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Unique Utah - Podcast  

Unique Utah - Podcast

Welcome to Utah

Author: Evan Sorensen @utahevan

Evan Sorensen talks about all the people, places and things that make Utah unique. Listen as he interviews locals both known and unknown, shines light on local folklore, and I can't think of anything else so you should stop reading this because it is just rambling in order to fill this up and see what it looks like non different devices, so, yeah! [ AAC Enhanced Episode Format ]
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Language: en-us

Genres: Society & Culture, Technology

Contact email: Get it

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Ep. 03: "The Great Saltair, Utah" - Unique Utah
Sunday, 22 November, 2015

Description – In 1893 the Mormon church built Saltair on the south shore of the Great Salt Lake, about sixteen miles from downtown Salt Lake City. They also built the railroad connecting the resort with the city. The church owned the resort until 1906, at which time it was sold to a group of private Mormon businessmen. The architect of Saltair was Richard K.A. Kletting, perhaps Utah's foremost architect at the turn of the century and the designer of the Utah State Capitol building. In building Saltair the Mormon Church had two major objectives: in the words of Mormon apostle Abraham H. Cannon, they wanted to provide "a wholesome place of recreation" under church control for Mormons and their families; and they also intended that Saltair be a "Coney Island of the West" to help demonstrate that Utah was not a strange place of alien people and customs. This was part of a larger movement toward accommodation with American society that had begun in the early 1890s as church leaders made a conscious decision to bring the church into the mainstream of American life. Saltair was to be both a typical American amusement park and a place that provided a safe environment for Mormon patrons. Those goals were somewhat incompatible, and in less than a decade the second had clearly triumphed at the expense of the first. Nonetheless, initially Saltair signified the Mormon Church's intention to join the world while at the same time trying to minimize its influence and avoid its excesses. Don't forget to follow us @FrySaucebossdesign on Twitter and also like us on FaceBook [ This episode has interactive content on www.frysaucebossdesign.com/blog/saltair - 360 panoramas, videos and pictures] : : Show Summary : : Evan Sorensen discusses The Great Saltair SLC – In 1893 the Mormon church built Saltair on the south shore of the Great Salt Lake, about sixteen miles from downtown Salt Lake City. They also built the railroad connecting the resort with the city. The church owned the resort until 1906, at which time it was sold to a group of private Mormon businessmen. The architect of Saltair was Richard K.A. Kletting, perhaps Utah's foremost architect at the turn of the century and the designer of the Utah State Capitol building. In building Saltair the Mormon Church had two major objectives: in the words of Mormon apostle Abraham H. Cannon, they wanted to provide "a wholesome place of recreation" under church control for Mormons and their families; and they also intended that Saltair be a "Coney Island of the West" to help demonstrate that Utah was not a strange place of alien people and customs. This was part of a larger movement toward accommodation with American society that had begun in the early 1890s as church leaders made a conscious decision to bring the church into the mainstream of American life. Saltair was to be both a typical American amusement park and a place that provided a safe environment for Mormon patrons. Those goals were somewhat incompatible, and in less than a decade the second had clearly triumphed at the expense of the first. Nonetheless, initially Saltair signified the Mormon Church's intention to join the world while at the same time trying to minimize its influence and avoid its excesses. Thanks for listening! : : Show Notations : : Hosted by Evan Sorensen from his sh*tty little apartment in SLC, Utah Visit frysaucebossdesign.com for more information Copyright: © 2015 FrySauce Boss Design | Unique Utah | All rights reserved

 

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