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Situated
near the southern end of the Salt Lake Valley, Riverton
is located on a low plateau west of the Jordan River approximately
twenty miles south of Salt Lake City. For most of its
history Riverton was an agricultural community, but widespread
residential development that began in the late 1960s has
largely transformed it into a bedroom community.
The earliest area settlers lived in scattered dugouts
and primitive log houses bordering the river on the bottomlands.
Archibald Gardner was the first person to live in Riverton,
and early settlers paid tribute to his pioneering efforts
in the mid-1850s by calling the area Gardnersville. The
size of the settlement long remained small because water
was available for the bottomlands only near the river.
Begun in 1870 as a local cooperative undertaking, the
South Jordan Canal, when completed in 1876, opened up
the benchland to farming and settlement. The community
expanded again when the larger Utah and Salt Lake Canal,
financed wholly by Salt Lake County, was finished in 1881.
Construction of these canals, which are still in use,
was undertaken with only basic tools and contracted manual
labor.
Riverton came under the jurisdiction of the West Jordan
Precinct in its early years. In 1867 the settlement politically
became part of the South Jordan Precinct. A judicial precinct
was established locally in 1879, and the name of the small
settlement, boasting little more than a hundred people,
was officially changed from Gardnersville to Riverton.
Riverton's residents reflected the predominant religious
affiliation characteristic of most rural Utah towns. Much
of the cultural, educational, and community life revolved
around activities sponsored by the local wards of the
Mormon Church. In the early years, Mormons met in the
dugouts and log homes of members, often in the home of
Nicholas Thomas Silcock, the community's first branch
president (called in 1870). Many of the activities and
traditions in the community were initiated in a church
setting during years when it was principally an agricultural
community. As in other predominantly Mormon Utah communities,
there was an overlapping and mixing of ecclesiastical
and civic roles and actions. In 1886, with 233 members
in thirty-five families, Riverton was organized as a ward
with Orrin Porter Miller as its first bishop. Members
met in a combination meetinghouse/schoolhouse which had
been built in 1879. By 1900 there were 517 members (ninety-two
families) and construction was begun on a new meetinghouse.
Completed in 1908, this domed structure in the Romanesque
style was designed by Richard Kletting and was generally
recognized as one of the finest LDS meetinghouses in a
rural setting. It was demolished in 1940.
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