Tour: Art gallery (short); Mormon museum @ Brigham City, Utah; Community Center building
At first I thought it was just an art gallery, but then walked around to find museum. The art prices are obscenely overpriced.
Soap was made with wood ashes and animal fat.
I could imagine the Chinese coming to America, wiping out the people and then selling the land to their own immigrants.
goblin, big bear, antelope, idle, Shoshone, beads, plains, 1800s, leatherworking, daughters of utah, squaw, metate, wickiup, box elder, settle, pioneer, fort, snow, church, LDS, recuperation, persecution, book of mormon, prayer book, Wight, butter container, reservoir,
via YouTube Capture
Top 13. Best Museums in Salt Lake City - Travel Utah
Top 13. Best Museums in Salt Lake City - Travel Utah: Natural History Museum of Utah, Joseph Smith Memorial Building, Church History Museum, Wheeler Historic Farm, Clark Planetarium, The Leonardo Museum, Pioneer Memorial Museum, Discovery Gateway, Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Fort Douglas Military Museum, Art at the Main Gallery, Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, Classic Cars International Antique Auto Museum of Utah
Tour inside Utah Capitol @ Salt Lake City; Reading; art; architecture; gallery; murals; Statues
via YouTube Capture
Drive: Hyrum to Brigham City, Utah; 21 miles; over the mountains
The evergreen trees survive a little better closer to the tops of the mountains around here.
Utah Salt Lake City Mormon museum
Trolley car back to Trolley Square Oct. 15, 2018.
Trolley car unveiling October 15, 2018 at Trolley Square in Salt Lake City, Utah. October 15, 1908 was the date Utah Light & Railway Company began using the property as home for the streetcars. The car barns weren't finished by this date in 1908 but the track and overhead wires were in. Through the years the two trolley cars (operated in 1946 as the Trolley Inn diner on North Temple and 300 West, exactly behind where Crown Burger is today. Later owned by various people and was Jack's Café. March 28, 1972, Trolley Square purchases the two trolley cars from John & Beth Purdue for $100. August 14, 1972, State Savings opens a branch in the restored trolley cars. The woodwork was done by Ernie Paetsch. Through the years it was also a video store (Trolley Video ran by the Cullimore family), a deli (Trolley Sandwich), a crepe restaurant (Trolley Crepe) and a restaurant bar (Trolley Wing Company). It was moved to the south parking lot and covered with a tarp for construction of Whole Foods on March 4, 2010. The wood interior was restored with lights. Final restoration will be done in the summer of 2019 on site at Trolley Square. Thanks to Michael De Groote for the information and if you'd like more see pictures from over the years visit:
Toyota Land Cruiser FULL HISTORY - Private Museum Tour
landcruiserhm.com
expeditions7.com
Axe Family gets a tour of the Toyota Land Cruiser museum in Salt Lake City Utah by Kurt from Expedition Overland. We go through the history of the Toyota Land Cruisers and discuss the progression of each vehicle. Land cruisers are an amazing overland rig. Overlanding is a passion for Kurt and he also loves Land Cruisers.
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Museum of Peoples and Cultures Open at BYU
The BYU Museum of Peoples and Cultures recently moved to a new location at 2201 N. Canyon Road in Provo, Utah. A teaching museum affiliated with BYU's anthropology department, the free admission museum offers tours and other activities for youth and children, with a perspective on ancient cultures from around the world as well as from Utah. See mpc.byu.edu for more information or call 801-422-0020 (mpc.byu.edu).
More from BYU News:
The BYU Museum of Peoples and Cultures has a new home.
The Museum opened in a newly renovated space next door to Outdoors Unlimited at the corner of Canyon Road and 2230 North in Provo.
In celebration of the new space, the Museum is debuting a new exhibit telling the history of the Museum at BYU through important artifacts from the collections. Items from all over the world, from South and Central America to Asia and Polynesia and right here in Utah, will be on display in this exhibit.
The Museum is always free and is located at 2201 North Canyon Road. The regular hours are Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
BYU's teaching museum, the Museum of Peoples and Cultures documents the diversity of human experience, is part of the College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences and gives students hands-on opportunities to learn about every aspect of the museum experience.
Upcoming events will be posted on the Museum’s website: mpc.byu.edu.
Williams Fine Art, Salt Lake City
……”A thing of beauty is a joy forever”………….that is what Clayton R. Williams had in mind when he established Williams Fine Art in 1988. He envisioned an art gallery which would present to the public a beautiful collection of art created by the best of early Utah artists. He concentrated on outstanding works by both living and deceased painters and sculptors. His gallery offered symposia whose speakers presented to the audiences important information about the lives of outstanding artists with showings of their works. Also, special events were held such as book signings by the authors of newly published art books.
Artist's work that is regularly offered through Williams Fine Art include, LeConte Stewart, James T. Harwood, Lee Deffebach, Florence Ware, Minerva Tiechert and many others.
Today Mr. Williams is continuing that Williams Fine Art tradition at a new location, 132 E Street in Salt Lake City, where you will see fine collections of museum quality art work. Mr. Williams truly believes that “a thing of beauty is a joy forever” and he wants to share that vision with his friends who have become collectors of the finest of Utah and Western Art. Williams Fine Art is located in the F. Weixler Co. gallery which contains an array of lovely furniture, rugs, pottery and paintings to please the eye.
We hope you will come to see us when you are looking for quality artwork. Learn more at williamsfineart.com.
We're located at 132 E St. in Salt Lake City. Our hours are 12pm to 5pm, Monday through Friday.
Discovery Gateway News Report
My kids take on the news and weather at the Discovery Gateway in Salt Lake City. Then we created a stop-motion animation video
Chase Home Museum of Utah Folk Arts
The Chase Home Museum of Utah Folk Arts is located in a historic building once owned by Mormon pioneer Brigham Young and built in 1853 for the Isaac Chase family. Today this two story adobe structure, located in the middle of Liberty Park in Salt Lake City, Utah, is home to the state-owned Folk Arts Collection. Enjoy this tour of the Ethnic Art and Occupational Art galleries which feature traditional art being made today by Utah folk artists.
Ghostly Guardians and the haunting of Old Fort Douglas This is from the movie Ghostly Guardian
Ghostly Guardians and the haunting of Old Fort Douglas -- This is from the movie Ghostly Guardians, written and directed by Brian Jackson Fetzer and features the song When Johnny Comes Marching Home
Ghostly Guardians
(Directed by Brian Jackson Fetzer -- approximately 83 minutes)
This movie is about the real ghost stories of Old Fort Douglas. Directed by Brian Jackson Fetzer, Ghostly Guardians is an artistic documenting of the accounts of paranormal happenings at historic Old Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City, Utah. For nearly a century now there have been reports of ghostly occurrences at this haunting place. Clem, the old Union soldier who apparently senses the need to guard the old fort, the mysterious footsteps and the lady in purple, are all part of this capturing of spooky cultural history. Three years in the making it is an exquisite glimpse into eerie narratives of the metaphysical.
Old Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City, Utah
From Deseret News archives:
Storyteller's film spotlights ghostly goings-on at Fort Douglas
Published: Friday, Oct. 14, 2005 12:00 a.m. MDT
By Jeff Vice, Deseret News
Brian Jackson Fetzer knows a good story when he hears one. After all, he has taught storytelling at the University of Utah, Brigham Young University and Salt Lake Community College.
One of the best stories he's heard involves a series of ghostly sightings and activities at Fort Douglas, the old U.S. Army encampment located just east of the University of Utah campus. The fort has played host to all sorts of paranormal and metaphysical activities, including hauntings, said Fetzer, who has spent the past couple of years looking into the stories.
Click to enlarge

Brian Jackson Fetzer will be showing Ghostly Guardians film at Fort Douglas.
In fact, he has used them as the subject of a documentary film titled Ghostly Guardians, which examines reports of hauntings witnessed by Fort Douglas employees and visitors.
Fetzer said he has tried to look at these reports with an unbiased eye, as objectively and scientifically as possible. And at the same time, he wanted to use his professional storytelling skills to present the stories dramatically.
They're absolutely fascinating. I'm a little surprised that I was the first person to think of making a movie about them, he said, adding that there have been television and newspaper reports about the spectral goings-on.
Probably the most well-known of these involves Clem, the spirit of a Civil War-period soldier that is said to be roaming the Fort Douglas Military Museum. Some of the employees there say they have not only heard spooky noises in the museum but have also seen him move objects. (According to Fetzer, those who have witnessed Clem's poltergeist activities do not believe Clem is the entity's actual name, but that the nickname came from a local Boy Scout troop.)
Fetzer is not saying whether he believes in ghosts, though he does find former museum curator Jess McCall's eyewitness reports compelling. You can tell that he certainly believes that he has come into contact with Clem — more than once. His story is so consistent, and he doesn't hesitate in telling it at all.
The Times They Are a Changin' - SALT LAKE CITY HISTORY MONTAGE
Video made in Studio IV class. Architecture and Planning U of U.
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Park City Gallery Stroll Video
Explore Park City & Summit County: Park City Gallery Stroll
Last Friday of Every Month, 6:00-9:00pm
Explore Our Art Scene - pcscarts.org
This Is The Place Heritage Park
Laura Barnes of the Salt Lake Convention & Visitors Bureau takes you to This Is The Place Heritage Park. This is one of 13 Connect Pass locations in Salt Lake City.
Connect Pass Locations Include:
Clark Planetarium
Discovery Gateway
Red Butte Garden
Thanksgiving Point
The Leonardo
Tracy Aviary
Utah Museum of Natural History
Utah Olympic Park
Utahs Hogle Zoo
Utah Museum of Fine Arts
The Lion House Pantry Restaurant
Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort
This Is The Place Heritage Park
The Leonardo Museum
The Leonardo is a new museum in SLC that merges art with science.
Memorial House, Memory Grove Park, 375 N. Canyon Rd., SLC
Memorial House was originally constructed circa 1890 as a stable and equipment storage shed. In 1926, Salt Lake City leased the building to the Service Star Legion and prominent Salt Lake architects Hyrum Pope and Harold Burton were hired to design a new façade with Georgian style. The brick walls were covered with stucco, six rounded dormers were added to the roof, and the stable doors on the east wall were turned into elegant French doors.
Under the management of the Service Star Legion, Memorial House became a popular setting for weddings, receptions, and luncheons. Over the course of the century, new features were added to improve the venue’s versatility for events. The garden room addition was constructed in 1953, and the patio on the east side was added in 1974. Sadly, after the Legion's lease ended in 1984, the building stood vacant and unused for 10 years. Seeking a new home and hoping that Memorial House could once again play an active role in the community, Utah Heritage Foundation, a statewide 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, raised funds for the renovation of the building in cooperation with Salt Lake City Corporation. In July of 1994, the Foundation re-opened the doors of Memorial House for public use and has continued to operate the building as a meeting, event, and reception center ever since.
- Jada, Historic Sites Manager
Places to see in ( Park City - USA )
Places to see in ( Park City - USA )
Park City lies east of Salt Lake City in the western state of Utah. Framed by the craggy Wasatch Range, it’s bordered by the Deer Valley Resort and the huge Park City Mountain Resort, both known for their ski slopes. Utah Olympic Park, to the north, hosted the 2002 Winter Olympics and is now predominantly a training facility. In town, Main Street is lined with buildings built during a 19th-century silver mining boom.
Park City is a wonderful place to visit throughout the year with fabulous dining and recreation options. Long before Park City became a world class mountain resort and venue for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, it was famous as a silver mining town, and boasts a lively and colorful past. Founded by prospectors in the late 1860's, Park City continued to mine silver until the early 1970's.
From approximately 1850, when small settlements were forming, until the railroad lines were laid throughout the West in the 1890s, stagecoach travel was the main form of transportation. There was even a stagecoach business in Park City! William Kimball, a Park City resident, started his stagecoach business in 1858 competing with Brigham Young for United States mail contracts. He was sent to England on a Mormon Church mission and when he returned, he started the Park City-Salt Lake City Route. The Kimball Brothers Stage Line operated from 1872 until 1890, when the railroad made its way into the West. Moving quicker as well as transporting more people and mail, the railroad easily put the stagecoach out of business.
Between 1880 and 1920 when Park City mines were the most organized, productive and active, they produced more than 20 million tons of ore including lead, zinc, copper, silver, and a small amount of gold. These were the years of Park City's mining renaissance. The mining company, Park City Consolidated Mines, started the ski business in 1963, when they built the first lifts on what was then called Treasure Mountain. The Park City area now has three world class resorts: Park City Mountain Resort, Deer Valley Resort, and the Canyons Resort.
Park City has a year-round free city-wide transit system. The bus routes connects Historic Main Street, Kimball Junction, Prospector, Deer Valley, Park City Mountain Resort and Canyons Village. Traveling with skis or snowboards on public transit is not a problem. Parking at the resorts is free; however, the lots fill up early in the morning. On the weekends, patrons of Park City Mountain can park at the Park City High School on Kearns Blvd and take the complimentary resort shuttle to the Park City Base Area. The majority of parking in the Historic Main Street area is paid.
A lot to see in Park City Utah such as :
Deer Valley Resort
Park City Mountain
Main Street
Deer Valley
Park City Alpine Slide
Kimball Art Center
Canyons Village at Park City
Park Silly Sunday Market
Park City Museum
Guardsman Pass Road
National Ability Center
Empire Pass
Mountain Trails Foundation
Solitude Mountain Resort
Deer Crest Club
The Viking Yurt
All Seasons Adventures
Park City Ice Arena and Sports Complex
Brighton Resort
Jordanelle Reservoir
Silver Mountain Sports Club & Spa
Utah Olympic Park
Mid Mountain Trail
Jordanelle State Park
Quinn's Junction Trailhead
Meyer Gallery
Escape Room Park City
Utah Outdoor Adventures
Gallery MAR
Old Town Cellars
Banksy Art
Park City Institute
McPolin Barn
Terzian Galleries
Treasure Hill
Miner's Park
Park City Ski Team
Park City Fine Art
Trove Gallery
Park City Main Street Historic District
Wasatch Mountain State Park
Olympic Parkway
Bloods Lake
City Park
Silver Lake
Lake Desolation
Montgomery-Lee Fine Art
Julie Nester Gallery
Daly Chutes
( Park City - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Park City . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Park City - USA
Join us for more :
Natural History Museum of Utah - Rio Tinto Center at the University of Utah
Laura Barnes of Visit Salt Lake takes you to the new Natural History Museum of Utah - The Rio Tinto Center at the University of Utah. The Museum has 10 thematic exhibit galleries, 1.2 million objects of Natural History and is all cared for in a Gold LEED Certified building.
This is one of 13 Connect Pass locations in Salt Lake City. Go to VisitSaltLake.com for more information.
Connect Pass Locations Include:
Clark Planetarium
Discovery Gateway
Red Butte Garden
Thanksgiving Point
The Leonardo
Tracy Aviary
Natural History Museum of Utah
Utah Olympic Park
Utahs Hogle Zoo
Utah Museum of Fine Arts
The Lion House Pantry Restaurant
Snowbird Ski & Summer Resort
This Is The Place Heritage Park
Antelope Island State Park at the Great Salt Lake - Utah
Antelope Island offers wildlife such as bison, antelopes, birds. Besides hiking you can go for a swim at the Great Salt Lake or visit the Fielding Garr Ranch Museum