Inaugural LDS seminary closes
Never again will Granite High School students file across 500 East from the school to the Granite LDS Seminary for release-time religious education, as the final chapter closes on the inaugural seminary of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
With today's formal closing of Granite High, the Granite Seminary becomes an associated casualty, the final class conducted Thursday morning for a program whose graduates include former LDS general authorities President James E. Faust and Elder Neal A. Maxwell, former U.S. Sen. Frank Moss, columnist Jack Anderson, former Mormon Tabernacle Choir director Jerold Ottley, entertainer Robert Peterson and author-lecturer Dian Thomas.
No longer will Granite students arrive at the front entrance of the 15-year-old structure at 3328 S. 500 East, passing by an entryway plaque displaying a portion of a red brick salvaged from the original seminary building, built when Granite High students first blazed a similar school-to-seminary path in 1912.
"It's sad to know kids won't be in that building like they have in the past, but we knew it was going to happen eventually," said Donald D. Davis, the seminary principal and teacher.
"I was hoping for one more year," he added, mindful that most of the handful of the regular attendees were underclass students and that attendance in his ninth-grade seminary class at nearby Granite Park Junior High had quadrupled this year.
During his three-year tenure at the seminary, Davis had watched its potential-student enrollment dwindle from 170 to 70 to 25, the annual decreases mirroring Granite High's as it changed from a traditional high school to an "academy" offering. The seminary's enrollment reflects the community's changing demographics of fewer and fewer LDS student households.
The Granite Seminary history concludes just a couple years shy of a full century. Wanting to enhance religious education for impressionable teens, the Granite LDS Stake created a seminary program in the fall of 1912, with the Granite District Board of Education allowing "release time" for students to leave the high school and attend religious instruction.
Granite Stake President Frank Y. Taylor borrowed $2,500 on a note from Zions Savings Banking to buy the property and build the original residence-like building, which consisted of one large classroom, blackboards, an office/library, a cloak room, seats and a stove for heat.
Thomas J. Yates was hired that first year to teach, contracted at $100 a month.
Some 70 teenagers attended the first year, and within a half-dozen years, similar seminaries had been established in Brigham City, Mount Pleasant, American Fork, Lehi and Blanding as well as in Mesa, Ariz., and Star Valley, Wyo.
By 1923, the first seminary graduation exercises were held throughout the church's education system; by 1926, seminary instruction for secondary students expanded to a college institute of religion, the first at the University of Idaho in Moscow, Idaho.
While the high school seminary will discontinue, religious education will continue to be a primary use of the current building. Davis will retain his office as a headquarters while he continues to teach classes at the nearby junior high and alternative high schools and work with home-bound students.
And the church has set up one of the classrooms to host a first-year pilot program for seminary/institute instruction for deaf students using videoconferencing equipment to reach students in Utah and across the country.
E-MAIL: taylor@desnews.com
Recent comments
Your non member attending or inactive attending early morning is...
-Early Morning | June 9, 2009 at 8:15 a.m.
The arguments against Released Time and for Early Morning are...
Jason | June 9, 2009 at 7:53 a.m.
I lived in Salt Lake until I was 12 and would have attended Granite...
Connecticut Mom | June 9, 2009 at 7:25 a.m.
- No. 4 Frogs crush the Lobos 11:36 p.m.
- Cougars honor 1984 champs 11:36 p.m.
- Field goals, penalties doomed Utes 11:33 p.m.
- A reason why they play the game 11:30 p.m.
- Hall mouths off about hate of Utah 11:29 p.m.
- Broncos still hope to crash BCS party 11:26 p.m.
- Gerhart helps Stanford steam past... 11:25 p.m.
- Hall comes up big when it counts 11:24 p.m.
- 5 Questions with an NHRA champ 11:17 p.m.
- Utah Utes football: 20 years ago 11:15 p.m.
- Cave to be sealed with body inside
- Predicting the unpredictable: BYU wins
- Vegas, Poinsettia bowls or bust
- Glover gives Utes last-second upset
- BYU football: 5 keys to victory
- Cougars turn back Wildcats'
- Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
- Running game key to BYU offense
- Woods, wife unavailable for interview
- Idaho woman dies after fall
- Cougars beat Utes, 26-23
383 - Thunder rolls by Jazz
136 - Letters: Rushing to judge Palin
134 - Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
115 - Cave to be sealed with body inside
114 - Editorial: Poor welcome for Palin
113 - Letters: Trump card for believers
99 - Rivalry Week is highly profane
88 - Hall's legacy measured today
75 - Y. focused on 10-win season
73
I wanted to tell them not to go. I dropped subtle hints. "My money is on...
When I was a kid, I worshipped my grandpa. He was undoubtedly my hero....
Look, these guys are pretty slippery for Bush or Clinton. The fact is that...
The only thing worse than his stats in the game were his remarks after. Even...
Maybe because the U doesn't pretend to be christians like the BYU crowd.
Wow. All of you BYU fans that are supporting Max Hall's comments should be...
"Snare | 10:51 p.m. Nov. 28, 2009 I don't know if it has been said yet or...
Couldn't agree more with Hall. Oh yeah........and..... GEORGE IS...
Here's one fan who is thrilled with another amazing finish. Go Cougars...
sorry to hear Max's post-game comments. He needs to be a bigger person given...
They should go back to that color permanently. It suits them better, and...
Comments such as Max's tirade are very troublesome. It will be interesting to...



