Dixie is a nickname for the populated, lower-elevation area of south-central Washington County, the southwest corner of the State of Utah, bordering nearby Arizona to the south, and Nevada to the west. The area lies in the northeastern Mojave Desert, south of Black Ridge and west of the Hurricane Cliffs. Its winter climate is significantly milder than the rest of Utah.
Originally settled by Southern Paiutes, the area became part of the United States after the Mexican–American War, in the subsequent Mexican Cession of 1849 of lands in the old Southwest. The following year, portions of it were organized by the United States Congress and approved by the U.S. president as the new federal Utah Territory. In 1854, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) moved to the area from the Great Salt Lake region to establish church president and territorial governor Brigham Young's intended Indian mission in the region. [1] After arrival, the settlers led by Jacob Hamblin in Santa Clara, began growing cotton and other temperate cash crops in and around the town. By 1860, the Paiute native population had declined due to disease and gradual displacement by the new white settlers. [2] [3]
Because of the warmer climate, the importance of cotton crops grown in the region, and the Southern origin of some early settlers, the area was nicknamed Utah's "Dixie”. This referenced the original Dixie, the nickname for The South of the eleven southern states of the United States further east that had seceded and formed the temporarily independent Confederate States of America government, which lost the subsequent American Civil War.
The area was first referred to as the "Cotton Mission", in response to Brigham Young's 14th General Epistle issued in October 1856. Although he determined that the Great Basin region surrounding the Great Salt Lake and extending to the west and south be self-sufficient, but it was not at first. He criticized his fellow Latter-day Saints as "quite negligent in raising cotton and flax.” His emphatic command was: "And let our brethren who have the means, bring on cotton and woolen machinery, that we may be enabled to manufacture our own goods, so fast as we shall be able to supply ourselves with the raw material...." [4]
"[The] first groups of settlers [arriving in Spring 1857] – the Adair and Covington Companies – were from further east in the southern states, mainly from Mississippi, Alabama, Virginia, Texas, and Tennessee." [5] While there is no indication that slavery was practiced in Utah's cotton farming, Robert Dockery Covington, the leader of the second company of Latter-day Saints, was a former slave overseer and was listed in earlier U.S. Decennial Census records as owning eight slaves per the 1840 Census, [6] which made "farming a very profitable occupation.” It is unknown whether Covington had grown cotton or supervised slaves who grew cotton. [7] A contemporary said: "He was a strong Rebel sympathizer and rejoiced whenever he heard of a Southern victory." [8] [9] Covington was the first president of the LDS Church's Washington Branch. [10] Covington's first counselor was Alexander Washington Collins, who the contemporary said was a former slave driver known to publicly and humorously tell horrific stories of whippings and rapes of his slaves. [8] [9] [11]
Andrew Larson's landmark history of the area in 1992 states that it was already referred to as “Dixie" by 1857:
Already the settled area of the Virgin Valley was being called Utah's "Dixie". The fact that cotton would grow there, as well as tobacco and other semi-tropical plants such as the South, produced made it easy for the name to stick. The fact that the settlers at Washington were bona fide Southerners who were steeped in the lore of cotton culture—many of them, at least—clinched the title. Dixie it became, and Dixie it remained. ... The name "Dixie" is one of those distinctive things about this part of Utah ... It is a proud title.
— Andrew Larson, I Was Called to Dixie (p. 185) [Emphasis in original]
"[T]he harsh environment, the intense heat of summer, the continual toil, and the ravages of malaria . . . led some of the settlers to desert the place at the end of the first season." [12] In the fall of 1858, it was reported "that of approximately 400 acres planted to cotton only 130 acres could be counted a success". [13] Cultivation of cotton and food crops depended on irrigation, which was a collective activity. [14] There were regular food shortages, including "the 'starving time' when many people were reduced to eating pigweed, alfalfa, and carrot top greens in lieu of a more substantial diet". [15] The area's culture included a shared religion, shared suffering and success, and even a collective economy for a time. [16]
The Cotton Mission did not work as well as Young had hoped. Yields in the test fields were not as high as expected, and growing cotton never gained economic viability, although a cotton mill was built and used for a few years in the Town of Washington. [17] "[C]onsistent operation of the Factory" ended in 1897. [18]
Local residents and others in Utah used “Dixie" to refer to the area. In 1915, the LDS Church-sponsored St. George Stake Academy, founded four years earlier in 1911, officially became reorganized, secularized and renamed as the Dixie Academy (now Utah Tech University). [19] Shortly thereafter, "Dixie" was painted on Sugarloaf, the nearby prominent red rock hill above the county seat town of St. George. “Dixie Rock,” as it became known, previously had been painted with the year of the college's graduating class and a "D.” [20]
The wider option of Dixie occurred during a period of nostalgic American Civil War history revisionism, including the Lost Cause of the Confederacy myth. Dixie and The South became idealized "by the many attentions of northern artists to southern mythology, the North's fascination with aristocracy and lost causes, the national appeal of the agrarian myth, and the South's personification of that ideal, to say nothing of the North's persistent use of the South in the manipulation of her own racial mythology." [21] [22] Dozens of institutions and businesses in the area of southwest Utah over the decades adopted and used the name "Dixie". [23]
Links between southwest Utah's Dixie region and the old southern Confederacy re-emerged in 1952, when then-Dixie Junior College athletics teams adopted 'Rebel' as their nickname and the school made its mascot as a Confederate Army soldier in 1956. By the end of the 1950s, the Confederate battle flag of 1863 was regularly flown as a school symbol." [23] These changes were contemporaneous with the nearby University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV) across the state line to the west similar adoption of the "Rebel" character name, mascot and other symbols, like "a cartoon wolf with a Confederate uniform.” [24] They also occurred during the emerging intensifying simultaneously of the nation-wide civil rights movement in the 1950s, 1960s and extending into the 1970s, against racial differences and discrimination/ segregation in the post-World War II era, between 33rd U.S. President Harry S. Truman and his then controversial executive decision to racial integration and gradual elimination of segregation and discrimination in all the military branches of the United States Armed Forces in 1947 and the subsequent later landmark Brown v. Board of Education famous legal case with the unanimous decision by the United States Supreme Court in the federal national capital city of Washington, D.C., issued in May 1954, outlawing future racial segregation in the nation's public schools. [25]
On a "parade float called 'Gone With the Plow', dating from the late 1960s, a man with his skin painted black pushe[d] a plow while a white student, formally dressed with a top hat, [held] what appear to be reins or a whip". [26]
John Jones and Dannelle Larsen-Rife wrote on behalf of the Southern Utah Anti-Discrimination Coalition, listing many Confederacy-related activities at Dixie State College, including “black-face minstrel shows (through October 2012), mock slave auctions (through the early 1990s), [27] Confederate flags (continuing to the present), and numerous other associations to the Confederacy prevalent on this campus (The "Rebel" mascot as recently as 2008, "True Rebel Night" is ongoing; The Dixie Confederate yearbook into the 1990s)." [28]
The Salt Lake Tribune recounted photos in Dixie College yearbooks, called for years as The Confederate. "[A]s late as the early 1990s [w]hite students sing in black face, dress as Confederate soldiers, stage slave auctions and affectionately display the Confederate battle standard." [26] [29] The local newspaper The Spectrum reviewed and published excerpts from local newspapers and Dixie College publications that contained Confederate related activities, photographs, and references. [30]
In March 1987 and 1988, the community held a festival called a "Secession", presided over by then 13th Governor of Utah, Norman Bangerter, in 1987, and in the following year by Wilford Brimley, the famous actor and Utah native, in 1988. [31] Events included a grand Southern-style ball presided over by a costumed Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara, who also participated in many publicity photos. [32] A 40-foot Confederate flag was hung over St. George Boulevard. [33] Smaller Confederate flags were displayed widely by city, county and school officials in promotional photographs. The former St. George local daily newspaper Washington County News (now merged into The Spectrum and Daily News of the Gannett Company nation-wide media chain), front-page masthead included the old Confederate battle flag and the slogan that it was published in “St. George, Confederate State of Dixie", and the headline puckishly reading that the "Area About to Leave Union Again". [34]
Controversy over the use of "Dixie" has repeatedly arisen in the larger Southern Utah community.
The Confederate flag was removed as a Dixie College symbol in 1993. The Confederate soldier 'Rodney the Rebel' was eliminated as the mascot in 2005 and the nickname 'Rebels' was discontinued in 2007. [23]
That same year, the Dixie State College administration considered affiliation with the University of Utah, and “U.U. officials said dropping the 'baggage' of Dixie would be mandatory." "'Dixie' has connotations of the Old South, the Confederacy, and racism,’ Randy Dryer, then the U.U. trustees' chairman, wrote to the academic journal The Chronicle of Higher Education." [26] The affiliation with the University of Utah did not happen at that time.
In 2012, many articles appeared as the college was about to make "the leap to university status next year". [26] The Salt Lake Tribune , the state's largest and influential daily newspaper in the state capital and largest city in Utah, editorialized that the school needed a new name based on the pioneer origin of the name, and Confederacy-honoring practices of the students. [35] An African American student told the Tribune he was shocked to find old college yearbooks with photos "of students in blackface, holding mock slave auctions, dressed in Confederate uniforms and staging parade floats and skits that seem to ridicule blacks, such as a crowd in black face behind a white student dressed as a Col. Sanders-type figure. 'In 1968 they were still doing minstrel shows,'" he said. [36] The college student body president said in 2012 that when "on recruiting trips to California that he encountered students unwilling to consider studying at a place called Dixie. "One said, 'Your name makes me shudder,' and walked away ..." Faculty members who raised the issue complained about being asked to leave the community. [37]
In July 2015, following the Charleston, South Carolina, shootings at a downtown prominent Black / African American church by Dylann Roof, Dannelle Larsen-Rife again editorialized for renaming Dixie State University. [38] She was interviewed on an episode of the state-wide public radio program "RadioWest" on station KUER-FM, with professors from the University of Utah and the University of Wyoming. [39] A substantial statue of rebel soldiers and a horse, with a Confederate flag displayed, was returned to its sculptor. [40]
In 2020, in the wake of the incident of the murder of George Floyd by city police officers in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the extensive nation-wide subsequent protests, the issue again returned to the forefront of public attention. Jamie Belnap, a former resident of St. George, wrote "Now, seven years after the vote at DSU [to retain the Dixie name], murmurings about the name 'Dixie' have begun again. There's a new petition and, unsurprisingly, online detractors from the community have already begun to emerge.... Isn't it time DSU sends a message to its students of color that it cares more about equality than nostalgia?" [41] On December 14, 2020, the University's board of trustees voted to recommend removing the word Dixie from the school's name. The 2021 session of the Utah Legislature meeting in the Utah State Capitol in Salt Lake City voted to take the recommendation, starting a year-long process to solicit input and consider alternative names. [42] [43] The Board of Trustees of D.S.U. and the Utah State Board of Education both voted unanimously voted to move forward with the new name of "Utah Tech University". Earlier than expected, after in November 2021, the Utah State Legislature was called into a special session by 18th Governor of Utah Spencer Cox (born 1975, serving since 2021). While the primary purpose for that session was to approve redistricting maps following the 2020 U.S. Decennial Census, The name change bill for Dixie State was also included on topics to be raised and discussed by Utah legislators that term. [44] While the issue continued to be contentious, the decision to bring the issue early into special session at the State Capitol was made because leaders felt no more information was needed, only a vote and decision. Both chambers of the bicameral state legislature voted on November 10, 2021 to change the name of the university near St. George to Utah Tech University effective eight months later in July 2022. [45]
In 2020, controversy also affected the name of the Dixie Convention Center. After a rebranding study, the governing board voted to change the Dixie Center name to Greater Zion Convention Center, consistent with the area's already renamed Greater Zion Convention and Tourism Office, which had an earlier name change the year before in 2019. [46] "The vote to change [the Convention Center name] to Greater Zion on June 23 led to a flood of social media posts and an online petition that gathered over 17,000 signatures of public citizens in favor of keeping Dixie as the name." [47] "[A]fter a public comment period in which multiple community members expressed strong support of the Dixie name, the Interlocal Agency amended the motion to temporarily revert to the Dixie Center name and to meet again on the issue in six months." [48]
A substantial number of citizens gathered at the St. George City offices July 2, 2020 to advocate for retaining the "Dixie" names. [49] [50] Joey Sammons Ashby, who organized the event as part of the Protect Dixie effort, [51] said "People in St. George are not racist.... We were never racist — never...." "You're not going to get rid of racism, but, instead of complaining, think about the blessings black people have." "Because of their ancestors, they're able to be an American, they were able to be born here, they're able to do something for themselves because this is America. This is America, and they can pull up their bootstraps and do it if they want to. There's plenty of people to help the blacks right now so instead of complaining, do something." "We used to have minstrel shows here in St. George. It was in fun, it was nothing racist." "I used to dress up with a blackface for Halloween. I think actually it was a compliment to want to look like a blackface." [52]
On July 16, 2020, Intermountain Health Care announced that the Dixie Regional Medical Center’s name would become Intermountain St. George Regional Hospital effective six months later on January 1, 2021. Mitch Cloward, hospital administrator, said "The meaning of Dixie is not clear for everyone. For some, it only requires explanation; for others, who are not from this area, it has offensive connotations.... Our hospital name should be strong, clear and make everyone we serve feel safe and welcome." [53]
St. George, founded in 1861, largest town and current county seat of Washington County, Utah [54] when The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) patriarch / church president and territorial governor Brigham Young (1801-1877), selected 300 families to take over that southern area of the old federal Utah Territory (1850-1896), and grow cotton, grapes, and other crops, is the largest community in the area. [54] : 3 Other communities in surrounding Washington County of the southwestern corner of Utah, include Ivins, Santa Clara, Hurricane, La Verkin, and Toquerville. The population is nearly 180,000 in the St. George metropolitan area. [55] [56]
“Dixie” is almost exclusively used to refer to Washington County itself. However, it sometimes is used to refer to a larger region, including nearby Kane (to the east), and Iron (to the north) adjacent counties, or an even broader definition of across southern Utah. The term "Payson–Dixon line" (a humorous phonetic play on the words / geographic term of the 18th century's famous Mason–Dixon line further east in the Eastern United States of the border between Pennsylvania to the north and Maryland / Delaware to the south, laid out and drawn in 1763-1767, by surveyors Charles Mason (1728-1786), and Jeremiah Dixon (1733-1779). It was the longtime traditional borderline between slave and free states in the 19th century before the American Civil War (1861-1865), The term implies that everything south of the town of Payson and the Wasatch Front range of mountains generally is considered "Dixie". [57] [58]
Utah is a landlocked state in the Mountain West subregion of the Western United States. It is one of the Four Corners states, sharing a border with Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico. It also borders Wyoming to its northeast, Idaho to its north, and Nevada to its west. In comparison to all the U.S. states and territories, Utah, with a population of just over three million, is the 13th largest by area, the 30th most populous, and the 11th least densely populated. Urban development is mostly concentrated in two regions: the Wasatch Front in the north-central part of the state, which includes the state capital, Salt Lake City, and is home to roughly two-thirds of the population; and Washington County in the southwest, which has somewhat more than 180,000 residents. Most of the western half of Utah lies in the Great Basin.
Washington County is a county in the southwestern corner of Utah, United States. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 180,279, making it the fifth-most populous county in Utah. Its county seat and largest city is St. George. The county was created in 1852 and organized in 1856. It was named after the first President of the United States, George Washington. A portion of the Paiute Indian Reservation is in western Washington County. Washington County comprises the St. George, UT Metropolitan Statistical Area.
St. George or Saint George is a city in and the county seat of Washington County, Utah, United States. Located in southwestern Utah on the Arizona border, it is the principal city of the St. George Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). The city lies in the northeasternmost part of the Mojave Desert, immediately south of the Pine Valley Mountains, which mark the southern boundary of the Great Basin. St. George lies slightly northwest of the Colorado Plateau, which ends at the Hurricane Fault. The city is 118 miles (190 km) northeast of Las Vegas, Nevada, and 300 miles (480 km) south-southwest of Salt Lake City, Utah, on Interstate 15.
Washington is a city in south central Washington County, Utah, United States and is a part of the St. George Metropolitan Area. The area is also known as Utah's Dixie because the Mormon pioneers who settled the St. George area came to the area to raise cotton, which was milled at the cotton mill in Washington. The population was 27,993 as of 2020. Washington is a fast-growing suburb of St. George, and is the second largest city in Washington County.
U.S. Route 91 or U.S. Highway 91 is a 172.7-mile-long (277.9 km) north–south United States highway running from Brigham City, Utah, to Idaho Falls, Idaho, in the U.S. states of Idaho and Utah. Despite the "1" as the last digit in the number, US 91 is no longer a cross-country artery, as it has mostly been replaced by Interstate 15. The highway currently serves to connect the communities of the Cache Valley to I-15 and beyond. Prior to the mid-1970s, US 91 was an international commerce route from Long Beach, California, to the Canada–US border north of Sweetgrass, Montana. US 91 was routed on the main streets of most of the communities it served, including Las Vegas Boulevard in Las Vegas and State Street in Salt Lake City. From Los Angeles to Salt Lake, the route was built along the corridor of the Arrowhead Trail. A portion of the highway's former route in California is currently State Route 91.
Utah Tech University (UT), and formerly known as the Dixie State University (DSU), is a polytechnic 4-year public university in St. George, Utah, in southwest Utah. UT offers doctoral degrees, master's degrees, bachelor's degrees, associate degrees, and certifications. As of fall 2022, there are 12,556 students enrolled at UT.
KMYU is a television station licensed to St. George, Utah, United States, serving as the MyNetworkTV affiliate for the state of Utah. It is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group alongside Salt Lake City–based CBS affiliate KUTV and independent station KJZZ-TV. The stations share studios on South Main Street in downtown Salt Lake City; KMYU's transmitter is located atop Webb Hill, 2+1⁄4 miles (3.6 km) south of downtown St. George. Previously, KMYU-TV maintained separate studios in the J. C. Snow Building on East St. George Boulevard in downtown St. George, while KUTV's facilities only housed KMYU's master control and some internal operations.
The Dixie Rotary Bowl was a college football bowl game initiated by the Rotary Club of St. George, Utah, and first played in 1986 at Greater Zion Stadium, the home field of Utah Tech University's predecessor institution, Dixie State Junior College. From 1986 to 2005, the game was a junior college bowl sanctioned by the National Junior College Athletic Association, featuring top NJCAA teams. The bowl was an NCAA Division II game from 2006 through 2008 after Dixie State became a four-year college and transitioned to Division II. The game was canceled before the beginning of the 2009 season, after the home team had failed to appear in consecutive seasons, reducing local interest.
Grafton is a ghost town, just south of Zion National Park in Washington County, Utah, United States. Said to be the most photographed ghost town in the West, it has been featured as a location in several films, including 1929's In Old Arizona—the first talkie filmed outdoors—and the classic Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. The nearest inhabited town is Rockville, which now includes the Grafton ghost town inside its legal boundaries.
Intermountain St. George Regional Hospital is a 284-bed hospital located on two campuses in St. George, Utah, United States. St. George Regional is the major medical referral center for northwestern Arizona, southeastern Nevada and southern Utah. St. George Regional is fully accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and is a service of Intermountain Healthcare, a nonprofit health care system serving the Intermountain West. It is also a Level II Trauma Center.
The landlocked U.S. state of Utah is known for its natural diversity and is home to features ranging from arid deserts with sand dunes to thriving pine forests in mountain valleys. It is a rugged and geographically diverse state at the convergence of three distinct geological regions: the Rocky Mountains, the Great Basin, and the Colorado Plateau.
Dixie, also known as Dixieland or Dixie's Land, is a nickname for all or part of the Southern United States. While there is no official definition of this region, or the extent of the area it covers, most definitions include the U.S. states below the Mason–Dixon line that seceded and comprised the Confederate States of America, almost always including the Deep South. The term became popularized throughout the United States by songs that nostalgically referred to the American South.
Confederate monuments and memorials in the United States include public displays and symbols of the Confederate States of America (CSA), Confederate leaders, or Confederate soldiers of the American Civil War. Many monuments and memorials have been or will be removed under great controversy. Part of the commemoration of the American Civil War, these symbols include monuments and statues, flags, holidays and other observances, and the names of schools, roads, parks, bridges, buildings, counties, cities, lakes, dams, military bases, and other public structures. In a December 2018 special report, Smithsonian Magazine stated, "over the past ten years, taxpayers have directed at least $40 million to Confederate monuments—statues, homes, parks, museums, libraries, and cemeteries—and to Confederate heritage organizations."
The Brigham Young Winter Home and Office is a historic house museum located in St. George, Utah. The home and office once belonged to Brigham Young, the foremost Mormon pioneer and second president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. During Young's later years, his arthritis precluded him from spending winters in the Salt Lake City region, so a winter home in St. George—located in the arid Dixie region of the state—was acquired. He seasonally occupied the property from 1873 to 1877.
Douglas D. Alder was an American historian and academic administrator who was president of Dixie College from 1986 to 1993.
Greater Zion Stadium, originally Hansen Stadium and later Trailblazer Stadium, is a stadium on the campus of Utah Tech University in St. George, Utah. It is primarily used for American football, and is the home field of the Utah Tech Trailblazers football and soccer programs. The stadium holds 10,500 people. In 2002 and 2003, it hosted the Paradise Bowl which was a post season college football all-star game. After the seating expansion in 2017, Greater Zion Stadium became the largest stadium in the southern portion of Utah.
Payson–Dixon line or Payson–Dixie line is an unofficial political boundary sometimes referred to in Utah politics. It refers to the area south of Payson, Utah, down to St. George, Utah which carries the nickname of Utah's Dixie. It is a pun on the well known Mason–Dixon line, an unofficial delineation of where the American south begins.
Mary Lou Romney, born Mary Louisa Stone, was an American Painter who resided in Utah. Romney studied art at the University of Utah where she earned a BFA and then completed a Post Graduate Education Certification program. She continued her education at Utah State University where she earned an MFA with a minor in Education. She was a nationally recognized painter and illustrator. She taught briefly at Utah State University, then spent many years teaching at the University of Utah, and was involved in local and regional art organizations, exhibits, and contests.
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