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History
Cedar
Hills is built upon an alluvial fan, or bench, created thousands of years
ago when it was a shoreline of Lake Bonneville. Early settlers referred
to the area as “the Bench.” Because of the growth of cedar
trees (later becoming Manila’s source of Christmas trees), the area
was later referred to as Cedar Hills. The bench provides a beautiful view
of the surrounding mountains, Utah Lake, and Utah Valley. Cedar
Hills was established as a community in 1977. The surrounding cities such
as Pleasant Grove and Alpine were settled in 1849 and 1850.
Various forms of wildlife flourished in the area. Coyotes prowled along the bench.
Wild cats, red foxes, bears, deer, skunks, and rabbits also lived in the
area. Some deer, skunks, and rabbits can still be seen around Cedar Hills.
The dry bench upon which Cedar Hills is located provided little attraction
to Native Americans. They preferred camping near streams,
such as in American Fork Canyon. Several Native American artifacts were
found upon the bench, however, including an Indian bowl (found by
Paul Adams and currently on display at a Brigham Young University museum) and numerous
arrowheads. The arrowheads were probably dropped during skirmishes between
the Utah Valley Indians and the Shoshones.
Between 1849 and 1850, early settlers began to make their homes in settlements
around Cedar Hills. A large portion of Cedar Hills was used for dry farming,
which proved to be unsuccessful. A few planted plots existed among the
sage brush. Much of the area was used to pasture livestock. Other forms
of livelihood among early settlers of Cedar Hills included trapping and
turkey farming.
The bench became a turkey ranch. The David Evans Company Advertising Agency,
advertiser for the National Turkey Federation, would take pictures of
the Adams turkey ranch because of its impressive background. In 1939,
the National Poultry Congress in Cleveland, Ohio, displayed photographs
of turkeys raised on the beautiful bench upon which Cedar Hills is now
located. And, as NBC ran a news story about turkey farming on the bench, the photographer
was taken back by the beauty of the bench and continued to say, “beautiful,
beautiful.” In 1962, the Saturday Evening Post also ran stories
about turkeys living upon the bench.
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