying taxes.

The Struggle for Statehood

Page 17: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

The State of Deseret as

proposed in 1849

The State of Deseret and the

Original Utah Territory

boundaries. Look at the map on

page 225.

Page 18: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

The Struggle for Statehood Utah had enough people to become a state. There were lots of things said about the

Mormons by those who visited here. There were truths and rumors in what was

said. There were seven roadblocks to statehood: #1-Lots of people were concerned about

how Mormons combined church with government and economics.

#2-All of the Mormon people voted together.

Page 19: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

#3-Mormons settled their own court cases instead of using the courts set up by the government.

#4-LDS leaders encouraged Mormons to support Mormon businesses so they could manage the economics of the territory.

#5-Mormons thought schools should cost, Non-Mormons did not.

#6-Mormon Immigrants were seen as a threat to getting jobs and land.

#7-Polygamy was not acceptable to Non-Mormons while Mormons thought it was their duty and right.

The Struggle for Statehood

Page 20: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

These top pictures are some pictures of

some polygamist families in Utah.

Because the rest of the county did not

think polygamy was acceptable, many Mormon church

leaders were wanted men who served jail

time.

Page 21: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

In Washington D.C. leaders vowed to eliminate the “twins of barbarism”-slavery and polygamy. They passed laws that mad life hard on polygamists.

The Edmunds-Tucker Act of 1887 was devastating to the Mormons.

It took away the vote from all Utah women and all polygamist men and made polygamy illegal.

It also took away the militia and confiscated all of the property of the LDS Church.

Laws against Polygamy

Page 22: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

After the Edmunds Act was passed many men and few women went to prison.

Others went on the “underground” (in hiding) in the territory, Eastern United States, Canada and Europe.

Mormon leaders began organizing colonies in Canada and Mexico.

Some polygamists were sent on foreign missions.

Living on the Underground

Page 23: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

The Mormons thought that polygamy should be protected by the bill of rights of the U.S. Constitution.

In a case called Reynolds v. the United States, the Supreme Court said that polygamy was illegal.

As a result of this “co-hab” hunts took place and informers were paid $20 for each arrest.

Many men went to prison rather than give up plural marriage and abandoning their wives and children.

Living on the Underground

Page 24: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

In the middle of this chaos caused by the Edmunds Act, Brigham Young died in Salt Lake City in 1877.

Brigham Young had been the leader of the Mormon Church for 33 years and accomplished some incredible things.

John Taylor, a former Methodist minister, who had been at Carthage Jail with Joseph Smith became the new leader of the Mormon Church.

He told Mormon Men it would be better to go underground than to go to prison.

He was the father of 35 children by 7 wives.

Living on the Underground

Page 25: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

John Taylor-The leader of the Mormons after Brigham Young. He died in the Kaysville Farmhouse on the

right because he was in hiding because of

polygamy and did not want to get arrested.

Brigham Young 1801-1877

The Lion House-This is where Brigham Young lived in SLC. It was named the

Lion House because Brigham Young was called the “Lion of the Lord.”

Page 26: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

The Manifesto Ends Polygamy

After three years of the Edmunds Act it became obvious that unless polygamy ended the Mormon Church might end too.

Wilford Woodruff, who took over for John Taylor issued the Manifesto that told the Mormon people there would be no new plural marriages.

The manifesto was a huge step in helping the Utah Territory achieve statehood.

President Benjamin Harrison issued a proclamation forgiving past polygamists.

Page 27: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Wilford Woodruff and the newspaper

reporting on it being read and

published for the members of the Mormon Church

Page 28: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Women’s Suffrage In the early years of Utah’s settlement people

thought that if women got the right to vote, they would end polygamy.

The people of Utah were happy to let women vote because they knew they were not being forced into polygamy.

The Edmunds-Tucker Act took that right away. Women would get the right when the 19th

amendment was passed in 1920.

Page 29: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

In 1895, President Grover Cleveland authorized Utah to write a constitution.

A constitution is a document that sets out principles of the law and government.

It took sixty days, but the document was finished in November 1895.

Heber M. Wells was elected as Utah’s first state governor.

Writing Utah’s Constitution

Page 30: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Heber M. Wells

Grover Cleveland

Page 31: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

The Glorious Day of Statehood

In 1896 there were about 250,000 people living in Utah.

On January 4th, residents received word that the proclamation had been signed declaring Utah the 45th state.

People dashed out from a telegraph office and fired a shotgun which was the signal that Utah had become a state.

A huge American flag with 45 stars hung from the ceiling of the Salt Lake Tabernacle.

Page 32: Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies. Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers

Downtown SLC

Salt Lake Temple