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Sanpete County (/ s æ n ˈ p iː t / san-PEET) is a county in the U.S. state of Utah. As of the 2020 United States Census , the population was 28,437. [ 1 ] Its county seat is Manti , [ 2 ] and its largest city is Ephraim .
Located at the confluence of the San Pitch River and Cottonwood Creek, Fairview is the largest city in the northeast end of the Sanpete Valley.Founded in 1859, soon after the resettlement of nearby Mount Pleasant, Fairview was one of the first new towns established during the second wave of Mormon settlement in Sanpete County.
Grand County adopted a seven-member council with appointed manager in 1992, followed by Morgan County in 1999 and Wasatch County in 2003. In 1998, Salt Lake County residents approved adopting a nine-member council with elected mayor that began work in 2001. [11] Summit County adopted a five-member council with an appointed manager in 2006. [12]
Manti (/ ˈ m æ n t aɪ / MAN-ty) is a city in and the county seat of Sanpete County, Utah, United States. [4] The population was 3,429 at the 2020 United States Census.
Sanpete County and Sevier County make up the "Little Scandinavia" portion of Utah, where many of Utah's 20,000 19th-century Scandinavian immigrants settled. Pair-houses, a Scandinavian home form, are relatively common. There are 82 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county.
Mount Pleasant is within the North Sanpete School District, [14] and has one elementary school and North Sanpete High School, the only high school in the district. [15] The district's middle school is located in Moroni. [16] Mount Pleasant is also home to Wasatch Academy, a private boarding school established in 1875. [17]
"It's not fair." "In essence, this money has been stolen from all of us for all these years," said an 84-year-old woman whose late husband's Social Security benefits were slashed. ... Its effects ...
Birdseye view of the town of Manti and the Sanpete Valley. The San Pitch Utes (Sahpeech, Sanpeech, Sanpits, San-pitch) were members of a band of Ute people that lived in the Sanpete Valley and Sevier River Valley and along the San Pitch River. They may have originally been Shoshonean, and were generally considered as part of the Timpanogos. [1]