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History

Utah State University

Joel Ricks

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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

The Settlement Of Cache Valley, Joel E. Ricks Oct 1956

The Settlement Of Cache Valley, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

The settlement of Cache Valley played a significant part in the tremendous efforts of Brigham Young to occupy and develop an extensive commonwealth in the Far West. As he led his tired but hopeful pioneers into the valley of the Great Salt Lake in 1847, it did not seem likely that one of America's greatest colonial enterprises was in the making.


The Origin Of The Utah State Agricultural College, Joel E. Ricks Mar 1953

The Origin Of The Utah State Agricultural College, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

In 1888, Representative Anthon H. Lund of Sanpete County introduced the bill to create a college in Utah. The idea of education for the people of rural Utah came to him while he was on a mission to Denmark. July 29, 1889 upon the sagebrush and wild grass-covered bench of Old Lake Bonneville, high enough above the valley to provide a marvelous view, the founders laid the cornerstone of a building to be used for the education of western democracy - a rural college for the masses.


Mormon Colonization In Arizona, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

Mormon Colonization In Arizona, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

While Mormon colonization was planned and initiated under Brigham Young, he died before his planned settlements could be well established. Thus it remained for the Quorum of the Twelve and Brigham Young's successor, John Taylor, to save the settlements already established and to expand the colonization of Arizona. Thus Brigham Young's colonial plans and efforts should be discussed as a part of the story of Mormon colonization. In the last three years of his life the great Mormon leader planned a magnificent colonization.


Early Cache Valley History, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

Early Cache Valley History, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

In the vaults of the Hudson's Bay Company House in London, Professor Merle of Harvard discovered the earliest authentic evidence of the first fur men in Cache Valley.


The Early History Of Cache Valley, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

The Early History Of Cache Valley, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

The Rocky Mountain men--American fur traders--were probably the first white explorers of Cache Valley. They spent the winter of 1824 and 1825 on the Bear River and its tributaries. Since there were at least fifty men they probably trapped all the streams of Cache Valley. In this group was James Bridger who was said to have traveled down the Bear River to Great Salt Lake. While the Americans were still in the valley, Peter Skeene Ogden led a party of Hudson Bay fur traders to the Bear River and followed that stream to the Great Salt Lake. This was in …


Logan Fifth Ward History, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

Logan Fifth Ward History, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

During the winter of 1865-1866, the people had settled in that part of Logan which subsequently became the Fifth Ward, went into the mountains after logs with which to erect a school house. his house was finished early in 1866 and stood on the Northwest corner of Block 15 of Plat "C" Logan City Survey. The building measured 16 by 20 feet; subsequently, an addition was made to it. As soon as the house was finished, the saints residing in the neighborhood commenced to hold meetings and day schools as well as social entertainments in this pioneer public building.


Fur Traders And Trappers In Utah, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

Fur Traders And Trappers In Utah, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

Though the explorers with their official reports did much to interest the East in the Far West, the fur men, who in most instances preceded the explorers, covered the Indian trails and trapped the beaver from the Rockies to the Pacific and added materially to our knowledge of the country. The story of the fur men is the earliest story of the white man in North America and from cavalier and Pilgrim days to the present, those who sought the furs were in the forefront of civilization.


Jedediah Smith And His Travels In Utah, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

Jedediah Smith And His Travels In Utah, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

Jedediah Smith and his travels in Utah.

Finding Aid for this collection can be found here: http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv08605/.


Fremont And His Explorations In Utah, Joel E. Ricks Jan 1950

Fremont And His Explorations In Utah, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

John Charles Fremont, explorer, soldier and aspirant to the Presidency of the United States, was born January 21, 1813, in Savannah Georgia. Fremont's great contribution to western expansion did not consist of exploration so much as a scientific mapping of the country.


A History Of Fifty Years: 1888-1938, Joel Edward Ricks Jan 1938

A History Of Fifty Years: 1888-1938, Joel Edward Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

For the past half century the Utah State Agricultural College has been making history without a history having been written. As the Semi .. Centennial year approached, the need of recording the outstanding events of the fifty years became imperative. This Institution, in the beginning, was established in the spirit of the Land Grant College Act of 1862-a spirit born in the gloom of military disaster and yet with rising hope and determination to preserve a Union which President Lincoln determined should "lift the burdens from the shoulders of all men." Each President of the College has stressed democracy and …


Mormon Western Colonization, Joel E. Ricks Jul 1935

Mormon Western Colonization, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

Like the pilgrims of New England, prayer and labor were united in founding a commonwealth in the west. Then too this was a pattern followed in the Mormon settlement which soon extended in all directions from the Salt Lake Valley. From the small camp in the valley as Brigham Young later stated were extended "the curtains of Zion."


The Utah Pioneers, Joel E. Ricks Jul 1934

The Utah Pioneers, Joel E. Ricks

Joel Ricks Collection

Eighty-six years ago the Mormon pioneer company under the leadership of Brigham Young entered this valley as the vanguard of a people who were to build their own civilization in the Great Basin and beyond. They were the fore-runners of a people admirably trained for the task of colonizing the intermountain valleys. The middle west was the proving ground for the Mormon movement. There they developed a missionary system through which they reached sufficient numbers for their far western venture.