Area:
268 square miles;
Population:
187,941 (in 1990);
County seat:
Farmington; Origin
of county name: after
Captain Daniel C.
Davis of`the Mormon
Battalion; Principal
cities/towns:
Layton
(41,784), Bountiful
(36,659), Clearfield
(21,435), Kaysville
(13,961), Centerville
(11,500); Economy:
defense industry,
small manufacturing
and distribution,
service industries,
agriculture (especially
alfalfa, grain, onions,
and fruit); Points
of interest: Antelope
Island, Great
Salt Lake, Hill
Air Force Base,
Lagoon
and Pioneer Village,
Farmington Canyon,
Farmington Bay Waterfowl
Management Area, Howard
Slough Waterfowl Management
Area, Freeport Center,
Bountiful-Davis Art
Center, Farmington
Rock Chapel.
The dominant geographical
features of Davis
County are the Wasatch
Mountains on the east
and the Great Salt
Lake on the west.
The mountains provide
a source of water
and help ensure a
remarkably uniform
growing season. Not
surprisingly, Davis
County has always
been a rich agricultural
area. It was attractive
to people even before
the time of permanent
white settlement.
In fact, Davis County
has been home to every
distinct culture group
in Utah's prehistory,
from the Paleo-Indian
big game hunters of
12,000 years ago to
the Numic-speaking
hunter gatherers of
the pioneer period.
The county's great
agricultural potential
was recognized quickly
by the Mormon pioneers,
and during their first
winter in Utah (1847-48)
several of them moved
livestock into that
area for winter forage.
By 1850 a number of
farms dotted the south
half of Davis County.
By the 1870s the county
was clearly the garden
spot of Utah. In addition
to producing bounteous
harvests and prize-winning
livestock, Davis County
farmers led out boldly
in experimenting with
new crops, such as
sorghum and alfalfa,
new equipment, such
as headers and threshers,
and new methods, such
as dry farming and
irrigation management.
Economic prosperity,
built on this farming
base, followed Davis
County into the twentieth
century. By 1910 the
county sported two
gristmills, two nurseries,
eight irrigation companies,
and six canning factories.
Five years later it
also had a sugar factory.
A great variety of
crops, fruit, and
livestock was raised.
New schoolhouses,
chapels, stores, and
other structures popped
up on the landscape.
Three railroads served
the county's transportation
needs. During and
immediately after
World War II, significant
changes began to appear
in Davis County. Farming,
while still important,
began to lose its
position as the economic
leader. Defense installations
in the Clearfield-Layton
area, such as Hill
Air Force Base and
the Naval Supply Depot,
began to employ large
numbers of people.
When the navy depot
closed, industry and
related enterprises
purchased the buildings
in 1963 and developed
the site into the
Freeport Center, a
bustling manufacturing
and distribution center.
Suburbs to meet housing
needs developed around
the Freeport-Hill
hub and also in the
southern part of the
county for people
who commuted to Salt
Lake City. Service
industries, to support
this growing population,
started to become
prominent in the county's
economic makeup.
Although the state's
smallest county in
size, Davis is one
of the fastest growing
in population. The
number of residents
doubled between 1940
and 1950, doubled
again by 1960, doubled
again by 1975, and
is expected to double
again by 1995. It
is presently Utah's
third most populous
county.
Stanford
J. Layton