Salt Lake City (Utah) -- History
Found in 323 Collections and/or Records:
Charles W. Hardy papers
Correspondence, diaries, financial records, legal documents, irrigation and canal documents, pipeline descriptions, railroad advertisements, receipts, and notes. The materials relate largely to Hardy's work on railroads and other projects.
Jesse Perse Harmon papers
Photocopies of handwritten and printed letters, notes, military orders, and certificates. The materials relate to the migration of Mormons to Utah, the operations of the Utah militia during the Black Hawk War against Ute Indians, Harmon's Mormon Church activities, and his life in Holden, Utah.
Irene Hascall letter to Ophelia M. Andrews
Typescript of a letter which describes Salt Lake Valley in 1847-1848.
John R. Haslam notes
Handwritten and printed receipt and notes for orders. The items are dated 13 Jan. 1875, 14 Dec. 1877, and 188? The materials relate to orders including financial transactions with Brigham Young, second president of the Mormon Church.
Luther S. Hemenway letters
Eleven handwritten letters written by Hemenway from 1852 to 1862 and two letters written by Elvira in 1862 and 1865. The items deal with family matters and with Hemenway's nursery.
Ira Nathaniel Hinckley diary and family papers
F. F. Hintze papers
Historical sketch of James Hendricks and Drusilla Dorris Hendricks
Typewritten copy of an autobiography. Drusilla married James Hendricks (1808-1870) in 1827. They joined the Mormon Church in 1835 and lived with the Mormons in Clay County, Missouri and Nauvoo, Illinois. They migrated to Utah in 1847 where they lived in Salt Lake City, Springville, and Richmond.
A history of John Charles Hall and his wife, Kezia, as remembered by their daughter
Typewritten biography. Stout writes about her parents' lives in Salt Lake City, Utah.
History of Ole Van Harris and wife, Annie May Perry Harris
Typewritten biography of Ole Van Harris and Annie May Perry Harris, his wife. Ole was born in Parowan, Utah in 1876 and was raised on ranch near the town. Ole attended Brigham Young Academy, taught school in various places in Utah, and eventually settled in Salt Lake City, Utah to work as a businessman. His wife Annie May Perry Harris was born in Provo, Utah in 1876 and married Ole in 1901.