From Deseret News archives:
St. George likely named after an LDS apostle
Other cities in region also linked to 'Saint' names
Located in the heart of Utah's Dixie, the city of St. George is currently one of the fastest-growing communities in the nation. But who is the city named after, and why is "Saint" affixed to this name?
Most historians agree on the same name origination for St. George, Utah, but there is an alternate version out there.
"St. George itself was named in honor of Elder George A. Smith, an early LDS Church apostle and first counselor to President Brigham Young. Although Smith did not participate in the town's settlement, he personally selected most of the company of the pioneers of 1861," Bart C. Anderson, states in the "Utah History Encyclopedia,"
Anderson also states on St. George city's Web site, www.sgcity.org, that Elder Smith was also nicknamed "the potato saint," because he had encouraged early pioneers to eat raw, unpeeled potatoes to "cure a troublesome bout with scurvy."
Andrew Jenson, an early 20th-century historian for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, also believed the name came in honor of Elder Smith.
Jenson said St. George was founded in 1861 by missionaries called in the October general conference of that year to settle there with their families. By Dec. 1, 1861, they made a camp a half-mile northeast of where the St. George Temple stands today.
Elder Smith was grandfather to President George Albert Smith, the church's eighth president.
John W. Van Cott, who wrote "Utah Place Names" in 1990, also agrees that St. George was named for Elder George A. Smith. He states that the naming came even before settlers arrived there and called Smith "Father of the South."
"It was half-humorously suggested that if other churches could have Saints, Mormons could, too," Van Cott wrote at the end of his paragraph regarding the naming of St. George.
In fact, the most historically famous "St. George" is a figure in early Christianity, who is considered the "Patron Saint of England," according to the Catholic Encyclopedia.
Rufos Wood Leigh, who compiled "Five Hundred Utah Place Names" in 1961, also sides with the Smith origin story.
However, in a different article included on St. George city's Web site, Anderson stated there is an alternative to the lone St. George origin possibility: Phillip St. George Cooke, a non-Mormon who may have donated a good share of equipment and wagons to Utah's Dixie. Anderson described Cooke as a trusted friend of Brigham Young. Cooke, a U.S. Army officer, also led the Mormon Battalion from New Mexico to California.
St. George is also not be the only Mormon settlement named after a "Saint." There are at least two more:
St. David, Ariz., located southeast of Tucson, was named in honor of David Patten Kimball. He was the presiding LDS Church authority in the area, from 1881-82.
According to the "Utah History Encyclopedia," St. Charles, Idaho located on the northwest side of Bear Lake was named after Elder Charles C. Rich, a Mormon apostle. He was one of the first early settlers. In 1864 Brigham Young honored Rich by naming Rich County, Utah, and the town of St. Charles, after him.
E-mail: lynn@desnews.com
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