The global headquarters of the church has been in Salt Lake City since , when the first company of Mormon pioneers arrived in the Salt Lake Valley and proceeded to colonize a large area of the Mountain West that would become Utah. Meanwhile, Utahns who use Google most often searched for the phrase "Gilmore Girls" in , according to the Deseret News.
Start your day with the top stories you missed while you were sleeping. Cookie banner We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, show personalized content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audiences come from. By choosing I Accept , you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. Print Subscriptions. The persistent swing toward a less-LDS Utah is expected to continue with every new group of children starting kindergarten and with every new business advertising for open positions.
Donate to the newsroom now. The Salt Lake Tribune, Inc. By Matt Canham. Religion Most Mormons voted Republican in the midterms — but their Trump approval rating continues to decline, study finds. Politics Utahns move more than most Americans. Think Latter-day Saint missions and a young populace. In case you missed it. You might have to get past your neighbors first.
Latest from Mormon Land: Tithing lawsuit against the church is born again. Other church members said the no-strings-attached funds carried them though circumstances that could have spiraled into disaster and poverty. All declined to have their names published for fear of stigma. McAdams became a tireless advocate for poverty alleviation programs, and credits socioeconomic equality practices within the church for leveling the playing field.
There were times the power company turned off the electricity; there were foreclosure notices and stretches when the family had no health insurance.
In those periods, the family got through with food from Welfare Square and relied on the church to pay overdue utility bills. The ideology of self-sufficiency and mistrust of the government runs deep in the Rockies, well beyond the Mormon church. There are hundreds of books and theories about why, but the easiest answer has something to do with the type of people who have chosen to live in this sparse, rugged land, eke out a living and remain here. In the 19th century, Mormons tested out many experiments with collectivism, while also denying an influence of socialism.
Several groups lived in a collective system known as the United Order, where property, goods and profits were communal, an effort to equalize wealth and eliminate poverty.
Polygamy was also common in these communities until the church officially outlawed it in But relying on the reports of Western explorers like John C. At the time, the region was part of Mexico, with limited oversight by the Mexican government.
They set out from Nauvoo in April , but were forced to spend several months camped along the Missouri River between Iowa and Nebraska. When spring came, Young and an advance group of men, three women and two children left the winter camp and headed for their final destination. And the mountains ringing the valley were stocked with freshwater streams and creeks that could nourish crops, despite the saltiness of the Great Salt Lake itself.
When Utah becomes part of the U. When Young and his followers first arrived in the Great Salt Lake, the region was still part of Mexican territory. Young saw an opportunity in this turn of events: State governments had a lot of power, and controlling one could give the Mormons considerable autonomy.
The state would have been massive, encompassing present-day Utah, most of Nevada, good chunks of Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Idaho, and even the city of San Diego. A colorized photograph of a 19th century polygamous Mormon family with two wives and nine children.
Young largely ignored the federal agents the Fillmore administration sent to Utah, and did what he wanted.
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