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The
Great Salt Lake has been a popular recreation site since
the earliest days of white settlement, and a number of
resorts have been built on its shores since the first
two were constructed in 1870. The most popular and the
best-remembered resort was the early Saltair. An important
cultural symbol, it is deeply imbedded in Utah's history
and has long interested artists, essayists, folklorists,
and historians.
In 1893 the Mormon church built Saltair on the south shore
of the Great Salt Lake, about sixteen miles from downtown
Salt Lake City. They also built the railroad connecting
the resort with the city. The church owned the resort
until 1906, at which time it was sold to a group of private
Mormon businessmen. The architect of Saltair was Richard
K.A. Kletting, perhaps Utah's foremost architect at the
turn of the century and the designer of the Utah State
Capitol building.
In building Saltair the Mormon Church had two major objectives:
in the words of Mormon apostle Abraham H. Cannon, they
wanted to provide "a wholesome place of recreation"
under church control for Mormons and their families; and
they also intended that Saltair be a "Coney Island
of the West" to help demonstrate that Utah was not
a strange place of alien people and customs. This was
part of a larger movement toward accommodation with American
society that had begun in the early 1890s as church leaders
made a conscious decision to bring the church into the
mainstream of American life. Saltair was to be both a
typical American amusement park and a place that provided
a safe environment for Mormon patrons. Those goals were
somewhat incompatible, and in less than a decade the second
had clearly triumphed at the expense of the first. Nonetheless,
initially Saltair signified the Mormon Church's intention
to join the world while at the same time trying to minimize
its influence and avoid its excesses.
Saltair opened on Memorial Day 1893, and was officially
dedicated on 8 June. Its main attractions were always
swimming in the Great Salt Lake, where people could bob
around like corks, thanks to its 25 percent salt content,
and dancing on what was advertised as the world's largest
dance floor; but the resort always had a wide range of
other attractions. They included a roller coaster, a merry-go-round,
a ferris wheel, midway games, bicycle races, touring vaudeville
companies, rodeos, bullfights, boat rides on the lake,
fireworks displays, and hot-air balloons.
Saltair reached the peak of its popularity in the early
1920s when it was attracting nearly a half-million people
a year. However, in April 1925 it burned to the ground.
Raymond J. Ashton and Raymond L. Evans designed a new
pavilion along the general lines of the original one,
and it was built the next year, but the resort never regained
its former popularity. During the 1930s it had to battle
the effects of the Great Depression; high maintenance
costs as winds and salt spray ate away at wood and paint;
a $100,000 fire in 1931; and receding lake levels, which
in 1933 left it a half mile from the water. Saltair closed
down during World War II. It reopened with high hopes
after the war but continued to struggle, and it closed
for good after the 1958 season. During the 1960s efforts
to save it failed, and it stood forlorn and abandoned
until fire destroyed it in November 1970.
In 1981 a new pavilion was built near the site of the
original. It opened in July 1982, but struggled to survive
as the lake first reached its highest level in history
by 1984, putting the pavilion's main floor under five
feet of water. In the late 1980s the water began to recede.
In the fall of 1992, the Great Salt Lake Land Company,
headed by Salt Lake attorney and real estate developer
Walter Plumb, bought the resort. Over the next six months
the new owners restored the structure and added a concert
stage where they intended to present local and national
artists. It opened on 8 June 1993--Saltair's one hundredth
anniversary.
John S. McCormick
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