All words, grammar and word usage, has been taken directly from this 1966 brochure.
Friday, January 22, 2010
Flag Highlights: How to Display the Flag --part 8
All words, grammar and word usage, has been taken directly from this 1966 brochure.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Art at the Capitol - Cyclorama
Read more of the story HERE!!
Come and See it Before it's Gone!!!
Come and see this old 3-D map of Utah before it is replaced!! The map has been apart of the Utah State Capitol since the 70's and is missing new crucial landmarks to Utah, including I-215 and other important National Monuments.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Flag Highlights: How To Display the Flag--part 7
Art At the Capitol - Pendentives
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Flag Highlights: How To Display the Flag--part 6
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Utah We Love Thee interview about author 2nd page
The 2nd page reads:
gatherings of the children of the state, but in many private homes and organizations. Professor Stephens thinks it particularly significant that his song should have had the additional honor which is received, practically at the time of attaining its majority--twenty-one years since it was first sung. Both the Ogden and Salt Lake Tabernacle choirs, on their various trips east and west to a number of National expositions, have sung the new state anthem; and when the silver service, donated by the state, to the United States battleship Utah, was presented in New York harbor, in the presence of nearly two thousand people from this state besides many national officials, it was also sung by the latter choir, this time on the deck of the battleship. For that occasion the author had written two special stanzas for as follows:
Queen of the ocean wave,
Utah, we love thee.
Mann'd by the true and brave,
Utah, we love thee.
Unconcquer'd may'st thou ride
Long o'er the resless tide,
Our country's joy and pride,
Utah, we love thee.
Guard well the land we love,
Utah, we love thee.
A friend to freedom prove,
Utah, we love thee.
Our nation's fame increase,
Bid all oppression cease,
Aid universal peace,
Utah, we love thee.
The text of the resolution adopted by the legislature as it appeared in the press at the time is as follows:
"Whereas, it is fitting and proper that a state should select and officially recognize an appropriate state song; and
"Whereas, the people of Utah are especially favored with patriotic songs which have been produced by both the native and adopted sons and daughters of the stat; and
"Whereas, it is universally recognized that the song, by Evan Stephens, entitled, "Utah, we Love Thee" possesses the supreme merits of a peoples' song; and
Flag Highlights: How To Display the Flag--part 5
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Utah Capitol Store SALE!!! U.S.S. Utah postcards for 25 cents!
These postcards can be purchased at the Utah Capitol Store.
Back of card reads:
The ship as completed in late 1911 USN Photo
The Utah number One Turret's crew posing under their turret's 12"/45 guns in 1913. Chief Turret Captain Aberaham DeSomer seated at right in the center of the front row. To his right is the Turret Officer, Ensign Arthur S. Carpender. DeSomer received the Medal of Honor for his "extraordinary heroism" during the seizure of Vera Cruz Mexico, 21-22 April 1914 USNHC photo.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Utah We Love Thee interview about author
The 1st page text reads:
Utah, we Love Thee
By Edward H. Anderson
The Legislative Assembly of the State of Utah adopted early in February, 1917, Professor Evan Stephen's "Utah, We Love Thee," as the official song of the State of Utah. It is twenty-one years since Utah entered the Union of states, and this song was especially composed for the inaugural exercises in the Salt Lake Tabernacle which signalized the admission of the state of Utah into the Union, January 6, 1896. At that time the author directed a chorus of one thousand voices, in the singing.
Professor Stephens met the writer of this note on the 10th of February, last, and on being questioned as to his health, he said he was particularly happy that day, as he was just on his way to the capitol to witness the proceedings and hear the adoption of his "Utah, We Love Thee" as the official song of the state. He said that the idea of this song came to him as far back as 1893 when, it will be remembered, the Tabernacle choir was on its way to the World's Fair, in Chicago. It then dawned on him that Utah had no song of her own, nor even one that could be sung in her favor at the exposition. On his return he began the composition of the words and music which were adopted by the late legislature of Utah's official hymn.
After the state inaugural exercises, held in the Tabernacle, at which many thousands of people heard the composition, it became popular in all public audiences, and was sung not only in the public schools, Sunday schools and other...
All text and grammar comes directly from the publication.
Utah in the Union in the News!
Flag Highlights: How To Display the Flag--part 4
When Hung Flat
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
In the News: Utah remembers its roots with Statehood Day
Deseret News
Utahns first petitioned for statehood in 1849, two years after the Mormon pioneers first established homes in the Great Basin.
But it took 47 years — and an official declaration from the leadership of the LDS Church stating church members would no longer practice polygamy — before President Grover Cleveland on Saturday, Jan. 4, 1896, issued the proclamation admitting Utah to the Union as the 45th state.
Salt Lake City officials, wanting to be properly prepared for the occasion, postponed the official celebration until Monday, Jan. 6.
But residents didn't wait that long. A battery of the Utah National Guard marched to Capitol Hill and fired a 21-gun salute to alert the city. Businesses closed their doors and crowds swarmed the streets, ringing bells, shooting off firecrackers and blowing whistles.
"The news of the admission was welcomed by the firing of cannon and small arms, the shrieking of steam whistles and every other kind of noise which could be produced," wrote James E. Talmage in his personal diary.
An article in the Jan. 4, 1896, Provo Daily Enquirer said that when a telegram announcing the signing of the proclamation was delivered to the newspaper — and the community ?— "precisely at 9:30 a.m. Mountain Time," the celebration started:
"At once the entire Enquirer building was covered with bunting and flags. The city marshal's office was notified and the Woolen Mills was called up by telephone, the Asylum and other places having steam whistles, and the long expected joyful news imparted. In the incredibly short space of time the entire city was reverberating with the shrieks of whistles, the chimes of bells, shooting of guns and cannon, and the happy shouts of freemen out of bondage. The town was decorated as if by magic and flags were soon seen floating from every public place and housetops everywhere."
Through the years, Jan. 4 has been recognized as Utah's Statehood Day. Sometimes the date coincides with the gubernatorial inauguration, which occurs on the first Monday of a new year following an election. On those occasions, the day is marked with inaugural balls and public ceremonies.
Many other years, like this one, the day passes with little or no notice.
Deseret News photographers have been on hand at many formal Statehood Day events, including the first one. Photo researcher Ron Fox has culled the newspaper's archives for these photographs, some that have never been published.
On Jan. 6, 1896, the Salt Lake LDS Tabernacle hosted the state's official celebration, a 45-star flag made for the occasion in the ZCMI overall and fabrics factory stretched 160 feet along the ceiling. It was the largest American flag at the time.
Read more of the article HERE!!
STATEHOOD quiz: Test your knowledge of Utah state history
Take quiz HERE!!!
1 How many constitutions did Utah territorial leaders write in order to become a state?
2 How many territorial governors were sent from Washington, D.C. to be governors of Utah
3 Territory? (A trick question!)
4 Who was the first governor of Utah Territory?
5 How many counties were there when Utah entered the Union?
6 How many counties are there in Utah today?
7 What was the first name for the state?
8 Where did the name Utah come from?
9 How many stars on the 1896 United States flag?
10 Who was Utah's first state governor?
11 Where was he sworn in and why?
12 Where was Utah's first capital?
13 How many years did it take for Utah to become a state?
For quiz answers, click HERE!!!!