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Within a few short years of their arrival in the Salt Lake valley in 1847, the Mormon
pioneers
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Walking up 2nd South
toward new University campus
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took the first halting steps toward establishing a university. The University of Deseret,
as it was to be called, was created by an act of the General Assembly of the State of Deseret on
February 28, 1850. Orson Spencer, a leader of the L.D.S. church, was appointed
Chancellor. Basics such as books, teachers, and even a place to hold classes were in short supply,
due to hard economic times, including crop failures and increasing federal pressure on the L.D.S
church to abandon polygamy. The first
classes were held in private homes, or wherever suitable space could be found. Funds to pay teachers
and for supplies came from private donations. But it was not enough, and in 1853, the budding
University was forced to suspend operations. For the next decade and more, classes were still
held on an intermittent basis in the Council House. The urge for an institution of higher learning
in Utah was strong, but the economic foundation was just not solid enough.
By 1869, however, conditions in Utah had changed. Relations with the federal government had improved--if
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Art Class, Deseret
University
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only slightly, and would soon worsen yet again--the economy had progressed beyond bare survival, the
transcontinental railroad was just completed, and once again leaders of the state began to plan for a
University on a permanent basis. The University of Utah got its first major boost that year when the
Regents hired a well-known educator, John R. Park, to be Principal and later President. Under President
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Deseret University
Gridiron Squad
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Park, the University of Deseret finally began to send down solid roots in the community, and would never
again be forced to close. Park spent 1871 through 1872 touring universities in Europe, studying their
organization and curriculum. In 1876, the school moved out of the Council House and into the Union
Academy, an adobe building located at 200 West 400 North in Salt Lake City. A few years later, the
Territorial Legislature appropriated funds to purchase a site and erect a building to house the growing
University. The Regents obtained Union Square from the city of Salt Lake, and in 1884 moved into the
first building that it could call its own. In 1886, the University granted its first degrees, and the
Alumni Association was organized. The Utah Territorial Library was transferred to the University of
Deseret in 1890, and a chair of Geology and Mineralogy, the predecessor of the School of Mines, was
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Prof. Babcock's
Physical Culture Class
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established. Students were offered a Classical course of four years; a Scientific course of three years,
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Pack House
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and a Normal course of two years. Student life began to develop; there were literary and debating societies
established during this period; several attempts at a literary magazine, and the tradition of an annual
University Ball was established. Noted faculty during this early, formative period, included (besides Dr.
Park, who was “much beloved”) Joseph B. Toronto; Francis Marion Bishop; Joseph T. Kingsbury; Karl G. Maeser;
and the misses Cook, Mary and Ida. Even under trying conditions of economy and uncertainty about location,
the University produced a number of graduates who would be heard of in many fields in the years to come.
They included Heber M. Wells, a governor of Utah; Rudger Clawson, a General Authority of the L.D.S. church;
Heber J. Grant, president of the L.D.S. church; Don Carlos Young, a famous architect; Richard W. Young, who
would rise to the rank of General in the U.S. Army; B. H. Roberts, the famous historian; and Orson F. Whitney,
a Mormon scholar and historian.
Major changes took place in 1892. On February 17, the Territorial Legislature changed the name to the
University of Utah. John R. Park, in declining health, resigned as President; but before he did, he
realized that the Union Square location was inadequate for a major university, and planned to relocate
the University on the east bench of the Salt Lake valley. With that in mind, he began negotiations with
the US Army to obtain land at Fort Douglas, and the Territorial Legislature petitioned the U.S. Congress
for a grant of land for a new campus. The stage was now set for the move to the east bench of Salt Lake
City, a move that would portend much for the future of the University of Utah.
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presidents of the era |
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John R. Park president, 1869-1892
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