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Show 1 II ...n.., inr,-T- - , , . f ! --..- ., -j- n mmmmmmmmm miilinin TTf wiwBWiWI -- ...... - o ....., T- -r ' ; t i ' ' " ' ... ' ' I ''-''"'.- , IK , .. ....... ' v a V Q ii c; r : ' 0 O 0 o Annual cattle drive from Strawberry Page 1A THE HERALD area summer range. o (Herald staff photo by Phil Shurtleff) Provo, Utah Sunday, March 7, 1971 By THERON H. LUKE Valley's first Mormon colony put plows to the soil in what T came the West Fields near old Fort Utah in the spring of 1849, they were of survival following a pattern of all new settlers everywhere meeting the needs first the established valley's Thus live. to they by raising the food they must have survival by agriculture. of the that call it if industry industry, you my Indians who frequented the land for ages before were fishermen and hunters, and did not estab-ablis- h with undoubtedly some agriculture, but they were migratory did. It was the white man white homes and intensively till the land as the a became spot, Uterally, it until garden of soil Utah Valley man who nurtured the several standand to this day it remains a leading agricultural area of Utah from e of the agnculture-scena became soon part animals points. Fine cattle, and other as well as tilling the soil and raising crops. of the Which is why we have named this section of the annual Progress Edition of both occupy the cove. . and and pictures Industry," Herald "Agriculture it as such, had its beginnings Industry, although no one seemed to recognize and lumber mills. At one time tanneries small were There Utah in Valley. early to power small industries Millrace of the water several penstocks harnessed the in 1868, became one of Utah s Woolen Mills, organized And Provo the it. along It was the forerunner of major and most important industries for many years. 1922 construction was started on the In it know we as today. heavy industry, fronton Plant, finished in 1924. This was followed by Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe Plant in 1926. And then, born of war but nurtured and developed in the peace years that followed, came the Geneva Steel Plant. This was really industry, employing thousands where the others did hundreds. It was the forerunner of several satellite mhen Utah be-Y- - - V -- 1 CV H , "V I ! I r f 1 In fail i ' 1 ' I Ml II ' Industry and Agriculture "1 t, i; , 6 A , S I M. 1 M Jr V" "f" 3 ' - steel fabrication plants. The textile industry has moved in again, a 20th century postlude to the Provo Woolen Mills, and several plants throughout the valley now make clothing of one sort or another. and conResponsible citizens and officials say still more industry is needed, stantly strive to get it but the valley has come a long way from the Millrace penstock-power- ed plants and mills. And so today Utah Valley remains an important agricultural area, leavened, by the payrolls of indsutry. It's a good way to live. Tapping an Open Hearth Furnace at Geneva Works of U.S. Steel Corp. I |