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Blogger I Am Woody said...

I have soooo got to go west!!

September 29, 2008 at 8:52 AM

Blogger Sarah said...

Love the B&W shots. Sepia work as well?

UP

September 29, 2008 at 6:40 PM

Blogger Enlightened Fox said...

Thank you for posting such an interesting history of the Frisco mines. My Grandmother grew up there her family hauled water from Milford up to the mines since there was no water.

I have visited the site several times as a kid and as an adult. You have great photos of it.

I wonder if adult bodies were buried in Milford instead of Frisco cemetery.

I also wonder if the Utah "beehive" symbol comes from the beehive ovens shape as much as from actual beehives.

January 13, 2011 at 10:23 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I was just there yesterday. I also felt the cemetery was quite depressing. In fact the whole area was depressing while fascinating at the same time. I didn't trust my car on the rough roads up to the kilns so we just viewed them from a distance. It looked like the kilns have been fenced off. I am now trying to find photos taken during Frisco's heyday if such photos were even taken and exist.

August 25, 2012 at 3:44 PM

Blogger Jillian said...

The reason Utah is called the beehive state because the original name of the state was Deseret. A Latter-day Saint religious word that means beehive. The pioneers called the territory that because of the new communities dedication to industry as bees are very industrious to create a beehive.

June 9, 2017 at 3:47 PM

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