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Show '~; fcw ,M^'X^ "jsJ^Sr^C - ,* - -#*jy* * " • ' - - » » - " ' ^ .* 4 ».%£«., a $k> c*i n TfftwfTTfi T\ IIiiiifffifff *t m tF< r '*&&* ip i Anthony W. Ivins home in St. George. USHS collections. ^•••••••••IHH i HI ,* ! IV ^-l Airs. Gramb's boardinghouse at Silver Reef, 1880s. USHS collections. I "'' • sffl < f" The People Vi * I >. i •'»*••» iHLiJI UU n Hft * • -&**& I%#-J ^fe .'*, • • The people were a diverse lot, just as they should be. Although poverty was a part of "making a go of it" for many people, it was not universal; and gentility and sophistication were as much a part of society as were hard work and simplicity. The clothes they wore and the houses they occupied tell a great deal about them, but their faces tell us even more. Dry-farm settlers pose before their first house at Blue Creek in northern Utah, 1911. Courtesy Utah State University. |