We were back in Salt Lake on Monday evening for Lance's week long training. During the week we visited this neat place called Saltair. Originally built in the late 1800's as a day resort, Saltair was the most-visited resort in the nation, 2nd to Coney Island. It was destroyed by fire, then rebuilt to boast the largest dance floor in the United States. A second fire took it to the ground again, but investors, mostly prominent LDS leaders, continued to rebuild - this time including an amusement park. Many believed Saltair just wasn't meant to be when it caught fire for the third time! The remains sat vacant for many years until the 1980's when it was rebuilt with a water park. The Great Salt Lake has risen and receded many times in the past century, and just a couple years after completion, the water park flooded. Saltair is now used as a music venue. We enjoyed going through the old building and seeing all the old photos time lining its' history. There once was a train that carried visitors out to the resort, which sat on over 2000 log stilts, and today one of the boxcars from that train is still there. Many people still visit the area to swim and sail from the marina just a mile down the road.
2 comments:
Hello,
I am curious if you could provide the sources for the great historic photographs? I am interested to see if the originals could be viewed in an archive.
Thanks.
Hi, great photos. I just wanted to point out that the current Saltair has nothing to do with the historic Saltair. In 1970 Saltair burnt to the ground. The location of the original Saltair is about two miles east of the Music venu using the same name. The current one is a old aircraft hanger that was moved to its current location in the early 1980's. Made to have a similar look to the old Saltair. It only shares the name of the historic Saltair and nothing else. Anyone can enjoy many photos of the original Saltair and Saltair 2 from the Utah Historical Society's website
https://heritage.utah.gov/search-results?q=saltair&sa=Search&cx=011332109034691905717%3Anqyvppbthi8&cof=FORID%3A10&ie=UTF-8&siteurl=https%3A%2F%2Fheritage.utah.gov&ref=&ss=
Post a Comment