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...Historically,
Provo has served as the focal point of Utah Valley industry,
commerce, and government. Agriculture and the Provo Woolen
Mills (which had its origin in the Mormon cooperative
movement of the late 1860s) served as Provo's commercial
staples in the late nineteenth century. Mining magnates
such as Jesse Knight, made rich by nearby precious-metal
mines, made their homes in Provo and helped create a thriving
financial industry in the city. The coincidence of a major
water source and the intersection of two railroad lines
led to the completion in the Provo area of the Ironton
steel mill in the early 1920s and later the much larger
Geneva steel plant. The railroads brought in needed raw
materials and transported finished steel products from
Provo. Area residents currently argue about whether the
Geneva plant, which many assert is a major cause of Provo's
serious air pollution problems, should continue to be
operated or whether Provo should rely on new high technology
as its industrial base. As county seat of Utah County,
Provo is the home of county offices and courts. Since
the mid-1880s Provo has been the home of the State Hospital,
originally the Territorial Insane Asylum.
Because of its close proximity to the mountains, Utah
Lake, and rivers, Provo residents have many recreational
outlets. In winter, alpine and cross-country skiing, ice
skating, and other winter sports are available within
minutes. In summer, hiking, camping, fishing, and boating
are equally accessible.
Provo residents have long been proud of their city. Supreme
Court Justice George Sutherland, United States senators
Reed Smoot (who also served as an apostle in the LDS Church)
and William King; LDS Church apostle Dallin Oaks (who
also served as president of Brigham Young University and
as a justice of the Utah Supreme Court); Jack Dempsey,
former heavyweight champion of the world, and numerous
less well-known political, church, sports, and business
figures have lived in Provo.
Today, Provo is a thriving community of 86,835 (1990 census).
The city's downtown heart is no larger the center of Utah
Valley commerce, having lost that honor to large suburban
shopping malls. Provo's once proud train depot was recently
demolished, a symbol of the declining importance of passenger
rail transportation in the West. Provo's downtown area
remains, however, the focal point of Utah Valley political
life, and nearby Brigham Young University remains the
education center of the area. Provo has grown from a quiet,
small Mormon city to a substantial modern metropolitan
area. Some of its traditional quaintness is gone, but
its heart and soul continue to thrive.
Kenneth L. Cannon II
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