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Sheep
and range cattle were invested in by a small number of
farmers at the end of the nineteenth century. Dairies
also developed, and several continue in the area today.
Early
non-farm related industries included two planing mills
that shaped and finished wood for building. Fugal Construction
has employed numerous men for more than eighty-six years.
Fugal Brothers Plumbing was started in 1906 by Chris,
Jens, and Niels Fugal. Their first major job was installing
Lindon City's waterworks in 1924; by 1948 they had installed
about forty city waterworks in Utah and Idaho. The company
now continues into the fourth generation. The Karl B.
Warren Concrete Pipe Plant began operation in the late
1930s, providing pipe for the Salt Lake aqueduct. This
project stopped during World War II, causing the plant
to close. After the war, it operated sporadically under
different ownerships-- United Concrete Pipe, and now California
Pressure Pipe Company. Westroc (formerly Warburton Readymix,
and then Ashroc) has operated since 1948. Bayleys Clothing
manufacturers employed numerous women from the late 1960s
into the 1980s. An industrial park, located on the west
side of the city since the 1960s, contains service-oriented
businesses.
The
close-set houses and the small business area of the town
grew from a fort the first settlers were forced into because
of the 1853 Walker Indian War. The fort became the nucleus
of the town and its development. Before 1900 many houses
were built of soft rock found in the eastern foothills.
This type of rock distinctly marks the town's early buildings.
An
influx of Scandinavian LDS converts between 1870 and 1890
changed the population from all Anglo-American to one-third
Scandinavian. Religious preference remains predominantly
LDS. A First Baptist Church chapel, built in 1960, is
the only non-Mormon denominational structure. A Fellowship
Bible Church meets in an existing public building. Earlier,
Presbyterians built a school in 1879 and a rectory in
1890, and the Reorganized LDS Church purchased those buildings
in 1900. A change in the city's southern border took place
in 1924; Lindon, known as the Southfields, a farming stretch
two and one-half miles wide, and extending from Utah Lake
to the east mountains in length, became an incorporated
city. Pleasant Grove's farming area and population thereupon
decreased considerably.
From
the beginning, men and women often sought part-time work
outside the community to supplement their farm income.
With the building in 1942 of Geneva Steel, three miles
to the southwest, farmers and their families saw an opportunity
for higher wages with fewer work hours invested, and many
were enticed into giving up small-acreage farming. Farming
as an area occupation began to diminish.
Since
World War II, Pleasant Grove has experienced ever-increasing
major subdividing of farms for house building. Today few
farms remain. Sons returning from the war settled in town
but worked elsewhere; the population explosion, increased
work opportunities outside the community, and fast and
convenient transportation all contributed to transform
the town into a bedroom community with few shopping amenities.
Pleasant Grove has evolved into a desirable living area,
with eight parks, a new public library, numerous recreational
facilities, and a low crime rate.
The
1990 population profile shows that forty percent of the
residents are age fourteen and younger, and the median
age is twenty-one. During the past decade, the population
grew by 2,634. Its current population of 13,476 places
Pleasant Grove twentieth largest among Utah cities.
Beth
Radmall Olsen
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