More
immigrants have come to Utah from the British Isles
than from any other area. They have become so fundamental
a part of the state that their story is involved in
most aspects of its history. British trappers and traders,
along with their Canadian and American counterparts,
helped open the West for settlement. Charles McKay saw
the Great Salt Lake as early as 1825 while exploring
northern Utah.
Among the early Mormon pioneers were many who emigrated
from the British Isles before they affiliated with the
Latter-day Saints. Others were among early converts
of the LDS British Mission, established in 1837, who
had emigrated to the Mormon city of Nauvoo, Illinois.
William Clayton, for example, quickly became active
at the heart of Nauvoo society; many other new immigrants
remained more on the periphery. Their later immigration
to Utah was simply part of the general movement west
of the Latter-day Saints from 1846 onward.
As their fellow believers left Nauvoo, thousands of
British Mormons were poised across the Atlantic awaiting
the announcement of a new gathering place so that the
process of emigration might resume. The heralded possibility
that they might settle on Vancouver Island failed to
materialize; instead, beginning in 1848, they were directed
to the Salt Lake Valley, where new headquarters had
been established.
Spectacular growth in the LDS British Mission coincided
with the founding of the new gathering place. The mission
tripled in membership from 1846 to 1851, despite heavy
emigration in the last two of those years. Later, fleeing
to Zion in troubled times, more Mormons left the British
Mission for Utah in the Crimean War years of 1853 to
1856 than in any other four-year period. Assistance
from the Perpetual Emigrating Fund Company, with the
benefit of creative financing by Mormon leaders, also
reached all-time highs during the same period. Hefty
LDS emigration came again during the American Civil
War, an economically difficult time for the British
Isles. The last major thrust of LDS emigration from
Britain was in 1868 as part of a colonizing effort to
reinforce Mormon numbers in Utah prior to the completion
of the transcontinental railroad, which would open the
territory to easier access for the outside world. By
that time more than 31,000 Latter-day Saints had left
the British Isles for Utah.
The 1870 census showed the British-born Latter-day Saints
at their apogee in proportion to the total population
of Utah Territory. Nearly a quarter of Utah's inhabitants
- 24 percent - were natives of the British Isles. With
their American-born children they may well have made
up as much as half of the population.
Although Mormon converts from the highly industrialized
British Isles came predominantly from the cities, their
occupational profile by 1870 was remarkably similar
to that of the Utah populace as a whole. Just under
half of the English, Welsh, and Scots had occupations
in agriculture; about one-fourth were involved in professional
and personal service. One in twenty - slightly below
the norm - were in trade and transportation, and just
under one-fourth - slightly above the norm - were in
manufacturing and mining. The immigrants from Britain
seem to have adapted to their new, more rural circumstances
with remarkable fluidity.
The small number of Irish natives in Utah in 1870 followed
a markedly different pattern. They were less than half
as likely to be in agriculture. With more soldiers and
laborers, they supplied a higher proportion of the professional
and personal services. Nearly one in seven was in trade
and transportation, and 29 percent were in manufacturing
and mining. In many ways, they were precursors of a
new type of immigrant from the British Isles, the non-Mormons
who had just begun to respond to opportunities in Utah,
particularly in the mining industry, after the arrival
of the railroad. Few came directly to Utah as immigrants;
Irish-born Patrick Edward Connor, a prime mover in the
development of Utah mining, was one of the most influential
of this group.
In sheer numbers, British immigrants brought remarkable
growth to Utah, particularly along the Wasatch Front.
Their individual leadership and talent gave direction
to and influenced the quality of life. Territorial delegates
to Congress George Q. Cannon and John T. Caine were
followed in government service by English-born governors
John Cutler and William Spry. Welsh-born Martha Hughes
Cannon, an early Utah physician, was the first woman
in the United States to become a state senator. Robert
L. Campbell (a Scot) was Utah's first superintendent
of public instruction. Irish Catholic sisters taught
at Saint Vincent's School in Salt Lake City. James E.
Talmage, from Berkshire, was a geologist and a leading
educator.
Leaders in business, mining, and industry from the British
Isles included the Walker brothers in banking, the Castleton
brothers and William Jennings as merchants, John W.
Donnellan and Matthew Cullen in mining, Charles W. Nibley
in lumber and sugar, David Eccles in banking, and furniture
maker Henry Dinwoodey. John Sharp superintended the
Utah Central Railway and the quarry for the Salt Lake
temple and served as a director of the Union Pacific
Railroad.
Churches frequently provided a focal point for group
identity. This was particularly true for Irish Catholics,
who owed much to the pioneering efforts of Father Lawrence
Scanlan. John Taylor as president and his nephew George
Q. Cannon as his first counselor in the LDS Church illustrate
the leading role British immigrants played in their
church in the nineteenth century and the early decades
of the twentieth. Other British-born counselors in the
LDS First Presidency included John R. Winder, Charles
W. Penrose, and Charles W. Nibley. Members of the Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles were George Teasdale, James E.
Talmage, and Charles A. Callis. Brigham H. Roberts and
George Reynolds were prominent members of the First
Council of the Seventy.
British immigrants filled more than their proportional
share of local leadership positions in the LDS Church.
Of 605 bishops and presiding elders in Mormon congregations
in the United States from 1848 to 1890, twenty-nine
percent were born in the British Isles. Twenty-three
percent of stake presidents during the same period were
born in the British Isles.
Just as remarkable was the part played by British women
in Mormondom. May Anderson, second general president
of the Primary Association (1925-1939), initiated what
became Primary Children's Hospital in Salt Lake City.
She also helped establish kindergartens in Utah. Ruth
May Fox was general president of the Young Women's Mutual
Improvement Association from 1929 to 1937. Matilda M.
Barratt, a counselor in the first general Primary presidency
from 1880 to 1888, made generous financial contributions
that benefited emigration and education. May Green Hinckley,
from Derbyshire, was the third general president of
the Primary, serving from 1940 to 1943.
British musicians made major contributions in early
Utah. William Pitt's Nauvoo Brass Band was prominent
in Utah music and theatre, and all but one of the Salt
Lake Tabernacle Choir's first eight directors were born
in the British Isles. Among these, Evan Stephens was
Utah's most prolific composer. Southampton native Joseph
Ridges built the famous Salt Lake Tabernacle organ.
Poetess Hannah Tapfield King, poet John Lyon, and authors
Edward Tullidge and T. B. H. and Fanny Stenhouse made
significant contributions to literature in Utah, as
did editors George Q. Cannon of the Salt Lake Herald,
Charles W. Penrose of the Deseret News, Edward
L Sloan of the Salt Lake Herald, and James Ferguson
of The Mountaineer. Tullidge and Elias L. T.
Harrison edited Utah's first magazine, Peep O' Day,
and Harrison and William S. Godbe founded the Utah
Magazine, forerunner of the Salt Lake Tribune.
Prominent British-born dissenters from Mormonism included
Welsh immigrant Joseph Morris in the early 1860s and
several leaders of the Godbeite movement in the late
1860s and early 1870s, including William S. Godbe, Elias
L.T. Harrison, Edward W. Tullidge, T.B.H. Stenhouse,
and William Shearman.
Artist and businessman Harry Culmer helped usher in
a new era of cooperation between Mormons and Gentiles
in Salt Lake City as president of what later became
the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce. Other British-born
Utah artists included Alfred Lambourne, George M. Ottinger,
and Alvin Gittins.
Local organizations, particularly those of Scottish
and Welsh immigrants, fostered the cultural heritage
of their native lands. The Cambrian Society, organized
in 1895, sponsored Eisteddfod festivals, helping maintain
the Welsh language and culture. The Caledonia Society,
organized in 1884, and the Caledonia Club (1892), were
later joined by Scottish social clubs, a football (soccer)
club, and at least three bagpipe bands.
In 1980, 3.2 percent of Utah's residents had been born
in the British Isles. Concentrated in the cities, they
were less than half as likely to live in rural areas
as the population of Utah as a whole. Just over three-fourths
of these immigrants were born in England, about 11 percent
in Scotland, 3 percent in Ireland, 2 percent in Wales,
and 1 percent in Northern Ireland. But the heritage
of the British Isles was more evident in the fact that
in the 1990 census 44 percent of Utahns claimed English
ancestry, 8 percent Irish, 5 percent Scottish, and 3
percent Welsh.
Richard
L. Jensen