Tuesday, September 29, 2020

1886: The first-ever reference to a community called 'Layton'?




LAYTON, Utah is Davis County’s premier city. It is common history that Layton is an outgrowth of Kaysville City. Layton separated from Kaysville in 1902-1907 and became its own official town in 1920.
But when was the “Layton” name first used?
-It is very likely that name came along in the mid-1880s. In fact, the very first newspaper reference to Layton being its own community, separate from mother Kaysville City, was published on May 7, 1886 in the Ogden Herald newspaper.
“The town of Layton is building up rapidly,” the Herald stated. “There is good demand for everything a farmer raises.”
-Another key reference to Layton, perhaps the first occasion in the Deseret News was on May 4, 1887, where a report on an artesian well was sent “from Layton, Davis County.”
(This water report was also significant, because it noted the very first time that Weber River water was used in Kaysville and Layton.)
-A third, separate reference to Layton was on June 10, 1887, in the Salt Lake Herald newspaper, where people from both Kaysville and Layton boarded a special train to take residents age 70 and over, to an Old Folks’ Day in Ogden.




-A fourth reference to Layton as a distinct area was published in the Ogden Daily Standard of July 26, 1890.
“A wreck on the Utah Central” was the headline and the story stated: “The passenger train which left here (Ogden) at 6 o’clock last evening, ran into a freight at Layton, one mile north of Kaysville.”
-How did the Layton name come about?
It was very likely because Christopher Layton, an early area pioneer, was also the first Bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in what was becoming its own, separate area. Since Kaysville was named after William Kay, an early settler and church leader there, hence the Layton name.
Yet newspaper references or not, the actual Layton took longer to fully create.
The Deseret News on Sept. 29, 1890 still referred to the Kaysville First Ward and the Kaysville Second Ward as the only two ecclesiastic districts in the area.
According to the Davis County Clipper newspaper of May 6, 1892,
members of the Kaysville Second Ward of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints actually resided in what most recognized as Layton
territory and not Kaysville. Hence, some church members circulated a
petition in 1892, asking church leaders to rename the ward to what it really
was – the Layton Ward.
This was one of the first signs that Layton residents wanted their own
community, separate from Kaysville.
"We do not live in Kaysville City, nor
Kaysville precinct, and why it is called the 2nd Ward of Kaysville we cannot
understand," the newspaper report stated.
Just less than 4 months later, the Ward name change did take place.
“The members of second ward of Kaysville last Sunday decided to change the name to Layton Ward so as to conform
with the precinct and post office and hereafter it will be known by that name.” (-Davis County Clipper, Aug. 31, 1892.)

It is also possible that the Layton name, for the northern portion of the then Kaysville community, was first used in 1882.
Also, Mr. Layton might have put a sign out, with his name on it, on the railroad, so they knew where to deliver goods for the Farmers Union store. Or, another legend is that survey of Layton in the 1880s found one more person with the last name of Layton in town than Adams.

Prior to that, Layton was also sometimes referred to as "Kays Crossing."





Before Layton had fully gained its independence from Kaysville, or had become an incorporated community, its identity was obscure.
“There are some people in the large surrounding cities that do not know there is a place as Layton, formerly known as Kays Creek, in Utah,” a story in the January 23, 1892 Ogden Standard newspaper reported.
“They do not know what a fine country we have here for agriculture and stock raising. The town is situated about fifteen miles south of Ogden, with seven hundred inhabitants, also three mercantile stores, a post office, two blacksmith shops, one meat market, a large steam roller mill, a saloon and two railroads running through the center,” the story stated.









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