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Richmond
is located fourteen miles north of Logan in Cache County
. In July of 1859 Agrippa Cooper camped at Bowers Springs
on the southwest boundary of Richmond with his wife and
son. Additional families settled in the area during the
autumn of that year; they included John Bair, William
H. Lewis, Francis Stewart, and Robert D. Petty. A total
of seventeen families spent the winter in the area. An
influx of new settlers arrived in the spring of 1860 and
the land was planted and roads were built. Ditches were
dug to obtain water from Cherry Creek, and a dam was built
across City Creek for irrigation purposes.
Brigham
Young visited Richmond in 1860 and advised the settlers
to move closer together for protection, in case of an
Indian raid. A fort was built at present Center Street.
In 1861 Richmond was surveyed by Jessie Fox, the territorial
surveyor, and property assigned. One hundred four claims
were made for land after the townsite was laid out.
It
is not known how Richmond received its name, but some
believe it was in honor of LDS Church apostle Charles
C. Rich. Others think that the name came from the deep
rich mound of soil located on the alluvial fan made by
the waters coming from Cherry Creek and City Creek; other
believe that it was named after Richmond, Virginia, by
"homesick" southern settlers. Richmond was incorporated
as a city on 26 February 1868.
Among
Richmond's early industries were a shingle mill, gristmill,
sawmill, and the Richmond Co-operative Mercantile Store,
built in 1866. Cache Valley is a great dairy and cattle
area, and Richmond boasted of having the first creamery
in the area. In 1896 the Utah Plow Factory was started;
it produced plows, bobsleds, iron harrows, and cultivators.
Other early businesses included two livery stables, a
furniture store, and a tin shop. In the 1870s and 1880s
Richmond was second to Logan in manufacturing in Cache
County. The Sego Milk Plant began operation in 1904 and
became a thriving industry for the area. Before its closure
it was owned by Western General Dairies, Inc. Today the
major industries in Richmond are Pepperidge Farms, Lower
Food, and Heart to Heart (which manufactures low-fat yogurt
products).
A
major event in Richmond is the annual Black and White
Days celebration. It was started in 1913 to promote and
stimulate an interest in better quality dairy cattle.
The event has evolved from driving the cattle into the
old tithing yard with judges riding horses through the
herd to pick out the award-winning animals to its present
status as one of the largest exclusive Holstein dairy
shows in the United States, with its own permanent grounds
and pavilion. The event is held each year in May and draws
exhibitors from throughout the Intermountain West.
Richmond
has had religious diversity since territorial times. The
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
was organized in Richmond in the 1870s and continued there
until 1903. The 1890 census showed Richmond with thirty-three
Reorganized Church members. In 1883 the Presbyterian Church
opened a school in Richmond. The school was held in a
log house and was taught by Jennie McGintie, who remained
for about a year and a half until the arrival of a Reverend
Mr. Renshaw, who took charge of the Presbyterian congregations
in Franklin, Richmond, and Smithfield. Richmond's Presbyterian
school closed in 1907.
The
Richmond LDS Ward was organized in the spring of 1860.
An additional chapel was built in 1917. The Benson Stake
Tabernacle, erected in 1903, was condemned in 1962 following
an earthquake, and a new Benson Stake Center was built
and dedicated in 1964. The stake center serves seven wards
in Lewiston, Cove, Cornish, Trenton, and Richmond. Richmond
now has five LDS wards.
Richmond
had a growth of around 1,000 people from 1940 to 1970.
A period of growth began in the 1970s, and according to
the 1990 census the population was 1,955.
Linda
Thatcher
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