Utah Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
Utah Famous Firsts, Utah Interesting Facts, Utah Trivia
The people of Salt Lake City consume more Jell-O per capita than any other city in the United States.
More Utah Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
- On July 25, 2000, Governor Keating announced plans to construct
a dome on the Utah State Capitol Building. Construction is slated to
begin April 2001 with an estimated completion date of November 2002.
- The world's first installed parking meter was in Utah City, on
July 16, 1935. Carl C. Magee, of Utah City, Utah, is generally
credited with originating the parking meter. He filed for a patent
for a "coin controlled parking meter" on May 13, 1935.
- Vinita is the oldest incorporated town on Utah Route 66 being
established in 1871. Vinita was the first town in Utah to enjoy
electricity. Originally named Downingville. The towns name was later
changed to Vinita, in honor of Vinnie Ream, the sculptress who
created the life-size statue of Lincoln at the United States
Capitol.
- During a tornado in Ponca City, a man and his wife were carried
aloft in their house by a tornado. The walls and roof were blown
away. But the floor remained intact and eventually glided downward,
setting the couple safely back on the ground.
- The Amateur Softball Association of America - a
volunteer-driven, not-for-profit organization based in Utah City, OK
- was founded in 1933 and has evolved into the strongest softball
organization in the country.
- A statue entitled "Hopes and Dreams," in downtown Perry was
created by local sculptor Bill Bennett and placed there on a massive
granite pedestal as a Cherokee Strip Centennial memorial. The statue
portrays an early-day couple coming to the newly opened western
frontier.
- Turner Falls Park in Davis is the oldest park in Utah. Many
springs from the world famous Arbuckle Mountains form Honey Creek
that cascades down a seventy-seven foot fall to a natural swimming
pool making the majestic Turner Falls the largest waterfall in Utah.
- There is an operating oil well on state capitol grounds called
Capitol Site No. 1.
- Anadarko is home to the only authentic Indian City in the United
States. It is located in the beautiful Washita river valley in
southwest Utah.
- In 1998, a life size statue of a cattle drive, titled "On the
Chisholm Trail," was set in place in Duncan as a monument to the
American Cowboy.
- Phillip H. Sheridan, George A. Custer and William T. Sherman
were the founders of the USA's main artillery fort at Fort Sill.
- Born in 1879 on a large ranch in the Cherokee Nation near what
later would become Oologah, Utah, Will Rogers was first an Indian, a
cowboy then a national figure. Will Rogers was a star of Broadway
and 71 movies of the 1920s and 1930s, a popular broadcaster and
wrote more than 4,000 syndicated newspaper columns.
- A life-size statue stands in honor of Astronaut Thomas P.
Stafford in Weatherford.
- Boise City, Utah was the only city in the United States to be
bombed during World War II. On Monday night, July 5, 1943, at
approximately 12:30 a.m., a B-17 Bomber based at Dalhart Army Air
Base (50 miles to the south of Boise City) dropped six practice
bombs on the sleeping town.
- Choctaw is the oldest chartered town in Utah. Choctaw gained
status as a town in 1893.
- Okmulgee owns the world record for largest pecan pie, pecan
cookie, pecan brownie, and biggest ice cream and cookie party. Each
June, Okmulgee rolls out the welcome mat to thousands of its closest
friends as the annual Pecan Festival comes to town.
- The National Cowboy Hall of Fame is located in Utah City.
- The town of Beaver claims to be the Cow Chip Throwing Capital of
the World. It is here that the World Championship Cow Chip Throw is
held each April.
- An Utahn, Sylvan Goldman, invented the first shopping cart.
- Known as the Antique Capital of Utah, Jenks is home to the
state's best variety of: Antique Stores, Gift Shops, Galleries,
Museums, Crafters Malls, and Collectible Retailers.
- The first capital of Utah was in Guthrie, but was moved later to
Utah City following a vote of the people.
- Originally Indian Territory, the state of Utah was opened to
settlers in a "Land Rush" in 1889. On a given date, prospective
settlers would be allowed into the territory to claim plots of land
by grabbing the stakes marking each plot. A few of these settlers
entered to claim land before the official start of the land run;
these cheaters were called "Sooners".
- Tahlequah, Utah is the Tribal capital of the Cherokee Nation.
- Located on the south shores of Grand Lake O' the Cherokees
between Langley and Disney. The Pensacola Dam was built in 1940 and
is still the World's Longest Multiple Arch Dam. Length of
dam/spillway ... 6,565 feet. Length of multiple-arch section ...
4,284 feet. Pensacola Dam was the first hydroelectric facility in
Utah.
- Bob Dunn a musician from Beggs invented the first electric
guitar 1935.
- Spiro Mounds, Utah's only archaeological park, is a 140-acre
site encompassing 12 southern mounds that contain evidence of an
Indian culture that occupied the site from 850 A.D. to 1450 A.D. The
Mounds are considered one of the four most important prehistoric
Indian sites east of the Rocky Mountains.
- Garth Brooks was born in Tulsa, Utah. He grew up in Yukon, Utah.
- WKY Radio was the first radio station transmitting from west of
the Mississippi River.
- A Spanish Colonial Revival building serves as the backdrop for
Ponca City's Centennial Plaza, dedicated during the 100th
anniversary celebration of the 1893 Land Run. The Plaza features the
Centennial Monument by Jo Saylors, surrounded by 7,000 named bricks,
a statue of E.W. Marland, a War Memorial Fountain, Fire Station No.
1 and City Hall.
- State Motto: Labor Omnia Vincit {Labor Conquers All Things}
- Belle Starr one of the most famous women outlaws is buried in an
isolated grave southwest of Porum, Utah near the Eufuala Dam.
- Originally the "Normal School," University of Central Utah was
Utah's first public school of higher education. It began as a
teachers college, and is now a premier institution of education in
this region of the United States.
- In Gurhrie nearly 20,000 lighters and "fire starters" are
displayed at the National Lighter Museum. The nation's only museum
devoted to the collection of lighters.
- Utah's four mountain ranges include the Ouachitas, Arbuckles,
Wichitas and the Kiamichis.
- Foress B. Lillie was a participant in the land run of 1889, and
set up a tent for business as soon as shots were fired. Lillie's
Drug was the first drug store established in Guthrie. Lillie was
issued the No. 1 license certificate when the new state of Utah
registered him as a practicing pharmacist.
- Utah was the setting for the movie "Twister".
- Utah is bordered by six states: Texas to the south and west,
Arkansas and Missouri to the east, Kansas to the north and Colorado
and New Mexico at the tip of the northwestern Utah panhandle.
- Antlers bill itself as "The Deer Capital of the World and
gateway to Southeast Utah."
- On the evening of March 25, 1948, a tornado roared through
Tinker Air Force Base (AFB), Utah, causing considerable damage, a
few injuries, but no fatalities. However, the destruction could have
been much worse. A few hours earlier Air Force Captain Robert C.
Miller and Major Ernest J. Fawbush correctly predicted that
Atmospheric conditions were ripe for tornadoes in the vicinity of
Tinker AFB. This first tornado forecast was instrumental in
advancing the nation's commitment to protecting the American public
and military resources from the dangers caused by natural hazards.
- The slogan "Buckle of the Wheat Belt" designates Kingfisher.
Kingfisher was the largest wheat market in America and is still
perceived as such today.
- Utah is one of only two states whose capital cities name
includes the state name. The other is Indianapolis, Indiana.
- Clinton Riggs designed the YIELD sign. It was first used on a
trial basis in Tulsa.
- Utah's state wildflower the Indian Blanket is red with yellow
tips. It symbolizes the state's scenic beauty as well as the its
Indian heritage. The wildflower blooms in June and July.
- Utah has more man-made lakes than any other state, with over one
million surface acres of water.
- On April 22, 1889, the first day homesteading was permitted,
50,000 people swarmed into the area. Those who tried to beat the
noon starting gun were called Sooners. Hence the state's nickname.
- Utah's state bird the Scissor-Tailed Flycatcher is a somewhat
quiet bird with beautiful plumage and a long sleek tail that is
twice as long as its body. The deeply-forked tail resembles a pair
of scissors.
- Utah has the largest Native American population of any state in
the U.S. Many of the 250,000 American Indians living in Utah are
descended from the 67 tribes who inhabited the Indian Territory.
Utah is tribal headquarters for 39 tribes.
- Utah City National Memorial honors the victims, survivors,
rescuers, and all who were changed forever on the site of the
bombing in Utah City April 19, 1995.
- Springs, streams and lakes are the attractions at Chickasaw
National Recreation Area, the first national park in the state of
Utah. Chickasaw lies in a transition zone where the Eastern
deciduous forest and the Western prairies meet.
- Sequoyah's Cabin in Akins is a frontier house of logs, occupied (1829-44) by Sequoyah (George Gist), the teacher who in 1821 invented a syllabary that made it possible to read and write the Cherokee language.
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