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Pleasant Grove, Utah

Pleasant Grove, Utah
City
Pleasant Grove Main Street
Pleasant Grove Main Street
Nickname(s): Utah's City of Trees
Location in Utah County and the state of Utah
Location in Utah County and the state of Utah
Coordinates: 40°22′13″N 111°43′53″W / 40.37028°N 111.73139°W / 40.37028; -111.73139Coordinates: 40°22′13″N 111°43′53″W / 40.37028°N 111.73139°W / 40.37028; -111.73139
Country United States
State Utah
County Utah
Settled 1850
Incorporated January 18, 1855
Area
 • Total 9.2 sq mi (23.7 km2)
 • Land 9.2 sq mi (23.7 km2)
 • Water 0.0 sq mi (0.0 km2)
Elevation 4,623 ft (1,409 m)
Population (2012)
 • Total 34,647
 • Density 3,800/sq mi (1,500/km2)
Time zone Mountain (MST) (UTC-7)
 • Summer (DST) MDT (UTC-6)
ZIP code 84062
Area code(s) 385, 801
FIPS code 49-60930
GNIS feature ID 1444479
Website www.plgrove.org

Pleasant Grove, originally named Battle Creek, is a city in Utah County, Utah, United States known as "Utah's City of Trees". It is part of the ProvoOrem Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 33,509 at the 2010 census.

On July 19, 1850, William H. Adams, John Mercer and Philo T. Farnsworth,Mormon pioneers sent by Brigham Young, arrived at the area now known as Pleasant Grove and staked out farms in what is now the southwest corner of the city. A small community was established September 13, 1850, consisting of George S. Clark and his wife, Susannah Dalley Clark, Richard and Ann Elizabeth Sheffer Clark, John Greenleaf Holman and Nancy Clark Holman, Lewis Harvey and his wife Lucinda Clark Harvey, Johnathan Harvey and Sarah Herbert Harvey, Charles Price and wife and child, Widow Harriet Marler and children, John Wilson, Ezekiel Holman, and possibly one or two others, relatives of those mentioned. Pleasant Grove was officially incorporated as a town January 18, 1855, by which time the settlement had grown to 623 people.

The original name of the city was Battle Creek. It was named for a battle which took place there in 1849 between Mormon settlers and a small band of Ute Indians. The settlers later decided they needed a more uplifting name and began calling their town Pleasant Grove after a grove of cottonwood trees located between Battle Creek and Grove Creek, near the current-day intersection of Locust Avenue and Battle Creek Drive. A monument with a plaque describing this battle is located at Kiwanis Park, at the mouth of Battle Creek Canyon.

During the Walker Indian War in the 1850s, citizens built a fort with walls two or three feet thick and six feet tall that occupied an area the size of sixteen city blocks. The settlers in the area at the time built homes inside the fort. While the fort no longer stands, memorial cornerstones were erected by local historians. The northeast monument was erected near the intersection of 100 North and 300 East streets. The northwest monument was erected four blocks west of that point at 100 West Street and the southeast monument erected four blocks south at 300 South Street. The southwest monument would have been located near 300 South 100 West, the area is now occupied by a large parking lot and retail store.


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