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July 2024 Meeting Announcement
- Film Night
- TUESDAY, JULY 16, Fort Douglas Post Theater
- 6:00 p.m. mingling and dinner, 6:45 comments by Dr. James V. D’Arc, 7:00 film, 9:00 Q&A
- Reserve space with Craig Smith at email utwesterners@gmail.com or at 801-712-6183. Payment of $45 at the door by cash, check, or PayPal. No reservations after July 11.
- July 2024 Utah Westerners Newsletter available to view or download here.
- Film notes below
“Civilization Stalks Warlock,”
Says the Town’s Deputy
Westerner Dr. James V. D’Arc – Presenter
It’s time to hear again from our film virtuoso Jim D’Arc about a well critiqued 1959 movie, Warlock, that was shot in Moab. The film was directed by Edward Dmytryk (The Caine Mutiny). It stars Henry Fonda and Anthony Quinn, two notorious gunslingers who are hired as the town’s (Warlock’s) sheriff and deputy. The novel that inspired the film was written by Oakley Hall, a University of California-Irvine professor who later was said to be the dean of West Coast writers after Wallace Stegner’s death.
Dmytryk said “the depth of the novel furnished us with a number of opportunities to examine life in the West in a serious and ‘adult’ manner, while retaining the obligatory action and gunfighting of the standard Western.” It has to do with democracy, crime, and friendship between two men. Dmytryk was known for having gone to jail in 1947 when he refused to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee.
The show’s music was composed by Leigh Harline, who studied at the University of Utah and was tutored by Tabernacle Choir conductor J. Spencer Cornwall. At Disney, Harline composed “When You Wish upon a Star.” He composed most of the songs for Pinocchio and scored Snow White.
When you arrive at 6:00 and pay Craig Smith, you will be able to pick up a meal at the food truck. D’Arc’s updated When Hollywood Came to Utah, with five new chapters, will be available for sale.
D’Arc was a professor of Speech and Theatre Arts at BYU for 30 years, curator of the Motion Picture Archive at the Harold B. Lee Library for 41 years, and was involved with the BYU Motion Picture Studio. His book has 1,240 movies filmed in Utah and the location for each movie. He also created BYU’s Film Music Archive.
Program Notes From Jim D’Arc for Warlock
Not-to-be-missed expert narrative and screen snaps from our film maven to view or download here.
May 2024 Meeting Announcement
- Dinner and Presentation
- TUESDAY, MAY 21, Alta Club
- 6:30 p.m. mingling, 7:00 p.m. dinner, 8:00 p.m. presentation
- Reserve space with Craig Smith at email utwesterners@gmail.com or at 801-712-6183. Payment of $45 at the door by cash, check, or PayPal. Drinks by credit card. No reservations after 1:00 p.m. May 16.
- May 2024 Utah Westerners Newsletter available to view or download here.
The Scofield Mine Disaster of 1900
Erin A. Thomas and Craig Fuller, PhD – Presenters
Erin A. Thomas is an adjunct professor at Weber State University. She received an MFA in creative writing and non-fiction from George Mason University. In addition to her book, Coal in Our Veins: A Personal Journey, (USU Press) she has published research and essays in periodicals and journals, including winning a writing award at Dialogue.
Craig Fuller, PhD, retired, worked for the Utah State Historical Society and Division of State History. He has published on Finnish emigration in the Utah Historical Quarterly and Utah History Encyclopedia. He co-authored, with Robert E. Parson and F. Ross Peterson, Water, Agriculture and Urban Growth: A History of the Central Utah Project.
April 2024 Meeting Announcement
- Dinner and Presentation
- TUESDAY, APRIL 16, Alta Club
- 6:30 p.m. mingling, 7:00 p.m. dinner, 8:00 p.m. presentation
- Reserve space with Craig Smith at email utwesterners@gmail.com or at 801-712-6183. Payment of $45 at the door by cash, check, or PayPal. Drinks by credit card. No reservations after 1:00 p.m. April 11.
- April 2024 Utah Westerners Newsletter available to view or download here.
Author to Speak on Southern Paiutes
Logan Hebner
Logan Hebner moved to Alta, Utah, in 1978 after graduating cum laude from Vassar College. In 1980 he founded the Bit and Spur Mexican Restaurant in Springdale. In 1987 he founded the International State Legislative Exchange, which brought delegations from ex-Soviet parliaments to the United States to study democracy. He began interviewing Southern Paiute elders in 1992, which resulted in his book, Southern Paiute: A Portrait. He is also the executive director of Zion Canyon Mesa, an arts and humanities center in Springdale. He currently resides in Rockville with his wife, Angie, with whom he has two sons.
Hebner came to know the Southern Paiute through friendships that developed organically, which over time included attending ceremonies. When the elder Lucille Jake died, Hebner asked her daughter Vivienne if he could access any interviews with her. Surprisingly, there were none. Hebner began researching and realized that a whole generation was about to pass away without anyone recording their stories. He intensively researched available histories, ranging from John Wesley Powell, Edward Sapir, and Isabel Kelly to Martha Knack, as he was quietly handed from one elder to the next. Award-winning photographer Michael Plyler took their portraits. This work evolved from local exhibits to a book with USU and John Alley, himself a noted Southern Paiute historian.
Addendum
On 4/15/24 Logan Hebner asked that the following document be made available as a supplement to his presentation on the Southern Paiutes at the Alta Club 4/16/24: Utah_Westerners_A_Reckoning_The_Green_Valley_Conference_w_intro.02.
January Announcement for the Utah Westerners
Buffalo Bill: A Life in the Wild West”
Steve Friesen
Steve Friesen retired in October 2017 after working in the museum field for forty years, including serving as Director for the past 22 years of the Buffalo Bill Museum and Grave in Golden Colorado, a facility owned and operated by the City and County of Denver.
Friesen has written numerous articles on life in the American West and is the author of three books: A Modest Mennonite Home; Lakota Performers in Europe: Their Culture and the Artifacts They Left Behind; and Buffalo Bill: Scout, Showman, Visionary. He has an MA in American Folk Culture from the State University of New York and received his BA from Bethel College in Newton, Kansas, a town once referred to by Buffalo Bill as the wildest and wickedest town in the West.
Friesen’s presentation “Buffalo Bill: A Life in the Wild West” will be based on his book and ongoing research into William F. Cody’s life and times. In addition to providing an illustrated overview of his life including his visits to Salt Lake City, it will examine some of the controversies surrounding Cody’s life and death.
December Announcement for the Utah Westerners
Notes from a Fish Lover: Things I’ve Learned about
Mankind as a Result of Writing Columns for Thirty Years
Ann Cannon
We are delighted to have Ann Cannon as our December speaker. Ann is a columnist and features writer for the Salt Lake Tribune. Currently she gives Tribune readers advice, not unlike Doctor Laura (only not as mean) and Ann Landers (only not as dead). She is also the award-winning author of many books for young readers, including CHARLOTTE’S ROSE, a novel written for a national audience about the migration of a Mormon handcart company composed primarily of Welsh church members. In addition to writing columns and books, Ann works as a bookseller at The King’s English Bookshop in Salt Lake City.
Ann and her husband, Ken, have five sons, four daughters-in-law and five grandchildren. Her interests include gardening, knitting, traveling, reading murder mysteries, watching baseball and football, and collecting antique dolls. She and Ken husband are also the caretakers of three dogs, two cats, and a talking parrot who will outlive them all.
Ann will discuss what she has learned about mankind as a result of writing columns since the publication of her first column in PARENT EXPRESS over thirty years ago.
November Announcement for the Utah Westerners
Salt Lake City’s Magnificent Knutsford Hotel
by
Walter Jones
“Salt Lake City’s Magnificent Knutsford Hotel: How an Opulent Building’s History Reflects the Ongoing Transformation of a Farm village into a Sophisticated Urban Center.” In this talk Walter Jones will present five features of the hotel’s history: Its role in changes in land use in SLC; its reflecting the development of a increasingly beautiful architectural landscape; how the hotel’s management represented many newcomers who became attracted to the city more and more for economic rather than religious reasons; the manner in which the hotel became a center for social activities; and, finally, what happened to the Knutsford property after the closure of the hotel. The presentation will feature a PowerPoint selection of slides that illustrate the Knutsford’s eminence in the city’s history.
Walter Jones is from Casper, Wyoming and once wrote a history of that city’s early 20th century red light district, titled History of the Sand Bar, 1888 – 1977 In 1967, he graduated from the University of Wyoming after which he immediately joined the United States Army and became a Korean language interpreter, translator, voice-intercept operator, and interrogator. Following his four years of active duty experience, he attended Brigham Young University where he constantly felt pressure to visit barbershops in order to avoid the scrutiny of standards-committee representatives who enforced short-hair rules and regulations.
In 1973, Walter married Helen Walker and started a 42 year career of being a librarian, 33 years of which were at the University of Utah’s J. Willard Marriott Library. While working in libraries, he joined the Army National Guard and worked his way up the enlisted ranks to become a command sergeant major, first for the 141st Military Intelligence Battalion, then the 300th Military Intelligence Brigade, and finally the 144th Combat Support Hospital. After retiring from the military, Walter began a part-time career of teaching Utah and American history at Salt Lake Community College.
During all the years from the time he graduated from BYU, he has done research and has written about local history subjects such as Casper’s red-light district, the oil fields of southwestern Wyoming, and various Utah subjects that include the Chinese of Salt Lake City and a history of Salt Lake’s Knutsford Hotel of which you are about to witness the results of his most recent historic project. Currently, Walter and Helen have two children and five grandchildren.
October Announcement for the Utah Westerners
Alf Engen – Snapshot of a Sports Icon
by
Alan Engen
Over the course of the 20th Century, many athletes have been honored for the contributions they made to Utah’s sports history. Names such as Jack Dempsey, Gene Fullmer, Alma Richards, Herman Franks, Merlin Olsen, Missy Marlowe, and Karl Malone are just a few examples of individuals who have demonstrated athletic excellence in various sports. However, there is only one person who was named the overall Utah “Athlete of the Century” in December 1999. He was ski legend, Alf Engen.
Please join Utah Westerner, Alan Engen, for a presentation on his famous father by looking back on Alf’s life from a very humble beginning in Norway to becoming one of the greatest all-around skiers to ever grace the sport. Viewing a selection of Alan’s personal historical ski photos, he will present a first hand account of his father’s life, including the many contributions and honors he received up until his passing in July 1997, at age 88.
At the conclusion of Alan’s presentation, he plans to show a fifteen-minute DVD on his father which was presented by Alan at the prestigious MOUNTAINFILM Festival in Telluride, Colorado during May 1997. According to Jim Petegrew, Telluride Event Coordinator, “The film was given top billing at Telluride’s Sheridan Opera House on the opening night of the MOUNTAINFILM festival, playing to a packed house. When the film was completed, it left the audience spellbound and resulted in a standing ovation for Alan’s film which he scripted, narrated, and produced.”
This particular dinner presentation, provides a unique opportunity to look behind the scenes of this ski sport icon by a person who participated with Alf in a number of activities highlighted. It is anticipated that this presentation will be both entertaining and of historical interest…and will be videotaped by members of the Alta Historical Society.
Alan K. Engen has been a member of the Utah Westerners since 1999. He is a nationally respected ski historian, author, and has played an important role in helping to promote and record Utah’s rich ski history. Although currently retired, he was Alta’s Director of Skiing up until April 2011 and has been honored in several halls of fame organizations… including the U.S. National Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame, located in Ishpeming, Michigan. He and his wife, Barbara, have been married 55 years and have two sons and four grand-daughters.
September Announcement for the Utah Westerners
“The Southern Utes of Colorado, San Juan County Utah and the Bears Ears: How San Juan County, Utah Almost Became the Permanent Southern Ute Reservation, 1879-1899”
by
Gregory C. Thompson, PhD
This is a story of Colorado’s attempt to have the Southern Utes of southwest Colorado removal from Colorado to southeast Utah. They came with in a vote in the House of Representatives in making this shift happen. Our discussion today on the Bears Ears National Monument and 20th century history of San Juan County would be of a very different nature.
Gregory C. Thompson, Ph.D. is the Associate Dean of the University of Utah’s J. Willard Marriott Library for Special Collections and an Adjunct Assistant Professor of History. He received his Bachelor of Science degree from Colorado State University (1965), Bachelor of Arts degree from Fort Lewis College (1967), and his Master of Science (1971) and Doctoral (1981) degrees from the University of Utah. From 1967 to 1983, Greg, a historian of the American West, served on the staff of the University of Utah’s American West Center. During this time, he worked with and helped to develop tribal histories, tribal archives and oral history collections for fifteen tribes across the Western United States. His own research focused on the Ute tribes of Colorado and Utah and he served as a consultant to the San Juan County School District (Utah) and the Southern Ute Tribe of Ignacio, Colorado. Dr. Thompson has published several monographs on the Ute tribe including Southern Ute Lands, 1848-1899: The Creation of a Reservation (1972); The Southern Utes: A Tribal History (1972); and edited, with Floyd A. O’Neil, A History of the Indians of the United States: A Syllabus (1979).
In the 1980’s Greg co-founded, with the late Sue Raemer, the Marriott Library’s Utah Ski Archives Program. He grew up in Durango, Colorado and as a youngster skied and competed in Colorado and New Mexico. An original member of the Alf Engen Ski Museum Foundation Board and the Board of Trustees, Greg has been involved with skiing since the early 1950s as a participant and historian. He has lectured widely and published numerous articles on the history of skiing in the Intermountain area. His latest publication, with Alan K. Engen, First Tracks: A Century of Skiing (2001) focuses on the history of skiing in Utah. Greg is also the general editor for the Tanner Trust Publication Series, Utah, The Mormons, and the West. The latest publication in the series is David Bigler’s book, Confessions of a Revisionist Historian (2015). Greg and his wife, Karen, live in Salt Lake City with their two children, Anna and Patrick.
August Announcement for the Utah Westerners
“An Architectural Travel Guide to Utah”
by
Martha Bradley-Evans
The common ground we have as Westerners is a love for the landscape and history of this place. If you’re like me, you love driving the state and coming upon a rural town or even an isolated homestead miles from the nearest neighborhood. One of the lens we can use to better understand Utah’s history is architecture. Buildings, towns and other elements of the built landscape help us imagine what life was like in the past. What men and women choose to build tells us volumes about their ethnic history, their relative socio-economic status, what they valued and held dear. I will be talking about my project: “An Architectural Travel Guide to Utah” which will be published by University of Utah Press but more importantly, I will recommend some themes you might look for in the landscape of this state.
Martha Bradley-Evans is the Senior Associate Vice President of Academic Affairs and Dean of Undergraduate Studies at the University of Utah where she teaches a class called “City as Text” to Honors students. She is the proud mother of six children and four step-children and thirteen grand-children. Her publications include: The Four Zinas: Mothers and Daughters on the Frontier and Pedestals and Podiums: Utah Women, Religious Authority and Equal Rights. She is a Fellow of the Utah State Historical Society and was one of the first women to join Utah Westerners.
July Announcement for the Utah Westerners
An Evening in Park City, Utah
Hosted by Sandra Morrison, Executive Director
and the Park City Museum
Discover Park City’s history at the Park City Museum on Historic Main Street. Prospectors discovered silver in 1868 in the area that became Park City. While mine owners made fortunes, thousands of miners simply made a living. After silver prices declined, Park City reinvented itself as a ski resort town. This history is displayed in the Park City Museum. Permanent galleries include “From Around the World” which tells about the early settlers and their journey to Park City; “Mega Mine and the Days of Ore” includes a scale model of the late 19th century Mega Mine and the mining equipment used. “Muckers and Millionaires” is an exhibit on the great economic divide between the miners and mine owners; “Living in Park City” shows what it was like to live in Park City 100 years ago; “The Great Fire” discusses the fire which tore through the heart of Park City the morning of June 19, 1898. The fire led to over $1 million dollars in damage and the displacement of 500 local citizens. Other exhibits to see include the territorial jail; a bar and a 1926 fire truck and much much more. Playing in the Subway Theater is a film which explains the transition of Park City from mining to skiing Town.
After dinner at Flanagans located three doors from the Museum we will hear a presentation by Sandra Morrison on the “History of Park City.”
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