Historical Marker · No. 1854
Brigham Young Home
St. George, Washington County · Utah
Erected by SUP
St. George exists because of cotton. In 1861, with the Civil War threatening the supply, Brigham Young called some three hundred families south to the Virgin River country to grow it — one colony among the hundreds he directed across the West, and one of the hardest. The settlers fought alkali soil and fewer than eight inches of rain a year, and Young visited annually to preach the mission forward. The cotton never really paid. The city it planted did: St. George is now among the fastest-growing corners of the country.
What the plaque says
Brigham Young was prophet and president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for 30 years. During those three decades he directed the establishment of more than three hundred communities throughout the American West. It was "Brother Brigham" as he was affectionately known, who sent the original company of settlers to St. George in 1861 to help establish the "Cotton Mission." His plan was to make the Latter-day Saints more self-sufficient by establishing communities in the south where cotton, grapes and other crops could be produced. The settlers struggled desperately during the early years when they attempted to grow crops in alkali soil with less than 8 inches of annual rainfall. It was Brigham's custom to visit the settlements once a year to preach and to uplift the Saints. During his visits to St. George he laid plans for the construction of the Tabernacle and the Temple, which became public work projects that helped to tide the settlers over during a period of dire poverty. Brigham decided early on to establish a winter home in St. George. But first a telegraph line from Salt Lake City would have to be built so that he could communicate with Church head-quarters and conduct business from Dixie. In 1871, he purchased a home one block north and one block west of here. The back portion of the house was already standing. It had been built by James Chesney in 1869. Brigham retained the original home and added the spacious two-story front section in 1873. At the age of 69, Brigham began spending winters in St. George, living in the home three to five months of the year until his death in 1877. This trend of wintering in Dixie is one which northerners have enjoyed ever since. He came here to take advantage of the mild winters, to nurse his rheumatism, and to free himself from the pressure of his duties as the Church president. The home now belongs to the LDS Church and has been refurnished as one of its historical landmarks. It stands as a symbol of the pioneers' success in creating a prosperous and civilized life in a desolate and isolated place.
Where it stands
37.10938, -113.58318 · Directions
Worth the stop nearby
- St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm — 2.6 miReal dinosaur footprints preserved in ancient sandstone
- Snow Canyon State Park — 7.0 miRed and white sandstone cliffs with ancient lava flows
- Hurricane Canal Trail — 17 miThe hand-dug canal that built Hurricane, now a walking trail blasted into the Virgin River gorge
- Kolob Canyons — 32 miThe quiet, uncrowded back door to Zion National Park
More markers nearby
- Erastus Snow's Big House — steps away
- Dixie Academy — steps away
- Pioneer Courthouse — steps away
- St. George Tabernacle — steps away