Another
factor in the decline of colonization, particularly after 1900, was
the abandonment of the concept of "the gathering," under which converts
were urged to gather to "Zion" to build the Kingdom of God in the West.
Converts were now urged to stay put and build up Zion where they were.
All
told, some 325 permanent and 44 abandoned settlements were founded in
Utah in the nineteenth century. Some of these settlements, however,
did not survive the mechanization of agriculture, modern transportation,
and the shift of rural population to urban communities that occurred
after the Depression of the 1930s. Colonization since World War II has
consisted almost entirely of building suburbs around the larger cities.
See:
Milton R. Hunter, Brigham Young the Colonizer (1940); Leonard J. Arrington, Great Basin Kingdom: An Economic History of the Latter Day Saints, 1830-1900
(1958); Eugene E. Campbell, Establishing Zion: The Mormon Church in
the American West, 1847-69 (1988); Joel E. Ricks, Forms and Methods
of Early Mormon Settlement in Utah and the Surrounding Region, 1847
to 1877 (1964); Wayne L. Wahlquist, ed., Atlas of Utah (1981); Richard
Sherlock, "Mormon Migration and Settlement after 1875," Journal of Mormon
History 2 (1975); and Leonard J. Arrington, "Colonizing the Great Basin,"
The Ensign 10 (February 1980).
Leonard
J. Arrington