Lehi Utah
5 Star hotel in Lehi Noni Juice headquarters Lehi Cemetery Home of Xango Dinosaur Museum Thanksgiving Point
www.cabelas.com 2502 W Grand Terrace Pkwy off Alpine Highway Exit 279 801) 766-2500
Micron and Intel joined forces to create a new technology called IMFLASH and lots of jobs
IM Flash Technologies www.imftech.com 1550 E 3400 N Lehi, UT 84043 Exit 279 Highland Hiway 801) 767-4000
IM Flash Technologies has a state-of-the-art, 300mm semiconductor manufacturing facility located near Salt Lake City, in Lehi, Utah. Discover more about living and working along the Wasatch Front of the Rocky Mountains. If you are looking for a job in Utah, consider a career with IM Flash.
The city of Lehi is centrally located between Salt Lake City and Provo, Utah, along the magnificent Wasatch Front. To the north, Salt Lake City is only 30 minutes away and Provo is a short drive to the south. This ideal location offers the best of Western living with all of the amenities of a big city nearby, including professional sports, legendary recreational areas, theater, ballet, and world-class shopping.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Utah's population has the fourth-longest life expectancy in the nation. Utah has the lowest cancer-death rate in the nation and the third-longest lifespan in the United States at 77.7 years. It is also among the top 10 states for low violent crime, a low risk for heart disease, a strong high school graduation rate, a low mortality rate, a low infant mortality rate, and a low premature death rate.
Lehi Utah
Lehi is a city in Utah County, Utah, in the United States. It is named after Lehi, a prophet in the Book of Mormon. A 2006 estimate placed its population at 36,021, making it one of the fastest-growing cities in the state. The center of population of Utah is located in Lehi. A group of Mormon pioneers settled the area now known as Lehi in the fall of 1850, at a place called Dry Creek, in the northernmost part of Utah Valley, near the head of Utah Lake. It was renamed Evansville in 1851, after David Evans, a local bishop in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The median income is about $55,000. Lehi is 26 miles from Salt Lake City.
The land was organized into parcels of forty acres, and new settlers received a plat of this size until the entire tract was exhausted. There was little water to irrigate the rich soil, so it became necessary to divert a portion of American Fork Creek. Evansville consumed up to one-third of the water as authorized by the Utah Territorial Legislature.
The settlement grew so rapidly that in early 1852, Bishop Evans petitioned the Utah Territorial Legislature to incorporate the settlement. Lehi City was incorporated by legislative act on February 5th, 1852. It was the sixth city incorporated in Utah. The legislature also approved a request to call the new city Lehi, after a Book of Mormon prophet of the same name.
Lehi, the northernmost community in Utah Valley, was first settled by a small group of Mormons in the fall of 1850. Known as Sulphur Springs that first year, the community later was named Dry Creek and then Evansville. Early in 1852 local bishop David Evans presented a petition to the Utah Territorial Legislature requesting that the community be incorporated. This request was granted on 5 February 1852, making the town Utah's sixth oldest. Also approved was Bishop Evans's suggestion that the town be named Lehi. Like the Book of Mormon patriarch of the same name, the colonizers of Lehi had been uprooted on numerous occasions before finally settling in their promised land.
Agriculture (producing wheat, oats, barley, and alfalfa) and animal industries (cattle ranching, sheep raising, dairying, poultry raising, fisheries, and mink ranching) have made a profound impact on the economic history of the community. With the establishment of the Utah Sugar Company's first plant in Lehi in 1890, the sugar beet became the town's most important cash crop and remained so until after World War I.
Important early industries in Lehi included Mulliner's Grist Mill (1856-90), the Lehi Banner newspaper (1891-1914), Lehi Cereal Mill (1922-74), Lehi Stone, Marble, and Granite Works (1897-1930), and the Standard Knitting Factory Company (1904-09).
A wide range of companies continue to maintain offices in Lehi in the 1990s.
Historical sites and points of interest in the area include the best-preserved portion of the Pony Express Trail in Utah (at the Point of the Mountain). Indian Ford at the Jordan River and Dugout--a Pony Express and Overland Trail station--are also located west of town. Seven People's Co-op buildings, once part of the ZCMI chain, remain in Lehi. The two most significant were recently recognized by ZCMI, which installed two replicas of the 1869 ZCMI sign on the building fronts.
Other important Lehi institutions include Broadbent's (since 1882), Lehi Roller Mills (since 1905), the Lehi Free Press (since 1932), Hutch's (since 1946), the Lehi Cafe (since 1958), La Casa Supper Club (since 1964), Porter's Place, named for the notorious Porter Rockwell (since 1971), and the Colonial Manor (the 1913-built Smuin Dancing Academy). The Colonial House, originally Racker Mercantile, is now a beautifully restored reception and hosting center.
The Lehi Memorial Building, the first municipal structure in America specifically erected to honor the memory of World War I veterans, is to be the home of the Hutchings Museum, which has won state and national accolades for the depth and variety of its collection.
Lehi City municipal offices are housed in new facilities. The city also boasts a new public library and senior citizens complex and a public safety building, both built in 1989. In addition to one of the finest culinary water systems in the state (a $3.74-million lead-free piping system, installed in 1989), the entire town is serviced by a pressurized irrigation system which was completed in 1990. Lehi's power collection and distribution system, the city's greatest single source of revenue, has been a boon to the community since 1964. At that time, city officials signed a long-term contract to purchase power from the Intermountain Consumer Power Association.
"Lehi is a good place to live," has been the community's official slogan since 1911. In addition to a safe, quiet, family-oriented environment, the town offers such recreational opportunities as Saratoga Resort to the southwest, Wines Park, Willow Park, the local Olympic-size swimming pool, Veteran's baseball park, Heritage Theatre, and the world-famous Lehi Roundup rodeo, which for the past half-century has continually drawn top cowboys from all over America.
Lehi attractions:
Thanksgiving Point is a new, 550 acre, non-profit attraction in Lehi, Utah that includes a championship golf course designed by Johnny Miller and recently named among the top ten new public courses in the country by Golf Magazine. The project also includes a fine-dining restaurant, bakery, soda fountain, animal park, idea gardens, nursery, gift shop emporium, flower cottage, vegetable gardens, outdoor reception facilities, fishing pond, pony rides, and much more. The Thanksgiving Point institute includes classes on gardening, cooking, crafts, and golfing. In the year 2000, Thanksgiving Point will complete a 70 acre estate garden that will be open to the public.
John Hutchings Museum of Natural History
55 N. Center St., Lehi
Phone: 801-768-7180
The museum houses a large collection of pioneer and Native American artifacts, bird specimens, and a collection of minerals and fossils.
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 11:00 am to 5:00 pm.
Adults: $2.50
Children 12 and over and Seniors: $2.00
Children under 12: $1.50
(Hours & prices are current as of 2006)
Lehi Bus Tours - (801) 768-4578 or 768-8665
Bus tours of Lehi's historic sites are available. Points of interest include the original Pony Express route and other frontier locales.
Lehi Round-up Celebration - Citywide celebration includes parades, chuckwagon breakfast, cowboy poetry, PRCA rodeo, picnic, entertainment. Free admission to Hutchings Museum on Tuesday. Contact - Mel Anderson (801) 768-9926 or 768-7100
Camp Floyd State Park/Stagecoach Inn 25 miles SW of Lehi on SR73. Site of former military post from the mid 1800's. Nearby Stagecoach Inn was an overnight stop on the historic Overland stage and Pony Express route. Open daily from Easter weekend throu Oct. 15. Call for more information - (801) 768-8932 (during season) or (801) 254-9036 (year-round)
Cabelas
New Hunting, Fishing and Outdoor Gear Store
The Utah store will be built in Cabela's style that evokes the feeling of the outdoors. Cabela's stores are known as top-notch educational and entertainment attractions, mixing a decor of museum-quality animal displays with colorful dioramas, huge aquariums stocked with native fishes and a centerpiece indoor mountain displaying trophy animals interacting in realistic re-creations of their natural habitats.
To operate the new store, Cabela's expects to employ as many as 400 people, who will join the Cabela's family of more than 8,000 employees. Employees are expected to come from Lehi and the surrounding area to join Cabela's family of staff members famous for their outdoor lifestyle and intimate knowledge of outdoor products.