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5.
Salt Lake City LDS Temple
PI-60 Building Stones of Downtown
Salt Lake City, A Walking Tour
Temple Square
The
Salt Lake City LDS Temple was constructed between 1853 and 1893
of quartz monzonite from the Little Cottonwood stock in Little Cottonwood
Canyon.
Photo courtesy of the Utah Travel Council.
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The gray, granite-like stone (quartz monzonite) used to build the
cathedral-like Salt Lake City LDS Temple was quarried at the mouth
of Little Cottonwood Canyon, about 20 miles to the southeast in
the Wasatch Range.
Temple construction began in 1853, six years after the first influx
of Mormon pioneers (members of the LDS Church) entered the Salt
Lake Valley, and was completed 40 years later in 1893.
Workmen cut the stone from enormous boulders at the base of Little
Cottonwood Canyon and initially hauled the three-ton blocks from
the canyon to the temple site by ox teams, making the trip in three
to five days. The blocks later traveled by rail cars after completion
of the railroad and a branch track to the quarry in 1873.
Inspired by LDS scripture, carved religious symbols and inscriptions
encircle the temple, including moon-stones, sun-stones, earth-stones,
cloud-stones, star-stones, and the all-seeing eye and the clasped-hand
motifs. Seven stars depicting the constellation Ursa Major (the
Big Dipper) are carved on the west center tower.
Stone
masons working on quartz monzonite blocks used in the construction
of the LDS Temple, 1874. The LDS Tabernacle is in the background.
Photo courtesy of the Utah State Historical Society.
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Only the recommended faithful of the LDS church can enter the temple,
and only by an underground tunnel from the Temple Annex, the building
located north of the temple. The main temple doors are sealed awaiting
Jesus' second coming.
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