The George Montgomery Scott Papers, 1885-1903

A Register of the Collection at the
Utah State Historical Society

The machine-readable finding aid for this collection was created by the Collections Management staff, Utah State Historical Society, with financial assistance from an LSTA grant provided by the Utah State Library Division.

Utah State Historical Society
Salt Lake City, Utah

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Summary Description | Background | Scope and Content | Administrative Info | Container List

Summary Description

Repository:Utah State Historical Society
Call number:Mss B 128
Creator: Scott, George Montgomery, 1835-1915.
Title:George Montgomery Scott Papers, 1885-1903
Quantity:1 lin. ft. (2 boxes)
Abstract:First non-Mormon Mayor of Salt Lake City. Correspondence and business records. Correspondence pertains to Scott's business interests in Salt Lake. There are also records from the Lily Park Stock Growers Association in Colorado and the Crystal Gold and Silver Mining Company.

Topics:

Business records -- Salt Lake City (Utah).
Cattle trade -- Colorado.
Mines and mineral resources -- Utah -- Piute County.

Organizations:

Crystal Gold and Silver Mining Company.
George M. Scott Hardware Company (Salt Lake City, Utah).
Lily Park Stock Growers Association.

Places:

Utah -- Politics and government.

Summary Description | Background | Scope and Content | Administrative Info | Container List

Background

Biographical Note

To the degree that George Montgomery Scott is remembered at all in Utah history, it is as Salt Lake City's first non-Mormon mayor (1890-1892). Scott himself, however, probably regarded his brief political career as the least of his major achievements, for his successful mayoral campaign was the only occasion upon which he ran for any public office in Salt Lake City during a residency of over thirty years. It was as a businessman, an Episcopal Church member, and public-spirited citizen that Scott probably wished to be remembered.
Scott was not a native Utahn, but neither was he a "carpetbagger" whose brief political career represents an outsider's attempt to capitalize upon the rising tide of non-Mormon power in Utah during the 1890s. He was born in Chazy, New York on 27 July 1835 to a merchant father in whose footsteps he early decided to follow. Like many others of the time, Scott felt the powerful pull of economic opportunity generated by the California gold rush, but unlike many, he was able to resist the temptation to risk all in pursuit of quick wealth in a sluice box, choosing instead the more prudent course of steady profits through a San Francisco hardware business supplying equipment to those in the gold fields. In 1871, drawn, no doubt, by similar opportunities in Utah's newly developing mines, he moved to Salt Lake City, where he opened the George M. Scott Hardware Company. The Scott firm went through several permutations, but it continued to grow and prosper, the most conspicuous evidence of which was the impressive Scott Building, constructed on Main Street in 1888.
Scott's business career was not without its reverses. Though the evidence indicates that he was a man of deep religious commitment, impeccable ethics, and altruism, he was unfortunate to be associated both in business and politics with James Glendinning, whose personal life and political ethics were not beyond reproach. Glendinning, who was Vice President of George M. Scott Hardware Company, also served as Mayor of Salt Lake City (1896-1898). During his term of office, Glendinning embezzled a quantity of public money through a "contingency fund," and left office in the midst of a scandal. That, added to alcoholism, resulted in a complete breakdown in his life in 1898. Though Scott seems to have been completely innocent, his reputation was compromised by association, and Glendinning even seems somehow to have drug Scott down with him financially.
In addition to the hardware business, Scott became involved in a mining venture at Marysvale, the Crystal Gold and Silver Mining Company, and a cattle business in Colorado, the Lily Park Stock Growers Association. All appear to have been successful, and no doubt helped to bring him out of the Glendinning debacle.
Ill health caused Scott to return to California in 1904 after selling his business interests. He may have married briefly before coming to Utah, for he is listed on an insurance form as a widower, but the fact was unknown to most Utahns, and he is listed as a bachelor in the biographical sources. At any rate, he had no children, and lived with a niece or nephews in Santa Barbara and San Mateo during his retirement. It was in the latter city that he died on 19 November 1915 after a brief illness.

Summary Description | Background | Scope and Content | Administrative Info | Container List

Scope and Content

The George M. Scott collection came to the Utah State Historical Society in June 1983 through manuscript dealer Mark Hoffman. It is approximately one cubic foot in size, half of which consists of letter books containing copies of outgoing correspondence of the Lily Park Stock Growers Association and the George M. Scott Hardware Company, and half of which is incoming letters, both personal and business, and various other records relating to the hardware, mining, and cattle enterprises.
Only a very few letters contain any reference to his political career; indeed, few mention politics at all. There are a number of personal letters from family and friends in New York; some of them contain requests for genealogical information, and all reveal close family ties. Of great personal interest are several letters from Mrs. Glendinning after her husband's tragedy, in which she expresses regrets for the harmful effects that spilled over into Scott's life, and seeks his help in dealing with her own desperate financial situation.
The mining records, and particularly the cattle business records, are of considerable historical interest. Both businesses were partnerships, and the records reveal the workings of such associations. The cattle business records are much fuller, though, since we have both incoming and outgoing correspondence and a wide variety of documented transactions, including purchases of land, feed, equipment, and stock.
The remainder of the collection is quite diverse. Scott's business experience was often tapped by those in need of legal or financial advice. Also, there is considerable documentation of his life insurance program, and a couple of personal account books.

Series Descriptions

Letterbooks
Correspondence
Business records and miscellaneous

Summary Description | Background | Scope and Content | Administrative Info | Container List

Administrative Information

Preferred Citation:

George Montgomery Scott Papers, 1885-1903, Utah State Historical Society.

Acquisition Information:

Received from Mark W. Hofmann, 1983.

Restrictions on Use

The George Montgomery Scott Papers are the physical property of the Utah Historical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. Literary rights, including copyright, may belong to the authors or their heirs and assigns. Please contact the Historical Society for information regarding specific use of this collection.

Processing Information:

Collection processed by Gary Topping

Finding aid compiled by Gary Topping

Finding aid edited by Linda Thatcher, 2000

Collection cataloged by Richard Saunders, 1988 (RLIN ID: UTSX88-A161).

Finding aid encoded for the World Wide Web by Craig Ringgenberg, 2000.


Summary Description | Background | Scope and Content | Administrative Info | Container List

Container list

Box

Folder

Contents

Letterbooks

1

1

Lily Park Stock Growers Association, January 1885 - March 1891

1

2

Lily Park Stock Growers Association, May 1897 - December 1901

1

3

George M. Scott hardware Company, 1887

Correspondence

2

1

1880s

2

2

1890-1895

2

3

1896-1899

2

4

1900-1903

2

5

Fragments, n.d.

Business records and miscellaneous

2

6-7

Records of the Lily Park Stock Growers Association

2

8-9

Records of the Crystal Gold and Silver Mining Company

2

10-11

Miscellaneous business, financial, and legal papers

2

12

Miscellaneous personal documents and ephemera