Parowan, Utah Parowan, Utah Parowan's Mormon Pioneer-era Rock Church Parowan's Mormon Pioneer-era Rock Church Location in Iron County and the state of Utah.

Location in Iron County and the state of Utah.

Parowan / p r w n/ is a town/city in and the governmental center of county of Iron County, Utah, United States. The populace was 2,790 at the 2010 census.

Parowan became the first incorporated town/city in Iron County in 1851.

Parowan served as the agricultural support base for the small-town iron industry, whose blast furnace was positioned in close-by Cedar City.

Parowan sits on the easterly edge of Parowan Valley, and at the mouth of Parowan Canyon.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 5.8 square miles (15.1 km ), all of it land.

Southern Utah's first settlement and governmental center of county of Iron County, Parowan City blends a rich historical past with present-day, small-town hospitality.

Fremont and Anasazi Indians were the first known inhabitants of Parowan.

At Parowan Gap, a natural mountain pass twelve miles (19 km) northwest of Parowan, ancient Indians inscribed petroglyphs on smooth-surfaced boulders that feature snakes, lizards, mouse-men, bear claws, and mountain sheep.

An annual birthday celebration memorializes Parowan's beginning on 13 January 1851, just twelve months after Parley P.

Based on Pratt's exploration report, Brigham Young called for the establishment of settlements in the region to produce much-needed iron implements for the pioneer state.

It is now a exhibition of Parowan's early history.

Parowan has been called the "Mother Town of the Southwest" because of the many pioneers who left from there to start other communities in southern Utah, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, and even Oregon and Wyoming.

In its first year, colonists were asked to settle Johnson Fort, now Enoch, where a stockade was built, and were also sent to settle along Coal Creek, site of the settlement to manufacture iron which became Cedar City.

Parowan's first pioneer were instructed to plant crops so that following immigrants could open up the coal and iron ore deposits, but small-town industries were also developed.

The first attempts at iron manufacturing were unsuccessful, but quarrying in the twentieth century brought prosperity to Iron County.

When the closure of the mines and the culmination of Interstate 15 threatened economic depression in the early 1980s, determined Parowan people pulled together to precarious an economic plan of action to keep the improve viable.

Parowan's Economic Development Office actively recruits small manufacturing companies looking to relocate to a non-urban community.

Significant expansion has occurred in the 1990s in Parowan; it has been attributed to affordable utility fees and a positive economic climate.

Parowan is the site of the annual Iron County Fair on Labor Day weekend; it also is a host improve for the Utah Summer Games and sponsor of the annual "Christmas in the Country" celebration each November.

This site contains a park, a grotto and pond, and statues commemorating the framers of Parowan.

Parowan City supports the Parowan Community Theatre, which produces thespian productions throughout the year.

Alma Richards - Utah's first olympic gold medalist, interval up in Parowan.

His last request was to be buried in his hometown of Parowan, where his remains presently reside in the Parowan cemetery.

Parowan High School's track and football stadium is titled Alma Richards Stadium where a memorial is placed in his honor.

Helped settle Parowan.

Served as mayor of Parowan from 1859 to 1860.

Tripp set out from his home in Parowan and traveled 3,116 miles athwart the United States on a riding lawnmower before finishing in Washington D.C.

In the city, the populace was spread out with 31.2% under the age of 18, 8.5% from 18 to 24, 21.9% from 25 to 44, 20.3% from 45 to 64, and 18.2% who were 65 years of age or older.

Parowan's Web site Municipalities and communities of Iron County, Utah, United States County seat: Parowan Cedar City Enoch Parowan

Categories:
Cities in Iron County, Utah - Cities in Utah - County seats in Utah - Populated places established in 1851 - 1851 establishments in Utah Territory