Twenty-five            ministers served the society/church in the one hundred years it has            been a part of the Territory and State of Utah. Its contribution is            significant. The records of First Unitarian Church of Salt Lake City,            which comprise seventy-six linear feet of shelf space, are housed in            the Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Marriott Library, at            the University of Utah. The first known Unitarian sermon delivered in            Salt Lake City - given by Reverend Sam Eliot on the 30 November 1890            at the Salt Lake Theatre - is one of the documents stored there. Eliot            was minister of the Denver Unitarian Church and director of the Rocky            Mountain Unitarian Conference; he visited Salt Lake City for the express            purpose of forming a broad, non-sectarian "People's Church." The collection            of historical materials (including photographs) has been processed and            a register prepared. Additional sources of information are the interviews            of former ministers, presidents of the board of trustees, and other            prominent Unitarians whose reminiscences are transcribed and available            in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, Marriott Library, University            of Utah.