Mormon Station State Historic Park Explained

Mormon Station State Historic Park
Photo Width:280
Photo Alt:Building
Map:Nevada
Map Width:280
Relief:1
Label:Mormon Station State Historic Park
Location:Genoa, Nevada, United States
Coords:39.0044°N -119.8453°W
Area:3.54acres
Elevation:4807feet
Established:1957
Free Label:Named for
Designation:Nevada state historic park

Mormon Station State Historic Park is a state park in downtown Genoa, Nevada, interpreting the site of the first permanent nonnative settlement in Nevada. Mormon Station was originally settled by Mormon pioneers and served as a respite for travelers on the Carson Route of the California Trail. The park offers artifacts and exhibits about the station's history housed in a replica of the 1851 trading post stockade which burned down in 1910.

Preservation

In June 1910, a large fire swept through Genoa, destroying a number of structures, including what remained of the Mormon Station trading post.[1] Reconstruction of the trading post structures began in 1947 with $5,000 provided by the Nevada Legislature. Legislation in 1955 authorized the transfer of management of the property to the Division of State Parks, which took place in 1957. The site is memorialized with a tablet erected by the Sons of Utah Pioneers in 1991 and Nevada Historical Marker 12.

See also

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Notes and References

  1. News: . Loss by Fire at Genoa Will Exceed Thirty Thousand Dollars . . . June 29, 1910 . 47 . 152 . 1 . The buildings destroyed and the estimates of loss are as follows...the old log cabin which was the first building built in the State of Nevada and whose value as a historical relic was priceless..