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Family Trees
Family trees associated with the Jackson family.
Various videos. Most are from my
parent's 8mm library.
Website for the ancestry of Pauline
Guymon, wife of Melvin Samuel Jackson. The Guymon's lived in La Jara, Colorado.
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Riverton, Utah
This is the
earliest picture of Riverton that I have been able to locate.
It was taken c. 1920s long after Timothy Gilbert and his family left
for Manassa, Colorado in 1888. The photograph was found on the
Utah History Encyclopedia
website at
Utah History
Encyclopedia

The following excerpt is from Riverton:
The Story of a Utah Country Town, by Melvin L. Bashore and Scott
Crump.
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.
Public schools in the community had their beginnings in private homes and in a
one-room schoolhouse which was built in 1879. A two-story brick school was built
in 1892 on Redwood Road; it served students through the eighth grade. In the
mid-1920s a new elementary school and junior high school were constructed on
this site. As population increased in the 1970s and 1980s, the Jordan School
District constructed additional elementary schools and a middle school within
the boundaries of the community.
In the decade of the 1890s, farming in Riverton underwent a transformation,
shifting from simple farms supplying family needs to commercial farming. This
paralleled a similar development in Utah agriculture. Although the farmer
normally still owned his land, he specialized in what he grew or raised and used
his cash profits to buy most of the things he needed. The local agricultural
economy was severely tested during two extended periods of drought--one at the
turn of the century and another in the early 1930s. Crops that were grown by
commercial farmers in Riverton included alfalfa, sugar beets, tomatoes, and
wheat. The livestock industry in Riverton was represented by sheep, dairy cows,
and poultry. Commercial production and marketing of these agricultural and
livestock products was accomplished through the establishment of various
businesses, including an alfalfa feed mill, a canning factory, an egg-processing
plant, and a dairy cooperative.
A central business district developed which was centered at the intersection of
Redwood Road and "Herriman Road" (12,600 South). On the northeast corner of this
intersection, a two-story commercial building was constructed by sheepman/developer
Daniel Densley in 1893. Several businesses were accommodated on the first level
of this building and the upper floor was used for dances, plays, and large
community gatherings. Another sizable business was a retail store built by
Thomas P. Page about the turn of the century. It was regarded for many years as
the largest concern of its kind in the county outside Salt Lake City. The Page-Pixton
(later Page-Hansen) store sold everything from building materials, coal, and dry
goods to groceries, grain, and housewares. The Jordan Valley Bank was started in
1905 as a community bank. This bank was a casualty of the Great Depression, and
many people suffered financially when it closed its doors. For a time, the town
also housed many automobile dealerships.
Although the move was controversial, in 1946 Riverton incorporated, operating
under a town board form of government. The most pressing problems which city
officials have dealt with in the latter part of the twentieth century have been
those associated with the rapid increase in the city's population. To
illustrate, in 1970 the city had a population of 2,820, a figure which expanded
to 11,700 in 1992. This has made a tremendous difference in land use as farmland
has been converted to residential use. This change is great in view of the fact
that approximately 94 percent of Riverton's land was agricultural in 1960.
Riverton has increasingly become a popular country-style suburb, an inevitable
development as a consequence of the Salt Lake Valley's expanding population.
Original Landowners and Residents
Description: This is a
map of the original
landowners and residents of Riverton, Utah. Timothy Gilbert settled
in Riverton in 1865 and remained there for
twenty-three years and was one of its very earliest settlers. The
"X" in the lower right hand corner indicates Timothy's
property. The "X" in upper part of the map represents Neils
Nelson's property. He married Sarah Ann Cartwright, Timothy's sister in
law.
Source: The
Descendants of Timothy & Johanne Gilbert, compiled by Minnie Gilbert
Heath.

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