Salt Lake County, Utah Genealogy

United States &gt; Utah &gt; Salt Lake County

History
The area that was to become Salt Lake County was settled in 1847 when Mormon Pioneers of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, fleeing persecution in the East, arrived in the Salt Lake Valley after traveling through Emigration Canyon. Brigham Young, their leader, declared "This is the right place" after seeing the valley, which was at the time arid, dry, and unpromising. However, they soon developed a flourishing, self-sufficient city, Great Salt Lake City, through extensive irrigation techniques. Thousands of Mormons from around the world followed in the next several decades. The county was officially formed on January 31, 1850, with just over 11,000 residents recorded.

Parent County
1849--Salt Lake County was created in 1849 as an original county. County seat: Salt Lake City

Record Loss
Marriage registers from 1887 through 1950's microfilmed and then destroyed. Microfilm copy available at the Family History Library and centers.

Populated Places

 * Cities: Alta | Bluffdale | Cottonwood Heights | Draper | Herriman | Holladay | Midvale | Murray | Riverton | Salt Lake City | Sandy | South Jordan | South Salt Lake | Taylorsville | West Jordan


 * Unincorporated Communities: Avenues | Bennion | Bingham | Bonneville | Butler | Copperton | Crescent City | Daybreak | Garden View | Garfield | Granger | Grant | Granite | Hercules | Highland Park | Hunter | Kearns | Lark | Magna | Mill Creek | Pleasant Green | Spencer | Sugarhouse | Union

Neighboring Counties
Davis (North) | Morgan (Northeast) | Summit (East) | Tooele (West) | Utah (South) | Wasatch (Southeast)

Cemeteries
Community contributed photographs for Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery are available &amp; welcome.

The website is Wasatch Lawn Mortuary and Memorial Park- it is a part of a larger Memorial organization. The cemetery is located at 3401 Highland Dr Salt Lake City, UT 84106-3391. The phone # is (801) 466-8688.

See http://history.utah.gov/apps/burials/execute/cemeterylist for Utah Burials Database

Kimball-Whitney Cemetery
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Salt Lake City Cemetery
TheSalt Lake City Cemeteryis located at 200 "N" Street.

Holladay Memorial Park--4900 S Memory Lane, Holladay, UT, 84117, 801-278-2803
In 1848, when the first pioneer death occurred in Holladay, the cemetery knoll in the southeast section overlooking lowland watery meadows and a cottonwood creek was selected as a community cemetery. For 127 years, local LDS church leaders oversaw the 13-acre cemetery. Old headstones dating from the 1800s are dotted across the hill and tell the story of the Holladay area. This cemetery is the burial place of early pioneers and settlers. From any place in the cemetery, the view of Mount Olympus is spectacular. The cemetery is a quiet, serene place of remembrance tucked into a quaint neighborhood. It is a landmark that offers convenience, history and peace. Memorial Estates purchased, Holladay Cemetery, in 1990.

Lake Hills Memorial Cemetery--10055 S State, Sandy, UT, 84070, 801-566-1249
Memorial Estates purchased, Lake Hills Mortuary and Cemetery, in 1990

Lakeview Memorial Cemetery--1640 E Lakeview Drive, Bountiful, UT, 84010, 801-298-1564
In 1965, 12 acres of land were purchased in the foothills above Bountiful. At the time, no paved roads led to the cemetery and a mile-long dirt track was graded to access the property

Mountain View Memorial Cemetery--7800 S 3115 E, Cottonwood Heights, UT, 84121, 801-943-0831
In the early 1950s, a group of church and civic leaders saw a need for a memorial park in the Salt Lake Valley that would be different from other parks. This memorial park was designed with a mortuary on the premises and set at the foot of the beautiful Cottonwood Canyons. Mountain View Memorial Estates resulted from their idea, and was the first combined mortuary and memorial park in the Intermountain West.In 1958, Mountain View Investment Group, purchased 18 acres of land on the east side of the valley to meet the needs of a growing population in that area. In 1964 the park increased in size from 18 acres to 23 acres, and the park was endowed.

Redwood Memorial Cemetery--6500 S Redwood Road, West Jordan, UT, 84123, 801-969-3456
Memorial Estates began work on a new cemetery to serve the west side of the valley on Redwood Road. Groundbreaking ceremonies for Redwood Memorial Estates were held in 1960 and construction began on the chapel and mortuary in 1961. Redwood, began with only 16 grassy acres and expanded to 85 acres. Redwood memorial has hosted an Isamic Garden since ????.

Census

 * 1850 (1851)
 * 1856
 * 1860
 * 1870
 * 1880
 * 1890
 * 1900
 * 1910
 * 1920
 * 1930

Church
LDS Ward and Branch Records

Salt Lake City


 * Airport
 * Arbor
 * Beacon
 * Belvedere
 * Big Cottonwood
 * Brighton
 * Browning
 * Bryan
 * Burton
 * Cannon
 * Capitol Hill
 * Center
 * Central Park
 * Colonial Hills
 * Columbus
 * Cottonwood
 * Cottonwood S.
 * Cummings
 * Douglas
 * Duncan
 * Edgehill
 * Edison
 * Eldredge
 * Emerson
 * Emigration
 * Ensign
 * Ensign E.
 * Ensign W.
 * Evergreen
 * Fairmont
 * Farmers
 * Forest Dale
 * Grandview
 * Granite Stake
 * Harvard
 * Haven
 * Hawthorne
 * Highland Park
 * Hillcrest
 * Holladay
 * Holladay 1
 * Holladay 2
 * Hunter
 * Imperial
 * Ivins
 * Jefferson
 * Jordan Park
 * Laurelcrest
 * Le Grand
 * Liberty
 * Lincoln
 * Lorraine
 * McKay
 * McKinley
 * Marlborough
 * Mexican
 * Mill Creek
 * Mill Creek E.
 * Miller
 * Monument Park
 * Mt. Olympus
 * Mountain Dell
 * Mountain View
 * Nibley Park
 * North Point
 * Park Avenue
 * Parley's
 * Pioneer Stake
 * Poplar Grove
 * Princeton
 * Redweed
 * Richards
 * Riverside
 * Riverview
 * Rosecrest
 * Rosslyn Heights
 * Salt Lake (Misc.)
 * Salt Lake City 1
 * Salt Lake City 2
 * Salt Lake City 2 N.
 * Salt Lake City 2 S.
 * Salt Lake City 3
 * Salt Lake City 4
 * Salt Lake City 5
 * Salt Lake City 6
 * Salt Lake City 6-7
 * Salt Lake City 7
 * Salt Lake City 8
 * Salt Lake City 9
 * Salt Lake City 10
 * Salt Lake City 11
 * Salt Lake City 11 W.
 * Salt Lake City 12
 * Salt Lake City 12-13
 * Salt Lake City 13
 * Salt Lake City 14
 * Salt Lake City 15
 * Salt Lake City 16
 * Salt Lake City 17
 * Salt Lake City 17 N.
 * Salt Lake City 18
 * Salt Lake City 18 N.
 * Salt Lake City 18 S.
 * Salt Lake City 19
 * Salt Lake City 20
 * Salt Lake City 20 N.
 * Salt Lake City 20 S.
 * Salt Lake City 21
 * Salt Lake City 21 N.
 * Salt Lake City 22
 * Salt Lake City 23
 * Salt Lake City 24
 * Salt Lake City 25
 * Salt Lake City 26
 * Salt Lake City 27
 * Salt Lake City 27 E.
 * Salt Lake City 28
 * Salt Lake City 29
 * Salt Lake City 30
 * Salt Lake City 31
 * Salt Lake City 32
 * Salt Lake City 33
 * Salt Lake City 34
 * Salt Lake City 35
 * Smith
 * South Cottonwood
 * Southgate
 * Springview
 * Stadium Village
 * Stratford
 * Sugarhouse
 * University
 * Valley View
 * Wandamere
 * Wasatch
 * Waterloo
 * Webster
 * Wells
 * Whittier
 * Wilford
 * Wilson
 * Winder
 * Yale
 * Yalecrest

Salt Lake County


 * Bennion
 * Bingham
 * Bonneville
 * Bluffdale
 * Butler
 * Copperton
 * Crescent
 * Draper
 * Draper 1
 * Draper 2
 * Garden View
 * Garfield
 * Garfield E.
 * Garfield W.
 * Granger
 * Granger 1
 * Granger 2
 * Grant S.
 * Hercules (Bachus)
 * HerrimanHunter
 * Lark
 * Magna
 * Midvale
 * Midvale 1
 * Midvale 1 E.
 * Midvale 2
 * Midvale 2 E.
 * Mill Creek
 * Mill Creek E.
 * Murray
 * Murray 1
 * Murray 2
 * Murray 3
 * Pleasant Green
 * Riverton
 * Riverton 1
 * Riverton 2
 * Salt Lake (Misc)
 * Sandy
 * Sandy 1
 * Sandy 2
 * Sandy 3
 * South Jordan
 * Spencer
 * Taylorsville
 * Union
 * Union 1
 * Union2
 * Valley Center
 * West Jordan
 * West Jordan 1
 * West Jordan 2

Local Histories
The History of Salt Lake City and its Founders, By Edward William Tullidge 1886

Newspapers

 * One major resouce for newspapers throughout Utah is the University of Utah's Utah Digital Newspapers project "with more than 600,000 pages of digitized Utah historical newspapers." Ten newspapers from Salt Lake County are included in this digital project, the Valley Tan, Union Vedette, Salt Lake Tribune, Deseret News (Weekly Edition), Deseret Evening News (Daily Edition), Salt Lake Herald, American Eagle, Salt Lake Mining Review, Murray Eagle, and the Broad Ax. Read more... about using Utah newspapers for your family history research.

Birth Records

 * Salt Lake County Birth Registers 1898-1905. Database at Utah State Div. of Archives and Records Services.

Death Records
Websites for death records in the state of Utah and specifically for Salt Lake County include:


 * Utah, Salt Lake County Death Records, 1908-1949. This title is misleading, because all the deaths were recorded in the City of Salt Lake City. There are no deaths recorded in any other places within the county in this County Death Records group.
 * Utah Death Certificates 1904 - 1956 -A free internet access to the 1904-1956 death certificates can be viewed on the Family Search Record Search Pilot . Utah requires a death certificate before a burial is completed.  A death certificate may contain information as to the name of the deceased, date of death, and place of death, as well as the age, birthdate, parents, gender, marital status, spouse and place of residence.

Marriage Records
Original marriage registers microfilmed by the Family History Library in the 1950's. Originals were then destroyed. Microfilm copy is not available at the county clerk's office.

58,919 marriages from 1847 to 18 September 1929 are listed on the Western States Marriage Index. Index is incomplete as there are few civil government recorded marriages in Salt Lake County prior to 1887. Some early divorce records were also indexed and included. This is not a complete database.

Societies and Libraries
The Family History Library is located in Salt Lake County and is the largest repository of family history records in the world.

The Salt Lake County Library system offers free access to Ancestry.com and Heritage Quest.

Web Sites

 * The Salt Lake County UT GenWeb Project, a member of The UTGenWeb Project, an affiliate of The USGenWeb Project


 * Family History Library Catalog