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Young chartered Cedar City a few months later. The iron mined from Cedar City was the first west of the Mississippi River. Following a series of mishaps, including the Mountain Meadows massacre, Young ordered the iron works to shut down in 1858. Most Cedar City citizens left for other cities, but three hundred and one people stayed behind.
Eccles Coliseum is an 8,500-seat multi-purpose stadium in the western United States, on the campus of Southern Utah University in Cedar City, Utah. [1] It is the home venue of the Southern Utah Thunderbirds football team of the United Athletic Conference and track and field teams of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC).
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Cedar City; Usage on ce.wikipedia.org Сидар-Сити (Юта) Usage on diq.wikipedia.org Cedar City, Utah; Usage on es.wikipedia.org Cedar City (Utah) Usage on eu.wikipedia.org Cedar City (Utah) Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Cedar City; Usage on fr.wikivoyage.org Cedar City; Usage on glk.wikipedia.org سيدر سيتي (یۊتا) Usage on he ...
America First Event Center is a 5,300-seat multi-purpose arena in Cedar City, Utah. It was built in 1985. It is home to the Southern Utah University Thunderbirds basketball, volleyball and gymnastics teams. The America First Event Center is also the centerpiece venue for the Utah Summer Games. [1]
The road from SR-1 (by 1926 US-91, now SR-130) in Cedar City to SR-11 at Long Valley Junction was added to the state highway system in 1912 and numbered SR-14 in the 1920s. [3] A branch from Cedar Breaks Junction to Cedar Breaks National Monument was added in 1927, [4] but in 1931 it was renumbered SR-55, and is now part of SR-148. [5]
Lund Highway looking east Lund Highway looking west. Lund Highway is a road connecting Cedar City to the ghost town of Lund in Iron County, Utah.Although it is classified as a minor collector, [2] it was once an important connection between the Union Pacific Railroad at Lund and the national parks of southern Utah and northern Arizona.
Lack of iron was a major concern to pioneers who began settling in Utah in 1847. When iron deposits were discovered in southern Utah, Mormon leader Brigham Young called for volunteers to colonize the area. A site near Coal Creek, now Cedar City, was selected in November 1851 for the iron works.