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The Mormon settlers applied for statehood in 1849 under the name Deseret, a word from the sacred Book of Mormon meaning “honeybee” and signifying industry. This bid was rejected, as were the efforts of five subsequent constitutional conventions between 1856 and 1887. Before the U.S. Congress and the national administration would assent to statehood for Utah, Mormon leaders were required to discontinue the church’s involvement in politics through its People’s Party, withdraw from an economic policy in which Mormons dealt primarily with each other, and discontinue the practice of polygamy.
Assimilation into the Union and later developments
After its acceptance into the Union in 1896, Utah moved rapidly into the mainstream of the country. The political structure changed from theocracy to a conventional democracy, and non-Mormons were elected to important positions, including the office of governor. The Mormon church has been officially neutral in politics since the early 1900s, although its doctrines are generally conservative.
Utah, devoted to farming and ranching, was generally little known to and little visited by outsiders until the 1940s, when the U.S. military established several bases and other facilities in the state; the most prominent, Tooele Army Depot, remains a centre for the storage of munitions. A boom in mining in the postwar era brought new immigrants to the state, which experienced fresh growth in the 1960s and 1970s parallel to that of other southwestern states.
In the early 1980s, torrential floods devastated much of the Salt Lake City area. Explosive population growth in the Wasatch Front continued in the last decades of the 20th century, a pattern that brought on urban sprawl, air pollution, gridlock, and other ills. The small towns of Moab, adjacent to Arches National Park on the Colorado River, and Cedar City and St. George in southwestern Utah, also saw dramatic growth during this period. The fact that the majority of the newcomers were non-Mormon caused concern among residents of longer standing regarding the preservation of the state’s cultural traditions.
A scandal involving the Salt Lake Organizing Committee (SLOC) tainted the run-up to the capital’s hosting of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games, but the committee and the city rebounded to stage a successful Games. A consortium of federal and local government agencies developed an urban plan for Salt Lake City that included the construction of new highways and a light-rail system. Despite these measures, however, planners predicted that resources would still be strained as Utah’s population continued to grow rapidly.