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Population:
578
Elevation:
6,000
City
Parks: 1 park
Churches:
LDS
Auto
Services: 2 gas stations,
1 auto repair
In
1849, as groups of Mormon colonists began to immigrate
to the fertile Sanpete Valley, many of them camped at
a verdant location in the northwestern end of the valley
known as Uintah Springs. A decade later, George W. Johnson
of Santaquin was granted permission to establish a permanent
settlement on the popular campgrounds. In July 1859 Albert
Petty surveyed a townsite, laying out twenty blocks of
about 4.5 acres each. Other pioneers soon joined the Johnson
family, building log homes and, in 1860, a multipurpose
log meetinghouse. In the same year, an irrigation channel
was plowed to a canyon in the San Pitch Mountains just
west of town, and the growth of Fountain Green was well
under way.
Fountain
Green's name is still a fitting description of the lush,
green hillside village abundantly watered by what is now
called Big Springs and Silver Creek which it forms. Artesian
wells and later pumped water provided an ample water supply,
allowing the development of agriculture and stock raising,
the staple industries of the town from 1860 to the present.
In 1865 a sawmill was constructed, followed in 1866 by
an adobe meetinghouse and in 1867 by a flour mill. Due
to hostilities and one death during the Black Hawk War
of 1865-67, a rock fort was erected in 1866. After peace
was made with the San Pitch Indians, growth and progress
continued unhindered and major crops of wheat, oats, and
potatoes were harvested.
Although
Fountain Green was the first Sanpete community to receive
the railroad in the 1880s, it did not take full advantage
of this opportunity, being the only major town in the
region to drop in population between 1880 and 1890. Experiencing
less fluctuation in size than most other Sanpete villages,
Fountain Green reached its zenith of about 1,150 people
in 1920, about twice its size of 578 in 1980. It had a
population of 602 according to the 1990 census.
Fountain
Green's flourishing in the early twentieth century, during
which time it was considered the "richest town" in the
county, was due mostly to its successful wool growing
industry. Expanding from a cooperatively owned herd of
Spanish Merino sheep in the 1880s, sheep growers greatly
enhanced their profits after upgrading their herds with
high wool producing Rambouillet stock.
In
1902, 40,850 sheep were owned by twenty-six growers, for
an average of 1,571 head of sheep each, although some
owned far more than others. The Fountain Green Woolgrowers
Association was founded in 1908 and became the dominant
group in town, with the possible exception of the LDS
Church, whose members they shared in common. The association
created the nationally famous Jericho Pool of 100,000
sheep, giving Fountain Green its nickname, "Wool City."
A celebration known as the "City of Lambs Days," is still
held annually, although the sheep industry has diminished
in importance over the years. In 1987, 47 percent of the
farms in northwest Sanpete County raised turkeys, while
only 26 percent produced sheep, revealing the economic
shift from Fountain Green to Moroni, the center of the
county's turkey industry.
...From
1869 when a Zion's Cooperative Mercantile Institution
store was established along the main highway, a small
string of general stores, shops, and public and religious
buildings has gradually filled in the modest business
district. The ZCMI was initially a profitable venture,
delivering a 68 percent dividend in 1870, its first full
year of operation. In time, other private co-ops and general
mercantiles were founded to offer ZCMI some competition.
A general store built of rock in 1880 with an 1884 dance
hall and theater addition was the most imposing of the
private commercial structures in the early days. By 1885,
Fountain Green formally organized its city government,
electing Reese R. Llewellyn as the first town president.
A
substantial Mormon meetinghouse, built over a thirty-year
period beginning in 1880, was the most prominent religious
structure in nineteenth-century Fountain Green. A tithing
office built in 1906 and a church-built theater and dance
hall erected in 1917 allowed for expanded economic and
social activity. The influence of the Mormon Church was
pervasive, as it remains today, with its Sunday School,
Relief Society, choir, children's organizations, and overall
concern for the community's welfare and progress. Members
of other religious faiths have lived in Fountain Green
during much of its history, although no group has managed
to establish a permanent foothold. A varied ethnic makeup
also helped to shape the town's early nature, with 65.3
percent of its adult married population being foreign-born
in 1880.
The
twentieth century brought incorporation as a city in 1910,
plus several new improvements for Fountain Green, including
a large elementary school in 1907, an improved water system
in 1913 (updated in 1935), a high school in 1920, a city
park in 1935, and a state fish hatchery in 1939-40. In
recent decades, new religious, educational, and business
facilities, together with the restoration and new construction
of residences, mark Fountain Green's continued vitality.
A
drive down Fountain Green's Main Street and up the hilly
lanes of the square blocks to the west helps one understand
the community's story. An outstanding collection of red
brick homes stands witness to the town's once-thriving
brick industry. The two-story elementary school and the
fine brick tithing office on Main Street also remain along
with impressive residences such as the Hans Peter Olsen
home (on the National Register). Many of the log, adobe,
and brick houses are vacant now, but their varied architecture
testifies to the ingenuity and talent of their builders.
Although there may be more buildings than people in Fountain
Green--evidence of years of gradual out-migration, a trend
that seems to have stabilized in the last decade--the
town remains a vital part of Sanpete County.
Allen
Roberts
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