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Show 38 Though lacking the "raw material," and skill to knowledge In month alone one produce beveled two-htmdred and the iornnns and stained forty-four did possess the glass windows. "farmers, convert joiners, shoemakers, rope-makers; watch-makers, engine-makers, tailors, weavers, butchers, bakers, painters, potters, masons, dyers, iron-moulders, glass-cutters, nail-makers, basket-makers, gun-makers, saddlers, miners, sawyers" took ,,16 ship from Liverpool. sm! tbs Including craftsmen from the Old World, where the stained ty glass were best the wants to meet windows made art the railroad during glass the was by three years, exampes on adobe flanking building on No of some of the some first Preceding of the last wagons City). freight trips, old Millcreek Built in 1867, the chapel on it still stands with its east and west sides, pioneer feeling for style, beauty, and 90). abili has since been bricked and adorned with windows, yet the Salt Lake with glass of its members. of the Mormon-Missouri 3900 South, East techniques of early imported glass. brought ••• of many skilled equipped was made into the decorative windows of the additional art dows are from the six-year period chapel (600 original today and designs for architectural art shipwrights population learned, the' Church Still in existence leaded a and doubt other art creation original win reminders of the (see slides #88- glass windows made from glass carted wagons have survived in out Utah; lacking documentation perhaps, but bearing equally interesting histories. Art ever, glass until the in Mormon railroad architecture saw little development, hm brought in great quantities of glass at |