Florence, near present-day Omaha, August 1856
Today's Olympic ski center was yesterday's rugged and ragged silver-mining capital.
Park City, Utah, where much of this winter’s Olympics will happen, is a two-boom town.
The truth is still emerging about the mass murder of more than 100 California-bound emigrants in Utah in 1857, and about the role of leaders of the Mormon Church in the atrocities.
On August 3, 1999, a backhoe operator powered his shovel into a hard-packed mound of earth at a remote site in the southwestern corner of Utah, and to the shock of those watching, the bucket emerged with more than 30 pounds of human skeletons.
It was a town where the trails started and the buck stopped. Home to a president and an outlaw, it made room for both.
The courts are taking up the question of what can and cannot constitute legal wedlock. They’ve been there before.
Rhetorical bombs were bursting last May, but the shock waves are just now being felt.
Retracing the pioneer trail in Mormon Utah
On my first visit to Gilgal Garden, a back-yard collection of folk sculpture in Salt Lake City, a Mormon friend who shares my taste for the unusual took my picture.
Discovering a giant in the family
Emerson wrote that “there is properly no history; only biography,” so my brother and sister and I knew that the revered collection of diaries and papers that had once belonged to our grandfather, which, during most of our early lives, was in a closet in an up
From Poverty and Persecution to Prosperity and Power
In the month of February, 1846, when conditions for travel were as unpropitious as possible, the Mormons began moving out of their newly built city of Nauvoo, Illinois, in order to cross the ice-strewn Mississippi, on the first leg of a long and uncertain journey.
The Mormons grow in numbers, but persecution makes them wanderers. Then a burst of violence results in
THE MORMONS—PART II
Ably led by Brigham Young, the Mormons made an orderly march to Utah and created ‘Zion” with smooth efficiency
In all the history of the American frontier, only two bands of pioneers achieved near-perfect order while advancing westward and planting their settlements.