Park
City's
History,
from 40,000
B.C to
the present
Click
anywhere
on the
timeline
to find
out
about
Park
City's
history.

Utah
before
Park
City
40,000
BC
Saber-toothed
tigers
hunt
bison in
what is
now the
Snyderville
Basin.
1600
AD
Indian
bands
travel
the high
alpine
valleys
in
search
of game.
1776
The
Dominguez-Escalante
expedition
makes it
as far
as the
Provo
valley
on their
way to
California
before
retreating
back to
Santa
Fe.
1823
Mountain
man
Jedediah
Smith
passes
through
the
Kamas
Valley
on his
way from
Wyoming
to
California.
1847
Brigham
Young
and the
Mormon
settlers
pass
near the
north
end of
this
valley
on their
way to
Salt
Lake.
1850
Parley
Pratt's
toll
road
leads
from
Parley's
Park
(the
present
Park
City)
westerly
into the
Salt
Lake
Valley
collecting
$1,500
from
travelers
en route
to the
California
gold
fields.
1862
Brigham
Young's
"City
by the
Salt
Lake"
is
booming
and
Federal
troops
from
California
under
Colonel
Patrick
Conner
are sent
to guard
the U.S.
Mail and
watch
over the
"Saints",
who
might
side
with the
Confederacy
in the
Civil
War.
Figuring
that a
strike
(a find
of
valuable
ore)
would
bring in
outsiders
and
dilute
the
Mormon
population,
Colonel
Conner
sends
soldiers
out
prospecting.
1863
Utah's
first
mining
claim is
filed in
Bingham
Canyon
west of
Salt
Lake
Valley.
Silver
Discovery
Draws a
Crowd
1868
In late
October,
soldiers
climb
over the
mountains
from Big
Cottonwood
Canyon
to the
Park
City
area and
find
silver.
As the
snow is
swirling
and a
storm
brewing,
they
mark the
outcropping
with a
bandanna
on a
stick
and
return
in the
spring.
The
first
mine is
named
Flagstaff.
Park
City
will
become
known
not only
for its
silver,
but for
lead,
zinc and
gold.
The
Flagstaff
Mine is
the
first to
ship ore
from the
area.
1869
The
Transcontinental
Railroad
is
completed
at
Promontory,
Utah.
Laid-off
workers,
including
many
Chinese,
settle
in
Parley's
Park.
1870
Parley's
Park has
a total
population
of 164.
1872
George
and
Rhoda
Snyder
name the
area
Parley's
Park
City,
soon
shortened
to Park
City.
The
discovery
of
exceedingly
rich
silver
ore (400
ounces
to the
ton)
leads to
the
opening
of the
Ontario
Mine and
starts a
boom
town
atmosphere
in Park
City.
George
Hearst,
the
father
of
William
Randolph
Hearst,
and his
partners
buy the
Ontario
for
$27,000.
It will
produce
over $50
million
in its
lifetime.
1875
A free
public
school
is
established.
1880
The
first
issue of
The
Park
Record
rolls
off the
press.
It will
be
published
continuously
from
this
date
forward,
expanding
in the
1990s
from one
day per
week to
every
Wednesday
and
Saturday.
1881
Park
City is
the
third
city in
Utah to
receive
telephone
service.
The
typhoid
epidemic
hits the
area.
The
Catholic
Church
builds a
frame
church
and
names it
St.
Mary's.
Water in
the
mines is
a
continuing
problem
in spite
of
numerous
underground
pumps.
The
Cornish
Pump, a
machine
30 feet
high
with a
70-ton
flywheel,
is
imported
from
Philadelphia
by
freight
wagon.
It pumps
water
from
1,000
feet
below
the
surface
in the
Ontario
Mine,
taking
out over
4
million
gallons
of water
a day.
Later,
drain
tunnels
will
replace
pumps.
1882
The
Ontario
has
competition
as other
discoveries
of
silver
occur.
Among
the
larger
ones are
the
Crescent,
the
Anchor
and the
Mayflower.
Park
City
Becomes
Official
1884
Park
City is
incorporated
and City
Hall is
under
construction
(to be
finished
in
1885).
1889
The
town's
population
is over
5,000.
The city
is one
of the
first in
the
state to
have
electric
lights.
1892
Silver
King
Mine is
incorporated.
It will
prove to
be one
of Park
City's
largest
producers
of
silver.
1893
Because
silver
is no
longer
to be
used to
back
currency,
silver
prices
drop.
Miners
at the
Silver
King
accept a
pay cut
from $1
to 50
cents,
allowing
the mine
to
continue
operating
while
others
remain
closed.
First
drilling
contest
takes
place.
In 15
minutes
Frank
Ward
sinks
his
drill
17.5
inches
into the
rock.
Yearly
contests
continue
to this
day as
part of
Miner's
Day
(Labor
Day)
festivities.
1894
The
Silver
Queen,
Susanna
Bransford
Emery,
is
making
$1,000 a
day from
her
interest
in the
Silver
King
Mine.
1896
On
statehood
day,
January
5, Park
City has
a
population
over
7,000.
Trial
by Fire
1898
Park
City
population
approaches
10,000.
In June,
200 of
the 350
structures,
homes
and
businesses
burn in
the
worst
fire
Park
City has
ever
seen.
Three
quarters
of the
town is
gone,
500 are
homeless,
$1
million
in
property
is lost.
Gone is
the
grand
new
opera
house
built at
a cost
of
$30,000
and open
less
than
three
months.
Seventeen
volunteers
leave to
fight in
the
Spanish-American
Way
which
forces
the
price of
silver
upward.
1899
The town
is
rebuilt
in one
and a
half
years!
The new
buildings
are more
substantial
- many
are
built of
brick
and
stone to
withstand
fire.
George
Wanning's
saloon
is the
first to
be
rebuilt.
1901
Silver
King
aerial
tramway
uses
buckets
to bring
ore down
to town,
lowering
transportation
cost to
22 cents
a ton
from
$1.50
per ton
when
hauled
by horse
and
wagon.
Dick
Smith, a
nineteen-year-old,
received
a
"blistered
bottom"
from his
mother
after he
climbed
a
tramway
tower,
inched
hand-over-hand
along
the
cable
and
climbed
down the
ladder
of the
next
tower.
1902
The
mines
are
going
strong,
with new
companies,
new
buildings
and
equipment.
William
Tretheway
is
honored
at a
special
banquet
for his
heroism
in
carrying
a case
of
burning
dynamite
from the
Silver
King
Mine. On
July 15,
34 men
from the
Daly
West
Mine die
in an
explosion
of a
large
underground
store of
dynamite,
which
also
produces
fatal
fumes.
Considered
the
worst
mine
disaster
in Park
City
history,
the
event
prompts
adoption
of a
state
law
forbidding
the
underground
storage
of large
amounts
of
explosives.
1904
The
Miners
Hospital
is built
for the
sum of
$5,000
raised
by local
businessmen
and the
Western
Federation
of
Miners
Local
#144.
Six
thousand
miners
are
treated
for
"Miner's
Con",
or
silicosis,
in the
first
year.
1906
One of
the
first
skiers
in the
area,
"Bud"
Wright
spends
the
winter
on skis
toubleshooting
as a
lineman
for the
telephone
company
between
Alta,
Brighton
and Park
City.
1907
Hard
times
befall
the
town,
with
cave-ins
and
flooded
tunnels
making
mining a
poor
enterprise.
The
panic of
1907
affects
the
whole
United
States,
causing
a
general
recession.
However,
the
economy
improves
by the
end of
1908.
1916
Heavy
snows
cause
fatal
snowslides
and the
collapse
of the
famed
Dewey
Theatre
(where
the Mary
G.
Steiner
Egyptian
Theatre
now
stands)
just
hours
after
300
patrons
finish
watching
the
evening
movie.
The
Great
Experiment
1917
The
prohibition
of
liquor
called
"the
Great
Experiment"
begins
in Utah,
two
years
before
the rest
of the
nation.
Bootleggers
abound;
stills
and
homebrewing
are
popular.
1918
The
great
influenza
epidemic
prompts
a law
requiring
anyone
on the
streets
to wear
a thick
gauze
mask or
be
arrested.
Consequently,
the
impact
of the
disease
is less
severe
in this
area.
1920
Skiing
becomes
more
widespread
as some
workers
take the
mine
train to
the top
of
Thaynes
Canyon
for a
ski trip
to the
bottom
of the
mountain,
the same
route
which is
used in
1964 for
the Mine
Train
Ride
which
moves
skiers
up the
mountain.
1921
There
are 27
bars in
Park
City
and,
despite
prohibition,
a
thirsty
soul
could
buy a
drink in
all but
one of
them.
Prohibition
continues
through
1932.
1929
The
stock
market
crashes.
Silver
King
stock
plummets
from
$12.87
to $6.50
in one
year.;
Park Con
from $2
to 27
cents. A
rope tow
is
installed
at Snow
Park
(now
Deer
Valley).
Skiing
Starts
with a
Jump
1930
A ski
jump is
built on
the
Creole
mine
dump.
Downhill
skiers
are few
and
skiing
is
mostly a
spectator
sport.
1931
Alf
Engen
sets a
world
record
at Ecker
Hill by
jumping
247
feet. In
all,
Engen
sets
five
world
records
at Ecker
Hill.
1934
Ski
jumper
Calmar
Andreasen,
hampered
by
strong
crosswinds
and
hardpacked
snow,
dies
from a
fall on
Ecker
Hill.
1936
The
town's
first
Winter
Carnival
is a
success,
with
more
than 500
skiers
arriving
in Deer
Valley
on the
ski
train -
a four
hour
journey
from
Salt
Lake
City.
1940
Swedes
and
Finns
carry
mail
over the
mountains
to
Brighton
and Alta
using
very
long
skis and
usually
only one
pole to
control
speed.
1941
December
7th,
Pearl
Harbor
is
attacked.
Subsequent
gas
rationing
prohibits
travel
to the
Ecker
Hill
site.
1946
The
first
lift is
installed
at Snow
Park
(now
Deer
Valley).
Mining
prices
continue
to drop.
Ghosts
Inhabit
Town
1949
On July
1, the
mines
shut
down,
putting
1,200
miners
out of
work.
1951
Park
City is
included
in a
book
called
"Ghost
Towns of
the
West"
indicating
no
population.
There
are
actually
1,150
"ghosts"
in town
at this
time.
1952
Some
mines
are
opening
as
mineral
prices
rise.
1954
People
are
leaving
town.
Welsh,
Driscoll
and
Buck's
department
store
closes
after 50
years.
The red
light
district
is
raided,
not an
uncommon
event.
Skiing
Gives
Town a
Lift
1958
United
Park
City
Mines
looks to
diversify
and
starts a
feasibility
study to
begin
the
Treasure
Mountain
Resort
(now
Park
City
Mountain
Resort).
1963
Park
City
qualifies
for a
federal
loan
from the
Area
Redevelopment
Agency.
The
government
gives
$1.25
million
and,
with
other
contributions,
a total
of $2
million
is used
to start
Treasure
Mountain
Resort.
A
gondola,
a
chairlift
and 2
J-bars
are
installed.
A lift
pass
costs
$3.50
and
there
are
almost
50,000
skier
days
logged
that
first
year.
1965
A mine
train
takes
skiers
into a
Silver
King
Mine
tunnel
then up
a shaft
to the
top of
the
mountain,
but the
trip
proves
too slow
to be
very
popular.
As word
of the
new ski
area
spreads,
people
start
moving
to Park
City.
Snow
Park is
open
weekends.
1966
Sports
Illustrated
magazine
includes
Treasure
Mountain
Resort's
PayDay
run
among
the
finest
ski runs
in the
country.
1968
Park
West Ski
Area
(now The
Canyons)
opens.
1969
Snow
Park
closes.
Art
Hits
Main
Street
1970
First
Park
City Art
Festival
debuts
on Main
Street.
1976
Kimball
Art
Center,
in the
old Eley
Garage
at 638
Main
Street,
opens
its
doors
with two
galleries,
a gift
shop,
and
classrooms.
1978
On
Valentine's
Day,
Park
City is
without
a
working
mine for
the
first
time in
over 100
years.
Despite
a rally
in the
early
80s,
mining
will be
over by
1982. A
skeleton
crew
keeps
the
water
pumped
out and
the
mines
open in
case the
price of
metals
increases
dramatically.
1979
The
Miners
Hospital,
threatened
with
demolition,
is moved
from its
site
near the
base of
the Park
City Ski
Area to
the City
Park for
its new
use as
the
City's
public
library.
1980
KPCW,
Summit
County's
public
radio,
goes on
the air.
1981
Deer
Valley
Resort
opens at
the site
of the
old Snow
Park
area.
The
United
States
Film and
Video
Festival,
highlighting
independent
films,
opens in
January
for the
first
season
in Park
City.
The
festival
has
since
become
the
Sundance
Film
Festival.
1982
After
extensive
renovation
on the
old
Miners
Hospital,
a human
chain
forms a
"book
brigade"
to move
the
thousands
of books
in the
collection
at the
original
library
on Main
Street
to its
new
location.
1984
There
are 14
lifts at
Park
City Ski
Area and
a day
pass is
$26,
with
500,000
skier
days.
1986
TV45,
Park
City's
television
station,
begins
broadcasting.
1990
The
estimated
year-round
resident
population
is
5,000.
Skier
days for
the
three
areas
are over
850,000.
1993
Parkites
witness
the
heaviest
snowfall
in 10
years.
The
public
library
moves
from the
Miners
Hospital
into the
old high
school
at 1255
Park
Ave. The
Utah
Winter
Sports
Park
(now The
Olympic
Park)
opens.
1995
Salt
Lake
City is
awarded
the 2002
Winter
Olympic
Games.
More
than 40%
of the
events
will be
held in
Park
City at
the Utah
Olympic
Park,
Deer
Valley,
and Park
City
Mountain
Resort.
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