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  1. A large, detailed and very rare 1870 bird’s-eye view of Salt Lake City, drawn by one of 19th-century America’s great view makers. The view depicts Salt Lake City as seen from an imaginary viewpoint to the southwest, with Grandview, Lookout and Twin Peaks of the Wasatch Range looming in the background. The grid layout characteristic of so ...

  2. 24 de jul. de 2020 · Throughout the last century and into this one, credit for the earliest map of Salt Lake City was given to Thomas Bullock, a Church historian and recorder, who sketched a plat map in his diary dated August 16, 1847. However, in 2014, a forgotten map drawn by Henry G. Sherwood, the first surveyor of Utah, was brought back to the attention of the ...

  3. Davis, Daniel M. 1971-. 19th Century Western Stereo-views Collection. 1865-1899 (inclusive) 2 boxes, (1.0 linear ft.) USU_P0349. Consists of 245 original stereo-views that were taken of sights along the Union Pacific or Central Pacific Railroads in Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and California as well as a few general views in Utah ...

  4. An old photo of Main Street, Salt Lake City, taken around 1871. At the time, Main Street was known as East Temple Street. Image from the archives of the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. Just 34 years later, this next photo of the same street show the growth of the city and modern technology.

  5. 11 de out. de 2018 · Color scenes of Old Salt Lake City in 1900. The late Colonel John Cockerell, in the Cosmopolitan, said, “There are three unique cities in America, and one of these is Salt Lake City. It is not only unique in its temple, tabernacle and Mormon church institutions, but quaint in appearance, with its wide streets, immense blocks, and martial rows ...

  6. This is the first of three blog posts discussing Greeley’s 19th-century photographers. 1870 John Wilkinson (bc 1840) is listed as a photographer in the 1870 federal census for Greeley. J. M. (or I. M.) Johnson opened the first photography studio in Greeley, working briefly between November 1870 and February 1871.

  7. In the 19th century, the average height of a samurai varied depending on various factors. There is no precise data available regarding the exact average height of samurais during that period. However, it is believed that the average height of a samurai in the 19th century was around 5 feet 7 inches to 5 feet 9 inches (170-175 cm) for men.