History
Courtesy of Wikepedia,
The Online Encyclopedia
Saltair is the name which
has been given to several resorts located on the southern shore of the
Great Salt Lake in Utah, about fifteen miles from Salt Lake City.
The first Saltair, completed
in 1893, was jointly owned by a corporation associated with the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly called "Mormons") and the
Salt Lake and Los Angeles Railroad Company (which originally served the
site). Saltair was not the first resort built on the shores of the Great
Salt Lake, but was the most successful ever built. It rested on over 2,000
posts and pilings, many of which remain and are still visible over 110
years later.
Saltair was a family place,
intended to provide a safe and wholesome atmosphere with the open supervision
of Church leaders. While some of the other resorts in the area were seen
as "spiritually bleak," a young couple could visit Saltair without worrying
about the gossip. Train schedules from Saltair to stations near home were
well known, and so long as the boy got the girl home at a reasonable time
after the train arrived, parents weren't worried -- in part because, from
the moment of arriving at the station before the outing until they left
the station coming home, they were never out of sight of trusted members
of the Church. More than once, a couple on the way home found themselves
in the same car as their parents, who themselves had been dancing at Saltair.
Intended
from the beginning as the Western counterpart to Coney Island, Saltair
was one of the first amusement parks, and for a time was the most popular
family destination west of New York. Some criticism was pointed at the
Church over the sale of coffee, tea or alcohol (all of which are prohibited
by Mormon doctrine), as well as Saltair's being open on Sunday.
The first Saltair resort
was destroyed by fire in 1920. A new resort was built nearby by new investors
(again, mostly prominent Mormons), but several factors prevented the second
Saltair from achieving the success of its ancestor. The advent of motion
pictures and radio, the Great Depression, and the interruption of the "go
to Saltair" routine kept people closer to home. With a huge new dance floor
-- the world's largest -- Saltair became more known as a dance palace,
the amusement park becoming secondary to the great travelling bands of
the day, such as Glenn Miller. Though Saltair showed motion pictures, there
were other theaters more convenient to town.
In
addition, the first Saltair had benefitted from its location on the road
from Salt Lake City to the Tooele Valley and to Skull Valley, which in
the late 1800s was home to Losepa, a large community of Polynesian Mormons.
Being near the fork in the road, Saltair also served as the first (or last)
major facility on the road, making it a popular resting area for those
travelling by horseback or wagon. When Saltair was rebuilt, however, this
traffic was all but gone. Part of the reason was due to the advent of automobiles,
bus and train service to the Tooele Valley, but the other cause was the
abandonment of Losepa, as Polynesians went to homes in the Salt Lake Valley
or the community forming around the new LDS Temple in Laie, on Oahu in
the Hawaiian Islands.
Saltair thus had to survive
solely against strong competition, and in a dwindling market. Disaster
struck in 1931, in the form of a fire which caused over $100,000 in damage,
then again in 1933 as the resort was left high and dry when lake waters
receded (forcing the construction of a miniature railway to carry swimmers
between the resort and the water). Saltair was forced to close during the
Second World War, which forced the rationing of fuel and other resources
while it took many of the resort's paying customers -- and vital employees
-- out of Utah. Reopening after the war, the resort found the same situation
that it had faced in the 1930's. There were so many other entertainment
options, closer to home, and the public was no longer in the habit of going
"all the way out there." The final nail in Saltair's coffin was television,
and the resort closed in 1958.
Key scenes of the horror
cult film released in 1962, Carnival of Souls, were shot in Saltair.
Attempts over the next decade
to breath new life into the resort finally ended in November of 1970, when
a fire was set in the center of the wooden dance floor, again destroying
Saltair.
Close proximity to Interstate
Highway 80, plus new population expansion into the Tooele Valley and the
western Salt Lake Valley, prompted the construction of a new Saltair in
1981. Once again the lake was a problem, this time flooding the new resort
only months after it opened! The waters again receded after several years,
and again new investors restored and repaired and planned, only to discover
that the waters continued to move back away from the site, again leaving
it high and dry.
Concerts and other events
have been held at the newest facility, but by the end of the 1990s, Saltair
was little more than a memory, too small to compete with larger venues
which are closer to the public. While there is occasionally activity of
one sort or another at the site, today by December 2004, the third Saltair
sat all but abandoned, sitting behind gates and fences.
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In spring & summer of
2005, a new round of investors puchased Saltair to bring life back into
the music venue of the 1990's that has seen bands ranging from Dave Matthews
Band to The Black Crowes to many other great musicians. The partnership
of Saltair, LLC include a property developer and concert promoter Tom LaPenna
of Lucky
Man Productions, LLC. Saltair’s ownership welcomes all
types of events from concerts, comedy, private functions, trade shows,
wedding receptions, sporting events, car shows, etc. The venue is available
for rent (contact us). Click
here to see our rental rate sheet.
A Beach Boys album cover,
circa 1967, taken at The Saltair.
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More Saltair Resources:
Information taken from Wikepdia,
The Online Encyclopedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saltair,_Utah
The Saltair Resort:
http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/Quarters/7736/saltair.html
The Saltair Resort:
http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/Quarters/7736/saltair.html
Saltair Photos:
http://dhke.com/railroad/utah/saltair.htm
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