Eureka's            role as the central financial point for the district insured its survival.            It housed business establishments, financial institutions, local and            county governmental buildings including Eureka City Hall (1899) and            a Juab County Courthouse (1892), various churches, and the meeting places            for numerous labor, social, and fraternal organizations. Eureka became            especially active as a successful political field for Utah's Socialist            party. Mining entrepreneurs such as John Q. Packard, John Beck, Jesse            Knight, Walter Fitch Sr., and others loomed as important figures in            Eureka and Tintic history. A relative calm and peaceful labor environment            marked Eureka's past. 
                    The            Chief Consolidated operated during the 1930s and into the 1950s, helping            to keep Eureka's economy afloat. Small scale mining operations have            continued, but most residents work in valley towns and for government            services, such as the Tooele Army Depot. Being located on Utah Highway            6, Eureka is on a main trail to the Little            Sahara Sand Dunes area. In 1979 Eureka was placed in the National            Register of Historic Places as part of the Tintic Mining District Multiple            Resource Area, recognizing the importance of remaining buildings and            sites. 
                    See:            Beth Kay Harris, The Towns of Tintic (1961); Alice P. McCune, History            of Juab County (1947); Philip F. Notarianni, Faith, Hope and Prosperity:            The Tintic Mining District (1982). 
                    Philip            F. Notarianni