Utah. Governor (1849-1857 : Young)

Brigham Young was the first territorial governor. He served fervently in this position from 1851 to1857. Brigham Young was elected as governor on 12 March 1849, when the citizens of the Provisional State of Deseret held their first election. On 9 September 1850 an act to establish a territorial government for Utah passed the United States Congress and Brigham Young was again the man for the governorship. President Millard Fillmore appointed him on 28 September 1850. The news of the newly created territory did not reach Utah until January and Brigham Young took his oath of office on 3 February 1851. He set to work changing the provisional government to the territorial form of government.

Utah was a pristine, ungoverned area that resulted in vast and various responsibilities with the governorship. The governor had the responsibility of molding and structuring a territory--turning undeveloped land into a settled area with laws. The territory needed a public education system, irrigation, development and many other things to create a successful territory. The governor was also the Superintendent of Indian Affairs and with that came the responsibility of pacifying the Native Americans and protecting the settlers from attacks. During Governor Young's terms in office land was cleared, roads and bridges built, a public welfare system created, a militia organized and a mail service initiated. These are only a few samples of what occurred while Brigham Young was governor.

...

Publication Date Publishing Account Status Note View

2023-09-19 04:09:55 pm

Gina Strack

published

User published constellation

Details HRT Changes Compare

2016-08-10 07:08:13 pm

System Service

published

Details HRT Changes Compare

2016-08-10 07:08:13 pm

System Service

ingest cpf

Initial ingest from EAC-CPF

Pre-Production Data