Tag Archive: salt lake city

Saltair Train Car 502 – Great Salt Lake – Utah

Saltair Train Car 502 - Great Salt Lake - Utah

The abandoned Salt Lake Garfield & Western Railroad Car 502 sits on in the desert grasslands that surround the Great Salt Lake outside of Salt Lake City, Utah. Also known as the Saltair Train, in its heyday, the train car ferried passengers back and forth between the old Saltair resort that stands on the edge of the lake.

Beginning in 1893, the Saltair Resort went through at least 3 different incarnations. The latest one, began with the construction of new facility out of an old military hanger in 1981. However the unpredictable water levels of the Great Salt Lake which went from flooding the new building shortly after it opened, to leaving the venue a significant distance from the edge of the lake, caused the resort to be abandoned for much of the last four decades. But in recent times, it has become a location for smaller, independent music concerts.

Salt Lake City Downtown Winter Skyline – Utah

Salt Lake City Downtown Winter Skyline - Utah

A view of downtown Salt Lake City at sunset, with the prominent snow-covered Wasatch mountains rising above some of the city’s largest skyscrapers. At the center of the picture is Temple Square, and one of the Mormon Churches first temples built over a 40 year period, and opened in 1893. Also visible is the Mormon Tabernacle completed in 1867, and home to the famous Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

The last rays of the sun reflect off skyscraper buildings, even the first light of evening appear in the temple’s spires.

Lincoln Highway Marker – Sugarhouse, Utah

Lincoln Highway Marker - Sugarhouse, Utah

A marker for the Lincoln Highway, found in Sugarhouse, Utah, a neighborhood in Salt Lake City. The Lincoln Highway was the first transcontinental highway in the United States, and the first built specifically for the automobile. The Lincoln Highway runs coast-to-coast from Times Square in New York City west to Lincoln Park in San Francisco. Its total original length upon completion in 1913 was 3,389 miles.  The concrete highway marker in the picture, is one of 3,000 erected along the highway by Boy Scout troops in 1928. The highway is named after Abraham Lincoln,  the 19th president of the United States. He is best known for his time in office during the Civil War, and the formal freeing of the slaves with the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863.