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Founded
in 1859, Logan, a city of approximately 33,000, is located on the east
side of Cache Valley in northern Utah at the mouth of Logan Canyon.
On
6 June 1859 a small group of Mormon settlers sent to Cache Valley by
Brigham Young surveyed a fort site near the banks of the Logan River
and began harvesting logs for houses. By the middle of the month, the
first drawing for parcels of land took place. A second group plowed
land and planted three acres of wheat on 10 June on an area called "the
island." They constructed two rows of cabins facing each other,
patterning the settlement after Salt Lake City, including streets wide
enough for several vehicles to pass each other. By March 1860 there
were 100 houses in the settlement, which was named Logan after an early
trapper, Ephraim Logan. The city was incorporated on 17 January 1866
and Alvin Crockett was elected Logan's first mayor.
Though not
the first white settlement in Cache Valley, Logan became the principal
city because of its central location and its abundant water supply for
mills and irrigation. Farmers and their families gathered there to buy
and sell; industries grew to service the community. Eventually, Logan
became the county seat for Cache County.
In November 1859 Mormon
apostles Orson Hyde and Ezra T. Benson installed William B. Preston as
bishop of Logan. That winter the citizens built a schoolhouse which
doubled as a meetinghouse for the seventeen families of the settlement.
The founding settlers included John B. and Aaron D. Thatcher, W.B.
Preston, George L. Farrell, Thomas E. Ricks, and their families. The
Thatchers developed a family empire in Logan--including business
interests in banking, merchandising, manufacturing, mining, building of
railroads, and commerce. In the spring of 1860, the Thatcher patriarch,
Hezekiah, brought the first assortment of general merchandise to the
city.
Other early industries in the town consisted of a sawmill,
a lime kiln, a tannery, and a carding mill. Of course, agriculture
formed the basis of the local economy.
In the winter of 1865
work began on the Logan LDS Tabernacle but was halted for a time while
some church leaders went on missions for the church. When work resumed,
a new foundation of rock was put in, and the building was completed in
1878. Construction on the Logan LDS Temple began in 1877 and was
completed in 1884. These two buildings remain as landmarks in the city.
In
1873 Logan had 2,033 inhabitants. In that year, the Right Reverend
Daniel S. Tuttle organized St. John's Episcopal Church in the city.
From that time on an active group of parishioners organized a school,
established businesses, and participated in city government. They
helped prepare the way for people of many religious faiths to settle in
Logan.
Higher education came to Cache Valley with the founding
of Brigham Young College in 1878. Some ten years later, after the
passage of the Lund Act by Congress, the Agricultural College of Utah,
a land-grant institution, came into being; it opened its doors to
students in 1890 with a faculty of eight. It was later known as Utah
State Agricultural College, and is now Utah State University. Also in
Logan, Bridgerland Applied Technology Center is one of five such
schools in the state and trains 6,100 students in office, managerial,
and technological subjects.
Logan is presently administered by a
mayor and city council, and it is the center for county government. Its
largest employer is Utah State University. There are more than sixty
manufacturing industries located in and around Logan, including
printing of business forms and yearbooks, exercise apparatus
fabrication, the production of sewn products, wooden windows and doors,
and cheese and meat processing plants. Logan also has many scientific
research and computer firms. There are more than 200 retail outlets in
the city.
Logan Regional Hospital serves northern Utah as well
as parts of Idaho and Wyoming. Newspapers include The Herald Journal
and The Cache Citizen. Logan City School District instructs almost
5,500 students.
Cultural endeavors include the Festival of the
American West, Summerfest Art and Jazz Fair, Old Lyric Repertory
Theatre season, the Summer Concert Series, AVA Holly Faire, and the
Capitol Arts Alliance, which is housed in the historic Capitol Theater
on Main Street. Many museums provide talented local artists space to
display their works.
The elevation of Logan is 4,775 feet,
producing cold winters and cool summer nights. The nearby mountains,
streams, and valleys offer sites for fishing, hunting, skiing,
four-wheeling, hiking, and snowmobiling opportunities. Since World War
II, Logan's population has nearly doubled from 16,832 in 1950 to 32,762
in 1990.
See: Vera A. Christensen, A Place In Time (1989); Joel
E. Ricks, ed., The History of a Valley (1956); Cache Valley Data
(1992); A.J. Simmonds, The Gentile Comes to Cache Valley (1976).
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