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Cottonwood Heights, Utah

Cities in Salt Lake County, UtahCities in UtahCottonwood Heights, UtahFormer census-designated places in UtahPopulated places established in 2005
Salt Lake City metropolitan area
Cottonwood Paper Mill 3
Cottonwood Paper Mill 3

Cottonwood Heights is a city located in Salt Lake County, Utah, United States, along the east bench of the Salt Lake Valley. It lies south of the cities of Holladay and Murray, east of Midvale, and north of Sandy within the Salt Lake City, Utah Metropolitan Statistical Area. Following a successful incorporation referendum in May 2004, the city was incorporated on January 14, 2005. Cottonwood Heights had been a Census-designated place (CDP) before incorporation. The population as of the 2010 census was 33,433. This is a significant increase over the CDP's 2000 census count of 27,569. The corporate offices of Dyno Nobel, Fusion-io, Extra Space Storage, Breeze Airways, and JetBlue are located in the city.In 2007, Money magazine rated Cottonwood Heights at #100 on their Best Places to Live list.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cottonwood Heights, Utah (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cottonwood Heights, Utah
South Sunhill Road,

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Latitude Longitude
N 40.617222222222 ° E -111.82027777778 °
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South Sunhill Road 7378
84121
Utah, United States
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Cottonwood Paper Mill 3
Cottonwood Paper Mill 3
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Cottonwood Paper Mill
Cottonwood Paper Mill

The Cottonwood Paper Mill (also known as Granite Paper Mill) is an abandoned stone structure located at the mouth of Big Cottonwood Canyon in Cottonwood Heights, Utah. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.It was built in 1883 by the Deseret News under the direction of Henry Grow. Workers used paper making equipment brought in from the old Sugar House Paper Mill to grind logs from nearby canyons into pulp. Rags gathered from old clothes were also used to produce the pulp, which was then placed into molds and dried. During its operation, the mill could yield up to 5 tons of paper per day. The mill provided jobs and paper for nearly ten years; the railroad increased the demand for cheaper paper manufactured outside the area. In 1892, the Cottonwood Paper Mill was sold to Granite Paper Mills Company. On April 1, 1893, a fire broke out among its indoor stored stockpile of paper. Many hearing the alarm thought it an April Fools' Day prank. All that remained following the fire was a stone skeleton. The structure was partially rebuilt in 1927 for use as an open-air dance hall, known as the Old Mill Club, and remained so until the 1940s. In the late 1960s, rock bands played there on Friday and Saturday nights. It was also used in the 1970s and 1980s as a haunted house and a craft boutique. It was declared a historic site by the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers in 1966, and was condemned by the city of Cottonwood Heights in 2005.