top of page
Iron Rails & New Roots: Immigrant Stories of Salt Lake’s West Side
Iron Rails & New Roots: Immigrant Stories of Salt Lake’s West Side

Sat, Apr 11

|

Salt Lake City

Iron Rails & New Roots: Immigrant Stories of Salt Lake’s West Side

A guided walking tour exploring how the arrival of the railroad transformed Salt Lake City’s west side into a vibrant, multicultural neighborhood shaped by immigrant labor, faith, entrepreneurship, and resilience.

Registration opens March 11th at 8am.
Back to Home

Time & Location

Apr 11, 2026, 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM

Salt Lake City

About the event

Beginning at the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Salt Lake City’s historic Warehouse District, this walking tour explores how the arrival of the railroad in 1869 transformed the city’s west side into a vibrant immigrant neighborhood. As rail lines converged near the Rio Grande Depot, Greek, Japanese, Jewish, Italian, Austrian, Basque, and other immigrant communities built churches, hotels, restaurants, boarding houses, factories, and small businesses that reshaped the area into a bustling commercial and industrial hub.


Along Broadway and surrounding streets, we’ll visit landmark buildings such as the Rio Grande Depot, the Peery and Broadway Hotels, the Bertolini Block, Japantown, and the Sweet Candy and Crane buildings, examining the architectural details that reflect this period of rapid growth and diversity.


Throughout the tour, attendees will uncover lesser-known stories that bring the neighborhood to life—from marble in the Rio Grande Depot sourced from the same quarry as the Lincoln Memorial,…


Tickets

  • General Admission

    $20.00

    +$0.50 ticket service fee

    Goes on sale

    Mar 11, 8:00 AM

Share this event

bottom of page